Former Bruins Brad Marchand traded to Florida, Brandon Carlo to Toronto

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For the past 25 years, I've been playing ball hockey with a bunch of guys on Monday nights. Last night, I scored a goal that was 100% Marchand-esque. The ball got turned over in the "neutral zone" (in gymnasium terms), I scooped it up and zoomed down the left-wing side, then ripped a wrist shot over the goalie's left shoulder, top shelf. Then I chirped Matt Cooke, for good measure.

That one's for you Marchy.
 
Beautiful.

One, all the haters around the League can go f*** themselves. Yes, Brad Marchand is and always has been an absolute pest on the ice but off the ice the man is class and humility.

Two, can we please now put to rest the notion that Sweeney showed disrespect and lack of loyalty to Brad? He doesn't sound at all like a man who feels he has been disrespected.

I still don't think he comes home -- I think the allure of chasing another Cup will be too tempting for a guy at his stage of his career. But I've been wrong before.
Also doesn't look like a guy who would not sign a 3 year 18 mil dollar extension. He's not leaving over a few million dollars. EF got it wrong IMO.

Buccigross screwed up the numbers in an attempt to be first. All other media outlets are reporting the aav is his current salary.

The Bruins didn’t lowball or screw him over.
His current salary is 4 million dollars. Could easily see EF missing that part and going with the 6.1
 
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Also doesn't look like a guy who would not sign a 3 year 18 mil dollar extension. He's not leaving over a few million dollars. EF got it wrong IMO.


His current salary is 4 million dollars. Could easily see EF missing that part and going with the 6.1
That could absolutely be the case. Lots of media takes have gone out that certainly appear to be wrong -- but not many "mea culpas" on that front.

I guess I'm going old school and stick to listening to the two key parties: Sweeney and Marchand.

Both showed respect and admiration. Both sad he's still not in Boston. But both acknowledge that it is a business at the end of the day.

Personally I'm not concerned or interested in efforts by Friedman, Bucci, and others as to how the situation evolved. They will never know for sure, but while they flail away in the media and speculate they rile up fans to take one of two positions: Marchand is greedy dreamer who is over his skis or Sweeney and management are a bunch of stone cold baby assassins. Neither is true and like all things in life very few are extreme black and white -- although that's clearly the world we live in today.

IMO people need to rewatch Sweeney's presser, then rewatch Marchy's comments, make their own decisions, and stop feeding on the shitty smelling chum that the "so called" inside media types are very sloppily ladling overboard.
 
Buccigross screwed up the numbers in an attempt to be first. All other media outlets are reporting the aav is his current salary.

The Bruins didn’t lowball or screw him over.


And unfortunately like many situations in the press, this will be the thing people remember, and for years we will hear about how evil Sweeney and Mr Burns tried to screw over Brad and insult him with their offer
 
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got asked to breakfast by the grumpy old guys from my gym ~ I’m sure we will talk Bruins & Marchand

Can someone send me the link Marchand or his agent Arnott said tbd Bruins humiliated and low balled him. Prefer audio. Thx
 
"Bucci" is an idiot and has been for a long time. His schtick got old about 27 years ago. He did have a good two year run before that though.
Yeh he’s not good at understanding what @ means

Brad hopefully signs with Florida. East coast will allow his kids to watch a period on TV before bed and Florida comes in 2X a season so they can get to see him live - hopefully Florida home during February school vacation.

Disney, see dad play - works out well
 
I don't think it would ever feel right, even if he was in a Canes jersey one day, to see Marchand in anything but the black and gold.
 
If Brad was willing to do the Chara/Recchi one year extension approach, this could have worked well. 3 years is too much term for a guy his age, it’s that simple.
 
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That could absolutely be the case. Lots of media takes have gone out that certainly appear to be wrong -- but not many "mea culpas" on that front.

I guess I'm going old school and stick to listening to the two key parties: Sweeney and Marchand.

