Realistically, the Bruins may have but these next five-eight games to shake their sleepwalking ways and gain some traction in the East.
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In a season leaning Pisa-like toward a potential crash and crumble, the Bruins remain in search of something or someone to prop up their sagging hopes.
Now 8-8-3, and the Blue Jackets in town for a 7:08 p.m. puck drop Monday, it’s possible that one-time Columbus goalie Joonas Korpisalo will be the prop of the hour.
Anyone expect that when training camp opened two months ago? Back when most of us considered Korpisalo a curious cast extra, and figured the Black and Gold were shoo-ins for a ninth straight visit to the postseason?
“He did have a really good game, but you know …,” mused coach Jim Montgomery, asked following Sunday’s practice how the Finnish ‘tender’s stout performance in Saturday’s
3-2 overtime loss to the Blues factored into picking Monday’s starter, “… we’re going to evaluate where we’re at, what gives us the best opportunity. This is his prior team, right? Sometimes that’s a motivating factor for a goalie — or any player.”
It’s mid-November and these are not ordinary times for the Bruins. A Berra-esque read of things is that the season is getting late early this year. Something’s got to give, even if it means hoping the backup goalie right now is the better choice, ahead of Jeremy Swayman and his top-dollar (
eight years/$66 million) credentials.
Yes, Swayman is and remains the franchise No. 1, despite his current Palookaville stats (5-6-2/3.35/.888). It’s just that, realistically, the Bruins may have but these next 5-8 games to shake their sleepwalking ways and gain some traction in the East. Absent that, they could be positioned to while away the final two-thirds of the season explaining how an $84.25M investment in center Elias Lindholm and defenseman Nikita Zadorov would have been pennies better left in that bloated Jacobs family piggy bank.
“We are looking for a spark,” agreed Montgomery amid his late-morning media gaggle in Brighton. “Yeah.”
If you’re into reading tea leaves, the 30-minute workout wrapped up with somber-faced associate coach Joe Sacco and Montgomery chatting a couple of minutes along the boards with an attentive Swayman. Korpisalo then quickly was on his way to the dressing room while Swayman continued to toil, after-class work that made him one of the last players to call it a day.
All that could point to “Korpy” getting the call Monday. It also could be a whole lot of nothing, of which we certainly have seen plenty of around here since the puck first dropped Oct. 8. We’re now officially at the seven-week itch, and man, get out the calamine.
On Saturday, while his teammates could muster but 17 shots and two goals on Jordan Binnington, Korpisalo turned aside 28 of 31 St. Louis offerings. Across the 60:00 of regulation, he made a handful of big stops, what might have/should have been the kind of work that banked 2 points — if only the Black-and-Gold forwards and defensemen matched the goalie’s effort and execution.
Korpisalo (3-2-1/2.74/.901) hadn’t faced live fire since Nov. 7, when he thwarted 34 Calgary shots in
a 4-3 OT win. Nine days later, following three starts by Swayman (1-1-1), Korpisalo stepped in and outperformed the 18 skaters he dutifully backed from the start to the finish that was Brayden Schenn’s goal 2:53 into the three-on-three free skate.
OK, small sample case. Duly noted. But for an afternoon, Korpisalo was the hot hand on a club needing exactly that. He provided it from a cold start, after sitting around for nine days while the club was stuck in that win one-lose-one-lose-another-in-OT cycle.
Maybe it will be Swayman on Monday night, but the logical pick, the deserving pick, perhaps the
necessarypick, would be the 6–foot-3-inch Korpisalo.
Going back to the 2012 draft, he spent more than a decade as Blue Jackets property, often stuck behind No. 1 Sergei Bobrovsky, ultimately to be sent packing to the Kings at the March 2023 trade deadline. Roster churn being what it has been in Columbus, Korpisalo noted Sunday there are only “maybe a handful of guys” still there who there with him along the way.
But a former team is a former team, which leaves Korpisalo with that lingering desire to prove he’s got the goods that the former team felt weren’t, well, good enough.
“Of course, you want to play against your former team,” he said. “You want to show up — there’s not many familiar faces [in the Columbus lineup — but the staff is the same, right? It’s always kind of nice to showcase yourself against your old team, you know? But, whatever goes, goes.”
To date, the Bruins' first quarter has shown there appears to be no quick, easy fix. Andrew Peeke, sidelined by injury the last couple of weeks, could draw back into the lineup vs. Columbus. Riley Tufte,
called up from AHL Providence for Saturday’s matinee, was returned promptly to the WannaB’s. Georgii Merkulov (first career point Saturday) remained with the varsity. Tyler Johnson will be back in the lineup after needing a couple of days home on personal leave.
If one of those guys proves to be the change agent, so be it. Montgomery, his
career arc here possibly trending toward Lilliput, would appreciate someone being that guy as early as 7:08 Monday evening.
Promise is fine, and no doubt Swayman eventually will be fine. At the moment, however, after
losing 11 of their first 19, the Bruins only need results, a big game, a hot hand. On Saturday, that was Korpisalo, the former Blue Jacket with that tiny bit to prove to his old team. As they’ve known in Pisa for centuries, a little extra push could change everything.