Boston Bruins 24-25 Roster/Cap thread XIX

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DeBrusk is being Jake in Vancouver, so hope, but just not enough, Heinen as predicted as done squat as was predicted after having a good year, JVR, has played well this year, but remember everyone thought Brazeau, would be that guy, he has also probably been more meaningful to that Columbus club this year,
I don't put much stock in how those 3 players are doing for their new teams. They're playing with different linemates, on different teams in a different system. What I DO know, is how they performed on this team in this system, and that they weren't adequately replaced......
 
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Always seems to be a misconception that Marchand signed a below market contract to be team friendly. It's not what happened - he had just come off his first 60 point season. He signed before the 2016-2017 season. Then he want on an absolute elite run including a 100 point season. But at the time he signed, getting $6.125M was a market rate contract for where he was at the time. He just ended up completely outperforming it.
 
I don't put much stock in how those 3 players are doing for their new teams. They're playing with different linemates, on different teams in a different system. What I DO know, is how they performed on this team in this system, and that they weren't adequately replaced......
Yeah. I think Debrusk was replaced with Lindholm, and however disappointing his season has been he’s still going to end up replacing Jake’s 40 points.
But JVR’s 38 and Heinen’s 36 were lost.

Add that to injuries to the back end and outlandish drop offs from Coyle and Frederic.
 
I wanted Bennett back before Calgary moved him.

I made plenty of smug posts after he had success in Florida.

With how this team is currently constructed, I pass on signing him.

Would have been a great fit imo when we still had Bergeron/Krejci. Even when we just had Bergeron I would be onboard.

But not now
Same all-around. He was a cheap get for Florida too.

Honestly him or Misa are the B's best chance to find that potential #1 right away with no money or assets leaving. It's just getting that far down in the standings is gonna be tough for a team with Pasta on it.
Get Meesta Misa!
 

Bruins’ Mason Lohrei, Matt Poitras and the limited options of next-wave support​

Mar 7, 2025; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Minnesota Wild forward Justin Brazeau (15) skates during warm up prior to a game against the Vancouver Canucks at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images

By Fluto Shinzawa
65

Mar. 11, 2025 8:00 am EDT

BRIGHTON, Mass. — On Thursday, following the Boston Bruins’ 3-2 loss to the Carolina Hurricanes, Mason Lohrei boarded the team bus next to the Lenovo Center loading dock. He walked toward his preferred seat.

Something was off.

Lohrei sat down next to the backpack of his usual seatmate. Its owner was outside on the phone.

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Moments later, Justin Brazeau got on the bus, grabbed his backpack and whispered in Lohrei’s ear.

“I’m outta here,” Brazeau told Lohrei.

“Let me give you a hug at least,” Lohrei responded.

By then, the jig was up. Their embrace signaled to everyone else that Brazeau was on the move.

So even though Brazeau had yet to be told the Minnesota Wild were his next team, his ex-teammates lined up to wish him well. They had a charter flight to catch to Tampa, Fla. Brazeau would be exiting the bus and staying behind in Raleigh, N.C., for a next-day flight to Vancouver.

Lohrei had no idea even more wreckage was coming less than 24 hours later.

Lohrei and the Bruins completed their 1 p.m. Friday practice at TGH Ice Plex. He and several teammates planned to get lunch instead of returning on the bus to the team hotel. As they waited in the parking lot for their Uber, they got word of Charlie Coyle being traded to the Colorado Avalanche.

They were still discussing Coyle’s trade at lunch when 3 p.m. came. No other moves had been announced.

“We’re like, ‘All right. That could be it,'” Lohrei recalled.

Ten minutes later, Lohrei learned he was wrong. Brandon Carlo and Brad Marchand were also gone.



Brad Marchand celebrates a goal with now ex-teammate Mason Lohrei. (Brad Penner / USA Today)
“It’s never a position you want to be in, watching some of your best friends get shipped away,” Lohrei said. “Guys that are not just really good players. But five guys I was really close with. Big pieces and big leaders. It’s not fun. It’s something I never want to go through again.”

A day after the era-ending trades, Lohrei played 23:54 in the Bruins’ 4-0 win over the Tampa Bay Lightning. It was the highest workload of the game’s 36 skaters.

General manager Don Sweeney has identified the 24-year-old as a keeper. Perhaps Lohrei could grow into the franchise’s next version of Torey Krug: a first-unit power-play quarterback and credible five-on-five defender. Lohrei, in fact, could be feeding man-advantage pucks to David Pastrnak and sharing even-strength shifts with Charlie McAvoy. In that way, Lohrei projects to be part of a secondary tier under Pastrnak, McAvoy and Jeremy Swayman.