Both showed respect and admiration. Both sad he's still not in Boston. But both acknowledge that it is a business at the end of the day.

Personally I'm not concerned or interested in efforts by Friedman, Bucci, and others as to how the situation evolved. They will never know for sure, but while they flail away in the media and speculate they rile up fans to take one of two positions: Marchand is greedy dreamer who is over his skis or Sweeney and management are a bunch of stone cold baby assassins. Neither is true and like all things in life very few are extreme black and white -- although that's clearly the world we live in today.

IMO people need to rewatch Sweeney's presser, then rewatch Marchy's comments, make their own decisions, and stop feeding on the shitty smelling chum that the "so called" inside media types are very sloppily ladling overboard.
agreed to me it was a "I asked for x, went down to y and they stayed the same" Mutual respect for sure. Not a fan of the Jacobs release though
 
Brad will be fine. We all move on from jobs we were at for a long time.

To me passing on a 3/18 deal just makes absolutely zero sense. If true bad on him, but I have to see more than EF saying it was so when others said it wasn't. He was paid 4 million this year. That's his salary and would make way more sense if that's what was turned down.

Regardless I wanted him out of here and didn't want him at any price as it was time to move on....Seems way more people agree with that now because they actually did trade him.
If Friedman is correct he passed on $18.375; if it was his number $6.3 M it was $18.9 M

observation/common sense intersection

Brad is still a very good player and Bruins second best forward

He’s the captain and one of faces of Franchise

7 M seems about right so to me offering $6.125 seems meh ….kind of a low ball but ok

But 3 M ???? They might as well put dog shit in a paper bag light it on fire outside his front door and ring the doorbell
 

Brad Marchand is officially a Panther, ditching his familiar Black-and-Gold garb for his first meeting with reporters in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. There he stood Monday morning, joking about the upside of the new red quarter zip he wore instead.

“It brings out my eyes,” he said.

Never one to pass up the chance for a laugh, Marchand had a much harder time addressing what it’s done to his heart.
Or ours.

In a literal sense, Marchand’s departure represents the end of an era, officially the roster’s final link to the last Stanley Cup win in 2011. Marchand leaves just as much in his metaphorical wake, blazing a trail across 16 Bruins seasons that won’t ever be duplicated.

Or forgotten.

It was one hell of a rollicking adventure, a no-hands-on-the-wheel, helmet-off joyride that took us from the depths of head-scratching frustration to the heights of thrill-seeking celebration, like throwing your arms to the skies from the front seat of the roller coaster. If the wing never quite ascended to the franchise-defining stature of his teammates at top-line center (Patrice Bergeron, David Krejci), defense (Zdedo Chara), or goaltender (Tuukka Rask), he was the perfect sidecar to their brand identity, an everyman whose small stature barely contained the raging competitive fires within.

He became a part of Boston’s fabric, declaring as much in his farewell message to fans, revealing it during his Q&A down south. Did you catch the slip Marchand made as he talked about the immediate vibe shift he felt being around a group deep in pre-playoff intensity, about the rejuvenation he said it brought out in him, about the respect he has for what the defending Cup champion Panthers have built across the past few seasons?

“They’ve bounced us the last couple years in the playoffs — well they bounced the Bruins the last couple years,” Marchand said, self-correcting.

“It would have been incredible to be in Boston, be in one place my entire career,” he said, “but I’ve always had the attitude that you need to be grateful for every opportunity. The gratitude piece does not get lost on me, to be able to play in this league. When the trade happened I was disappointed and I was sad but I’m still extremely grateful I got to come to an incredible place, an incredible team, a very, very, very competitive team. That’s what you want. Ultimately we chase the Stanley Cup. You want a chance to play for that every single year.”

For the bulk of Marchand’s 16 seasons, the Bruins did just that. They competed. It all went bad this season, forcing general manager Don Sweeney and team president Cam Neely to pay the price for years of bad drafts and failed free agent signings.

