In need of tapping into offensive mojo in a hurry, before no mojo morphs into no playoff invite, the Bruins Tuesday night in St. Louis will have
Hampus Lindholm try to get the good vibrations going as the point man on the No. 1 power-play unit.
Delete
Charlie McAvoy, the reluctant shooter, and insert Lindholm, who leads Bruins defensemen with three goals.
“I think he’s a person on our team who has some offensive confidence right now,” noted coach
Jim Montgomery, his club 1-1-1 in the last three games and minus-12 in goal differential for the season. “Just want him to be direct. We find our power play’s been slow, so we just want him shooting puck or moving pucks quickly.”
The Lindholm-for-McAvoy swap occurred during Monday’s practice in Brighton, less than 48 hours after the Bruins went 0 for 2 on the power play in a
3-2 overtime loss to the Senators.
The loss at the Garden, in which the Bruins (7-7-2) did not land a shot in the third period, came on a night when McAvoy didn’t attempt a shot during his game-high ice time of 24:22 (including 3:27 on the man-advantage).
McAvoy, the club’s highest-paid (cap hit: $9.5 million) defenseman, paired with
Mason Lohrei on PP2 Monday. Lindholm previously paired in the two-two-defensemen approach with Lohrei, but results across the board have been risible.
“I think he’s being a lot more assertive, with a shot-first mentality,” said Montgomery of Lindholm, who has already tied his goal output of last season. “In the other two zones [defensive and neutral] when he’s moving the puck, he’s moving it and joining [the play].”
In 179 regular-season games with the Bruins, Lindholm has scored twice on the power play.
He clicked 12 times with the Ducks, including a career-high in 2015-16. He does not fire a booming slapper, but has a knack for getting shots toward the net with quick-release wristers. Of late, he’s been more inclined to get involved down low, be it for shots, passes, or tips.
“I’m going to keep playing the way I’ve been playing — try to get pucks to the net, be a shooter, be a threat up there at the blue line, keep moving pucks quick,” said Lindholm.