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“When you take away everything else and just think about it that way, it’s really exciting for me,” Lohrei said of being part of the next generation. “I want to be a big part of this team. And I want to be a big part of this team for a really long time. Just keep elevating in all aspects of my game on and off the ice, being a good pro, being a good leader.”

In one way, lopping off Marchand, Carlo and Coyle was the easy part for Sweeney. The heavy lifting comes next. Sweeney has to repopulate future rosters with enough reinforcements to maximize the Pastrnak/McAvoy/Swayman window and guarantee the lost cause that is 2024-25 ends up being meaningful in the future. Otherwise, the season ticket holders being slugged with a 4 percent price increase in 2025-26 will not be happy about digging deeper into their pockets.

“We’re never going to lose hope,” Pastrnak said. “We’re going to fight until the end. But also we are building for something past this season.”

For now, the trouble with Sweeney’s plan is how limited he is for 2025-26. Unless the GM swaps them at the draft this June, acquired assets like the two 2025 second-rounders (Coyle, Trent Frederic) and the 2026 first-round pick (Carlo) will not ripen into NHL players for some time — if at all.

The Bruins were hopeful that Matt Poitras would join Lohrei as part of the support tier. That is not guaranteed.

On deadline day, the Bruins assigned Poitras along with Patrick Brown, Vinni Lettieri, Ian Mitchell and Riley Tufte to Providence to make them eligible for the AHL playoffs. Brown, Lettieri and Mitchell were promptly recalled to play against the Lightning. Poitras was not. A nine-game scoreless streak and a tendency to open himself up for dangerous thumps are just two of the reasons Poitras has been designated an AHLer, perhaps for the rest of 2024-25.

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It is the latest confidence-knocker for a 21-year-old who takes such things seriously. The Bruins, in retrospect, should have left Poitras in Providence all year. Now Poitras has to pick up the pieces from being pushed into situations for which he was not ready. That is his employer’s fault, not his.

“There’s just not a lot of room out there,” interim coach Joe Sacco said. “Ice gets tighter. Space becomes less available. It’s just something he’ll continue to work on in his game, trying to find and create some space for himself out there. He did some good things. But he’s a guy that needs to be playing. He’s not going to be here and not play. He’s going to be playing.”

Lohrei will play a big part in the franchise’s rebuild. Whether Poitras will do the same is unknown.

Case in point: The Bruins once believed Jack Studnicka, a second-round pick like Poitras, would be one of their long-term centers of the future. The 26-year-old Studnicka has spent all of 2024-25 in the AHL.

That is not what the Bruins need. They are desperate for NHL players.

(Top photo of Justin Brazeau: Bob Frid / Imagn Images)

Can the Bruins rebuild in time around David Pastrnak, Charlie McAvoy and Jeremy Swayman?​

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - OCTOBER 26: David Pastrnak #88 of the Boston Bruins and Charlie McAvoy #73 of the Boston Bruins talk before a faceoff against the Toronto Maple Leafsduring the second period at the TD Garden on October 26, 2024 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Brian Fluharty/Getty Images)

By Fluto Shinzawa
134

Mar. 10, 2025

TAMPA, Fla. — Will Zellers is having a very good season for the Green Bay Gamblers. The left-shot forward leads the USHL with 38 goals in 42 games. In 2025-26, Zellers, acquired in the Charlie Coyle trade from the Colorado Avalanche, will be a freshman at North Dakota, a perpetual NCAA contender.

None of this guarantees the 18-year-old Zellers will become a Boston Bruin to form the support staff for David Pastrnak (28), Charlie McAvoy (27) and Jeremy Swayman (26).

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“See him as more of an AHL scorer,” wrote one NHL director of amateur scouting, granted anonymity to discuss a prospect whose rights do not belong to his club. “Will produce in college, but will it translate to pro?”

This is the issue with acquisitions such as Zellers, the 2025 second-round pick from the Trent Frederic trade and the 2026 first-round pick from the Brandon Carlo deal. Their NHL timelines may be mismatched when it comes to the franchise’s contention expectations around its three best players.

As Pastrnak noted after Saturday’s 4-0 win over the Tampa Bay Lightning, the right wing is one of the Bruins’ oldest players. While there are still plenty of points remaining in Pastrnak’s stick, time is ticking when it comes to maximizing No. 88’s window of stardom.