But when it was good, it was glorious, with Marchand in the mix of it all. A scintillating playoff performance in his first full season, 11 goals and eight assists on the way to beating the Canucks for the 2011 Cup. And when it was hard, it was heartbreaking, with Marchand in the mix of it all. A devastating Game 7 loss at home to the Blues in the 2019 Cup Final, a game in which Marchand’s early exit on a line change led to a backbreaking goal in the first period’s final seconds.

But compelling? Always.

Marchand did it all. He is who he is, and even as he joins a locker room already led by strong personalities in Matthew Tkachuk and Sam Bennett, he isn’t planning on turtling anytime soon.

“I’m not coming in to step on toes, but I’m also not going to change who I am,” he said. “I have an outgoing personality. When I get in the room or on the ice, my competitiveness takes over. I get a little emotional at times.”

In the Hollywood script of this story, Marchand’s already inspiring journey from instigator-in-chief to respected team captain would be capped by a triumphant return home. While he will be with the Panthers when they visit TD Garden Tuesday night, he won’t be on the ice, shelved instead by an upper-body injury that could keep him out for a few more weeks. Such is the reminder that he is 36 years old, in the last year of the one big contract he already earned (eight years, $49 million), and well aware he is so much closer to his career finish line that he is from the start.

“You never know how long you have in this league, never know when your last day is going to be, and you want to make the most of it,” he said. “So, yeah, it would have been great to be able to stay and play out my career there, but this is an incredible opportunity.”

So he’ll make that familiar walk into the building, take the unfamiliar turn to the visiting locker room, find the former Bruins teammates who were on the road when the trade went down, share some hugs, and more than likely, shed some tears, just like the ones he had to choke back Monday.

“It’ll be nice to see the guys and kind of say goodbye,” he said. “It’s great to go home. It’ll be very weird to be there as part of an opposing team. It’s nice but it’ll be sad too.”

The end of an era.
 
Wrong. Marchand's cap hit is $6.125 mil

Lou said his salary for the year though.

That was $4M.

IMG_4789.jpeg
 
If Friedman is correct he passed on $18.375; if it was his number $6.3 M it was $18.9 M

observation/common sense intersection

Brad is still a very good player and Bruins second best forward

He’s the captain and one of faces of Franchise

7 M seems about right so to me offering $6.125 seems meh ….kind of a low ball but ok

But 3 M ???? They might as well put dog shit in a paper bag light it on fire outside his front door and ring the doorbell
yeah no way he got offered 3mil. That's insulting

If he wanted 8, and then game down to 7 and they offered 6.3 then bad job by him IMO if he really wanted to stay a Bruin. He will prob get 4/24 on the open market but still.
 
Brad Marchand discusses Bruins contract talks, defends Don Sweeney following trade

"I am grateful beyond words for everything that that organization has done for me.”​

Brad Marchand — having shed his black-and-gold garb for red Panthers gear — spoke to the media on Monday for the first time since getting dealt to Florida just ahead of Friday’s NHL trade deadline.

While most of the questions posted to the former Bruins captain in Sunrise revolved around the opportunity in front of him this postseason and his ability to mesh in a dressing room filled with former antagonists like Sam Bennett and Matthew Tkachuk, Marchand also reflected on his 16-year run with the Bruins — as well as defend Boston’s management after they made the call to trade Marchand.

Both Marchand and Bruins general manager Don Sweeney said all of the right things in the months and days leading up to Friday’s deadline in terms of making Marchand — a pending free agent — a Bruin for life.

But with both parties unable to come to terms on a new contract and an underachieving Bruins roster slipping out of postseason contention, Boston ultimately made the call to deal Marchand at the 11th hour — sending him to the reigning Stanley Cup champions in exchange for a conditional 2027 second-round pick.

Amid a report from Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman of a “face-to-face meeting” between Marchand and the Bruins that “really hurt Marchand” when a new contract couldn’t be struck, Marchand defended Boston’s management group on Monday.



