Post-Game Talk: GAME 31 - Sleeping in Seattle - Kraken 5 BRUINS 1

Fenway

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Sep 26, 2007
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Time On Ice: BOS

Time On Ice: SEA

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SEATTLE — The long-and-winding road delivered the Bruins to another dead end Thursday night at Climate Pledge Arena.

Paced by a pair of Oliver Bjorkstrand goals, and the steady work of Philipp Grubauer (33 saves) in net, the Kraken dismissed the Bruins, 5-1, leaving the Black-Gold 0-for-2 on their five-game road trip.
That’s 0-for-2 with only two goals scored.

The Bruins will be in Vancouver Saturday night for stop No. 3 on their five-game Western swing.
The Kraken took an early 2-0 lead, Bjorkstrand connecting on a power-play goal only 24 seconds into play, followed by Jaden Schwartz at even strength.


With only 5:14 off the clock, the Bruins were faced with a two-goal uphill climb that they couldn’t erase.
After scoring only once in the road trip opener Tuesday night (an 8-1 shellacking in Winnipeg) the Bruins scored the lone goal in the second period when Brad Marchand scored on a penalty shot at the 10:28 mark.

Marchand was awarded the free chance when Brandon Montour, the one-time UMass-Amherst backliner, was charged with covering the puck in the crease as Marchand attempted to jam the puck over the goal line at the left post.

On his freebie, Marchand barreled in alone, faked a forehand shot in the low slot, and then slid a sleight-of-hand backhander through goalie Grubaeur’s five-hole. It was Marchand’s seventh career penalty-shot goal, tying him with Pavel Bure, the Russian Rocket, for the league’s all-time lead. The L’il Ball o’Hate previously was tied at No. 2 with Mario Lemieux.

The Kraken, currently out of the playoff mix in the West, put it out of reach in the third on goals by Vince Dunn and Bjorkstrand’s second of the night, boosting the lead to 4-1. Jared McCann closed out the scoring with an empty-netter with 1:54 to go.

Joonas Korpisalo made 16 saves on 20 shots in the Bruins' net.
The Bruins lost the services of Elias Lindholm midway through the second period. The underperforming center (31 games: 3-10–13) who signed a $54.25 million deal in July as an unrestricted free agent, sustained an upper-body injury.

If Lindholm can’t suit up Saturday night against the Canucks, the Bruins on Friday might consider calling up Matty Poitras from AHL Providence. Assigned to there a month ago, Poitras has wielded a hot stick the last two weeks, and the Bruins now are desperate for offensive pop.

The Bruins, who began the trip after winning a season-high four straight games, now stand 7-4-0 since Joe Sacco took over as interim coach upon the dismissal of Jim Montgomery.

The loss left the Bruins with a 6-7-1 record on the road this season.
 

Aussie Bruin

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Not sure what change is needed. Nor how missing the playoffs will help answer that question.

I'm assuming they will have a new full time coach next season. A new system to go with it. But that's no guarantee to work. I'm certainly not up for a complete, 5-year plan rebuild that could turn into a 10-year drought.

We differ on this. I'm totally here for a full rebuild, even while fully acknowledging that the odds are high that the whole thing will end in failure. I enjoy the process, the chase, seeing kids emerge and develop, the sense of unknown. Much prefer that to staggering on in mediocrity. Been ready for it since 2021. Then Monty's first season happened and I thought my forecasting had been wrong. Turns out it was instead perhaps just premature. For all that, don't begrudge Sweeney trying to keep the party going, because despite how it ended the 22/23 season was a hell of a lot of fun.

But that's past now, and the reality of the slump that almost all franchises have to go through post a long run at/near the top is finally upon us. So what next? Can a new coach, system and roster shakeup alone turn this team back into a true contender? They will most likely try, but I'm very doubtful about it.

As to preferring to miss playoffs, it doesn't make any major difference, I agree, just think it will force management's hand a bit more in having to make some bigger/deeper changes, potentially including within the front office. Less scope to kid themselves that things are more or less ok.
 

Bradely

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Sep 17, 2021
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Habs are selling their reconstruction process.... tv show etc..... At some point, reconstruction process might become what fans are searching league wide, youth, new faces... new vibe, new new new of whatever and that might be a good team seller now and in the future.

I don't know what is wrong..... but it just can not only be the lack of talent. I don't buy that. For sure Sway is ......well different than last year. I don't care about money... but the guy is currently NOT delivering.

The last two games, the outcome was catastrophic. The Jets game was simply painful....
 

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