Don Sweeney’s swift and deep carvings at the deadline, in other words, represent only the first stage of the turnaround. The general manager’s next step, be it in free agency or with additional trades before the 2025 NHL Draft, is to reinforce the roster while Pastrnak is still pouring in pucks, McAvoy is thumping bodies and pushing the pace and Swayman is taking goals off the scoreboard.

go-deeper
GO DEEPER

‘Needed to turn the page’: Bruins begin new era with roster-smashing deadline day

For now, Casey Mittelstadt, the primary return in the Coyle transaction, is the player most ready to give his stars a hand. The 26-year-old centered the No. 2 line against the Lightning between fellow Minnesotans Cole Koepke and Vinni Lettieri. The left-shot center was also on the No. 1 power-play unit, primarily working his strong side.

Mittelstadt initiated the Bruins’ first goal by intercepting a Nick Perbix clearing attempt. When Perbix approached to close, Mittelstadt pulled the puck around the defenseman and floated a backhander onto Koepke’s stick. It was a creative, high-speed maneuver by Mittelstadt, whose career high in helpers is 44 with the Buffalo Sabres in 2022-23.

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“Ability to hold onto pucks,” interim coach Joe Sacco said when asked how Mittelstadt caught his attention. “Poise with the puck, especially coming over the blue line a couple times, cutting across in the offensive zone. Just hanging onto pucks, the ability to have some confidence to make some plays in those areas.”

Mittelstadt, the No. 8 pick in 2017, is signed through 2027 at $5.75 million annually. He is a different center than Coyle, the latter an older, heavier and more reliable three-zone presence.

GettyImages-2203458379-scaled.jpg


The Bruins acquired Casey Mittelstadt from the Avalanche in the Charlie Coyle trade. (Mike Carlson / Getty Images)
“A lot of speed today I saw,” Pastrnak said. “Casey’s line had a great game.”

By being the No. 2 center behind Pavel Zacha, Mittelstadt pushed Elias Lindholm to the third line and Matt Poitras out of the lineup against the Lightning.

Lindholm, on the books until 2031 at $7.75 million annually, is on track to be Sweeney’s most miscast signing. The 30-year-old is best suited to be a checking-line center, not the No. 1 pivot the GM signed him to be.

As for Poitras, Sacco did not know the plan for the 20-year-old. Poitras was assigned to Providence on deadline day to be eligible for the AHL playoffs. So were Lettieri, Patrick Brown, Ian Mitchell and Riley Tufte. Lettieri, Brown and Mitchell were then recalled to play against the Lightning. Poitras and Tufte were not. Poitras, once projected to be a top-two center, was riding a nine-game scoreless streak.

Of the other acquisitions, Marat Khusnutdinov, 22, projects to have the highest offensive ceiling. Khusnutdinov was the No. 3 left wing Saturday next to Lindholm and Jakub Lauko. The left-shot forward is quick, shifty and creative with the puck. It’s possible he could become a third-liner. Khusnutdinov’s entry-level contract expires at year’s end.

Lauko, 24, is a depth wing. Henri Jokiharju, who requested a trade from the Buffalo Sabres, will be unrestricted. Time will tell whether the Bruins extend the right-shot defenseman.

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So until Sweeney acquires more help, Zacha, Morgan Geekie and Mason Lohrei will make up the secondary tier. Geekie and Lohrei will be restricted. Geekie will have arbitration rights, which will give him muscle during negotiations.

Geekie will earn a raise over his current $2 million average annual value. This will leave the Bruins with enough cash to be aggressive in free agency.

It cost them last summer when they erred on Lindholm. But perhaps Mitch Marner will be available this time. It’s the kind of impact player Sweeney needs to keep the pain of what he initiated at the deadline from stretching into multiple dark years.

(Top photo of David Pastrnak and Charlie McAvoy: Brian Fluharty / Getty Images)
 
Geekie 4mil
Jokiharju 3.75mil
Lohrei 3mil
Beecher 1mil
Lauko 1mil
Koepke 1mil
Khustandinov 1mil

Thats give you about 20mil to fill the XXXXXX in 2025 summer....whats the XXXXX for you guys? Can we hope to get kind of Marner + Chychrun? Enough money?

XXXXXXX Zacha Pasta
Lindholm Mittlstad Geekie
Khustandinov Poitras Lauko
Beecher Kastelic Koepke
XXXXXXX

Lohrei McAvoy
Lindholm Jokiharju
Zadorov Peeke
XXXXXXX

Sway
Korpi
 
Don sweeney should be extended for more years as the general manager for that trade deadline . What a whopper of a Friday he had and the future looks bright. The cap savings with all the picks and prospects plus a possible nice plug in 2nd line center installed in middlestadt. Plus getting a high energy 3rd 4th line players in marat and lauko just wowsers. I'm still in disbelief that it was Donny on Friday. Before the deadline I thought it would he Frederic for a 2nd and brazzeau for a 4th the end. I'm so happy I was so wrong . Exciting times everyone.
 