“We obviously were working to try to get an extension done, and Sweens said it the other day, there was a gap. … “We both felt that we had a position, and ultimately we didn’t get it done,” Marchand said. “But I do want to kind of clean up, because I’ve seen the last few days, just the narrative that’s been going around. I want to kind of set the record straight, like I don’t have any ill will towards the management group, towards Sweens, Cam [Neely] or Charlie [Jacobs].

“I’ve had an incredible run in that organization, and I’m extremely proud just how things went there. So yeah, it was very disappointing that things didn’t get done, just because obviously I love the organization. I wanted to stay there. But at the end of the day, I also know that business is business, and every player has a shelf life, regardless if that’s when we want it to be or not.”

While both the Bruins and Marchand had to contend with both term and payout with his new contract, Friedman noted on Monday’s “32 Thoughts” podcast that he didn’t believe Boston was offering up a pay cut as part of their negotiations.

“The other thing I do believe, at the end, and nobody has disputed this to me, I do not believe the Bruins were offering a pay cut,” Friedman said. “His current AAV is $6.125 [million]. I’m certain the offer was not below that. Now, how much more than that it was, I don’t know, but I am certain the offer was not below that. Marchand was not being asked to take a pay cut.

“However, there was a gap. There was a sizable gap. Nobody out there would confirm to me what the gap was, but I think that the Bruins reached the line. It’s kind of the same thing as the Lightning with [Steven] Stamkos. They reached a line and they said, ‘This is as far as we’re going to go.’”

It remains to be seen what type of contract Marchand will command in free agency this offseason, especially if it’s similar to the $6.125 million payout that’s currently on the books. Some of it might depend on how the 36-year-old winger fares during the postseason in Florida — with Marchand’s projected return from an upper-body injury still uncertain.

But Marchand — who will travel with the Panthers up to Boston for their game on Tuesday night at TD Garden — stressed that his unexpected change in scenery is a byproduct of the business side of the NHL.

“If we were in the playoffs at the point in time, we’d probably be having a much different conversation, and I know that,” Marchand said of Friday’s trade. “It’s something we had talked about previously, but we weren’t — and at that point, very tough decisions have to be made. And the one thing that I always respect, I told Cam and Sweens this — they have a job to do, and they have to make the best decisions for the team. And I completely understand where the decisions need to be made.

“Yeah, sometimes they work against you, but that’s why I believe Sweens is one of, if not the best, general managers in the league. I watched him for a very long time excel at his job, and for those who are in the organization and know the effort that he puts in every day and how hard he works — no one would question where his loyalty lies, and that is to do what’s what’s best for the team every day. And when you’re part of that group, you feel it sometimes.

“And like I said, every guy has their day and it’s obviously not what you want to have happen. But I don’t hold that against him or the group, it’s just part of life. It’s part of the game, but also he did create this opportunity for me to be here. So I am grateful beyond words for everything that that organization has done for me.”
 
I haven't seen it. Going to look now.

I'm cringing though.
It's not overly bad, just shows how thin skinned they are at times.

We're gonna be debating the "Did the Bruins do Marchand wrong" question for the next 3 years, aren't we?

Can't wait.
To me they didn't come close to doing him wrong IMO whether they offered 4 mil per or 6 mil per or whatever million per. It was time to move on.
 
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Not me. He is pretty much done, I did not want him signed and wanted him traded so no debate for me.
It was time to move on for sure. If they could've gone a year at a time with him for slightly less money than he was already making, fine.

I'd rather trade him for the 2nd rounder than see him here for 3-4 years at 6+ mil
 
What difference does it make?

Does Marchand sound angry or betrayed?

Tell me, outside of emotional attachment (which Brad just gave us all a master class on how to handle), do you think that signing Brad for 3x$6M or more is the best move this team can make given where it is right now after what they decided (courageously IMO) to do at the TDL?
I know it a 35+contract but Brad is in shape so yes I think it is a better move. It is certainly better than giving him away.
 

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