The Bruins doled out an annual cap hit of $12.75 million for the pair, and a combined price tag of $82.25 million.
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Elias Lindholm had a productive night Thursday at TD Garden.
For just the fifth time in 53 games this season, the Bruins center registered at least 2 points — orchestrating Brad Marchand’s power-play tally before snapping a shorthanded strike past Jets goalie Connor Hellebuyck.
The Bruins, however,
left the ice with 0 points for the standings.
It’s been that type of season for Lindholm and his new team, with Boston’s offseason spending spree doing little to move the needle.
Several factors have contributed to the rudderless Bruins — be it regression from key cogs, injuries, and a knack
for letting go of the rope in critical situations.
But the offseason efforts to build upon an overachieving bunch in 2023-24 has compounded the Bruins’ woes — hampering the organization’s efforts to retool on the fly, and saddling a depth chart with players that are shrinking this team’s ceiling.
Entering last summer
with $25 million in cap space after dealing Linus Ullmark to Ottawa, the Bruins allocated most of their fiscal flexibility toward Lindholm and defenseman Nikita Zadorov — doling out an annual cap hit of $12.75 million and a combined price tag of $82.25 million.
That steep commitment — coupled with Jeremy Swayman’s eventual $66 million deal — hindered Boston’s ability to retain fleet-footed Jake DeBrusk, or at the very least replace him with other middle-six scorers.
But in Lindholm and Zadorov, Don Sweeney, Cam Neely, and the top brass believed they found and 200-foot centerman and the bruising blue liner required for the playoffs after being knocked out by the Panthers in back-to-back years.
“Elias, I mean, his 200-foot game is remarkable,” Neely said in late September. “I don’t want to put him in the Patrice [Bergeron] category, but he’s Patrice-like. And Zadorov, I mean, a big back end like that, it just solidifies our back end. Our back end is big, and they’ve got some beef to them, which I think bodes well in the playoffs. You’ve got to get to the playoffs, but I think we’re built a little bit stronger for the playoffs.”
Those playoff hopes are dwindling, with
MoneyPuck now tabbing the Bruins with just a 19.1 percent chance.
The inability of Lindholm and Zadorov to elevate Boston’s lineup also has been reinforced. Lindholm has been solid on faceoffs (54.7 percent) and defensive assignments, while ranking fourth among Bruins forwards in shorthanded ice time per game (1:41).
That’s suitable for a defensive-minded, third-line center — which has been Lindholm’s primary role for the last few weeks. But the Bruins aren’t paying him close to $8 million a year to be a defensive stopgap.
Lindholm may not be a net negative, but he’s far from a play-driver, especially at his price tag.
Zadorov has been as advertised when it comes to his sandpaper style of play. But his propensity for landing in the penalty box (league-leading 115 minutes) and occasional D-zone lapses have put his team behind the eight-ball — with the Bruins’ own scoring woes giving them little margin for error when those breakdowns end with pucks sailing past Swayman.
Embracing a retool this season could see the Bruins net future assets by moving pending UFAs such as Trent Frederic
or even Marchand. Players with term such as Brandon Carlo or Charlie Coyle might also be coveted by teams.
But moving players such as Lindholm and Zadorov — fresh off of inking those hefty contracts — feels futile.
With long-term deals involving franchise fixtures Pastrnak and Charlie McAvoy primed to age well, the Bruins should have the means to aggressively add talent in the coming years.
But orchestrating a successful retool via a free agent spending spree is risky. The Bruins don’t have to look back very far to heed those hard truths.