Yeah, hits. As in not strike outs. Every guy on that list has brought more good to the Bruins than they cost. Even Max Jones brought back a pick. Koepke has been a good signing. Brazeau returned a bunch of good assets. Nobody is claiming those guys are homeruns, but did the organization benefit from signing them? Yes.

Zadorov is absolutely a hit. On a team that's -28, he's a team leading +14. He plays the most minutes of any D, frequenly playing 24 minutes a night. He has more Dzone starts than any D, and is frequently matched up against the other team's best. He wasn't signed to be a shut down D like Carlo and he wasn't signed to be a play driver like McAvoy. He is supposed to be a Johnny Boychuk / Al Iafrate type and he's been that.

You counted Mike Reilly as a UFA whiff. He was traded for, then re-signed, so if we're counting rentals, then you have to add Taylor Hall and Hampus Lindholm to your scales.

Even if we just look at "top half of the roster players" his misses are Lindholm and Backes. His hits are Ullmark, Zadorov, Geekie, Krug and Vatrano. We're not counting getting Krejci back from Europe. I won't make the argument that Heinen and Haula played top6 roles here on a winning team and produced in their roles.

I just don't see this legacy of failure in free agency that you do. He's signed dozens of guys who've helped this team. He has had some very notable duds, and it does appear he's better at signing young guys than older guys, depth players than top-end talent... but I still wouldn't say he can't do it or he needs to steer clear.

Thanks Bill. Really fine record signing free agents under the current management regime.

I’m hoping E. Lindholm contributes more next season when the new line-up is stabilized and he has the right role.
 
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Geekie 4mil
Jokiharju 3.75mil
Lohrei 3mil
Beecher 1mil
Lauko 1mil
Koepke 1mil

Khustandinov 1mil

Thats give you about 20mil to fill the XXXXXX in 2025 summer....whats the XXXXX for you guys? Can we hope to get kind of Marner + Chychrun? Enough money?

XXXXXXX Zacha Pasta
Lindholm Mittlstad Geekie
Khustandinov Poitras Lauko
Beecher Kastelic Koepke
XXXXXXX

Lohrei McAvoy
Lindholm Jokiharju
Zadorov Peeke
XXXXXXX

Sway
Korpi
Let two of those scrubs go and you would have the 1.5/2 mil per you needed to make Marchand stay. Why pay a 37 year old franchise stalwart 6.9 per when you can divvy it up between 3-4 ham and eggers?

Hoping they sign Ehlers maybe for that top LW spot. That bottom six is not good either, prob will need more.
 
Geekie 4mil
Jokiharju 3.75mil
Lohrei 3mil
Beecher 1mil
Lauko 1mil
Koepke 1mil
Khustandinov 1mil

Thats give you about 20mil to fill the XXXXXX in 2025 summer....whats the XXXXX for you guys? Can we hope to get kind of Marner + Chychrun? Enough money?

XXXXXXX Zacha Pasta
Lindholm Mittlstad Geekie
Khustandinov Poitras Lauko
Beecher Kastelic Koepke
XXXXXXX

Lohrei McAvoy
Lindholm Jokiharju
Zadorov Peeke
XXXXXXX

Sway
Korpi
I did a plan the other day that was a bit different.
I had Geekie and Lohrei getting 4.0 each, Lauko 1.25, Khustandinov 1.75, Koepke at 1.5 and Beecher, at 1.0 and I left Jokiharu off.

That comes in at a tick over 80m, giving about 15 of cap space for the XXXX spots.

XXXX- Zacha - Pasta
Geekie/XXXX - Middlestadt - Geekie/XXXX
Khustandinov - Lindholm - Poitras
Lauko - Kastelic - Koepke

McAvoy - Lindholm
Zadorov - Peeke
Lohrei - XXXX

Sway
Korpi

Ehlers for 8.0
Hall/Marchand/Veteran Winger 4.0
Third Pair D 3.0. Or go with Mitchell/Callahan and spend more on the forwards.
 
Let two of those scrubs go and you would have the 1.5/2 mil per you needed to make Marchand stay. Why pay a 37 year old franchise stalwart 6.9 per when you can divvy it up between 3-4 ham and eggers?

