The Bruins are playing passionless, mediocre hockey, and it’s getting tough to watch - The Boston Globe
With two points to be had, the score at 2-2 after 40:00, the hometown team produced a bagel on home ice with zero shots for the final 20:00.
www.bostonglobe.com
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For those of us who’ve witnessed upward of two-thirds of Bruins hockey history — the good, the godly, the bad, the ugly — this win-one, lose-one model is taking on the feel of the early- and mid-’60s Boston brand. That was the pre-Bobby Orr, pre-Channel 38, pre-Jeremy Jacobs, pre-Jumbotron iteration.
They were not good times, including a franchise-record eight consecutive playoff DNQs, the last of those including Orr’s 1966-67 rookie season (reminder: even the sainted No. 4, then only 18 years old, couldn’t lift the deadweight on that roster).
Oh, those days were damned entertaining, absolutely, because of standard Original Six mayhem: big fights, bucket-of-blood donnybrooks, the ice sheet covered in abandoned sticks, gloves, and sweaters. Those days are gone for good — for reasons good, bad, and political — but the passion around the play had a way of making up for the mediocre, sometimes passionless play of bad Bruins teams.
We’re seeing far too much of the mediocre and passionless right now in 2024. It’s a disturbing retro look. The 20:00 bagel on Saturday felt like a defining moment.
The final word on the latest loss — their ninth in 16 outings (7-7-2) to date — belonged to coach Jim Montgomery:
“We just weren’t good enough.”
Follow-up podcast with KPD talking to Jimmy Murphy and Pierre McGuire