Hoping they sign Ehlers maybe for that top LW spot. That bottom six is not good either, prob will need more.
I'm surprised more people aren't scared of Ehlers...he's made of glass so I'm not sure I'd give him a long term deal
 
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I think this free agent class coming up sucks for what they need and they shouldn’t spend just to spend. Would rather trade for players or get some 1 year stop gaps and wait for the strong class the following year. Some of them will sign but I’d bet with the cap going up some will go to market.
 
I'm surprised more people aren't scared of Ehlers...he's made of glass so I'm not sure I'd give him a long term deal
Fair. I am afraid of every UFA after this past summer.

This is what I would do and it will be laughed at but I go for bargain basement skill guys like Skinner, Beauvillier, Sprong and Holtz. MAYBE you catch lightning in a bottle with one and flip him deadline. No more Tuftes, Patrick Brown and Jones and that crap.
 
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I'm surprised more people aren't scared of Ehlers...he's made of glass so I'm not sure I'd give him a long term deal

I thought that too, but I looked it up and I have him playing 83% of their games since his first full season.

To be fair the last few year have seen him miss a bunch.

He played 82 in 23/24 but only 62 in 21/22 and 45 in 22/23…this year he’s missed 9.
 
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I thought that too, but I looked it up and I have him playing 83% of their games since his first full season.

To be fair the last few year have seen him miss a bunch.

He played 82 in 23/24 but only 62 in 21/22 and 45 in 22/23…this year he’s missed 9.
I feel like the problem is when he misses, it's long term. Maybe it was just some bad luck, which does happen

Fair. I am afraid of every UFA after this past summer.

This is what I would do and it will be laughed at but I go for bargain basement skill guys like Skinner, Beauvillier, Sprong and Holtz. MAYBE you catch lightning in a bottle with one and flip him deadline. No more Tuftes, Patrick Brown and Jones and that crap.
A lot of the top tier UFAs this offseason have me worried. I like the players available, but I would be inclined to pass on the type of contracts that Bennett/Ehlers/Boeser are going to get.

I either go all in on Marner or do what you're suggest and try to find the next Geekie out there.
 
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I thought that too, but I looked it up and I have him playing 83% of their games since his first full season.

To be fair the last few year have seen him miss a bunch.

He played 82 in 23/24 but only 62 in 21/22 and 45 in 22/23…this year he’s missed 9.
Yeah he’s my big fish too. If they sign him and moved Middlestadt to left wing that’s a pretty good top six.

Ehlers-Zacha-Pasta
Middlestadt-Lindholm-Geekie
 
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Bruins should have gone after wingers last off season, rather than overpay for Lindholm, that would have carried through this season. Bruins, still have a need for a center, but also they have not solved their wing problem, they needed one before DeBrusk left and he was not replaced, so after giving Lindholm a huge over payment, giving up DeBrusk for nothing, what are you left with..............ask me I would say a big f***n headache
Agree that was bad asset management.
 
His name is Sweenius!

Man I'm excited for this stretch, the draft, free agency, and next year!

Maybe now people understand why I called the other day one of the best days for us in the last few decades...
 
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ok Dom, tell me how we afford Jokiharju in a sane world. Surely he'll want 3-4 years. I know we don't lack the cap space, but how the heck do we do that and get scoring up front?

My god with him on the 3rd pairing next year? Savage
 
Geekie 4mil
Jokiharju 3.75mil
Lohrei 3mil
Beecher 1mil
Lauko 1mil
Koepke 1mil
Khustandinov 1mil

Thats give you about 20mil to fill the XXXXXX in 2025 summer....whats the XXXXX for you guys? Can we hope to get kind of Marner + Chychrun? Enough money?

XXXXXXX Zacha Pasta
Lindholm Mittlstad Geekie
Khustandinov Poitras Lauko
Beecher Kastelic Koepke
XXXXXXX

Lohrei McAvoy
Lindholm Jokiharju
Zadorov Peeke
XXXXXXX

Sway
Korpi
How in the world are you getting 20 left?? This roster and signings leaves closer to 13.25mil as structured I’m pretty sure. I’d be pleasantly shocked if Geekie was only 4 and not 5. Lohrei feels a little low.
 
I think this free agent class coming up sucks for what they need and they shouldn’t spend just to spend. Would rather trade for players or get some 1 year stop gaps and wait for the strong class the following year. Some of them will sign but I’d bet with the cap going up some will go to market.
I was eyeballing Rangers centres because I know McAvoy would waive for them, and yuck they are all in 30s now.No dice so I agree with you.
 

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