Management Montgomery fired - Sacco named interim coach Sacco - Blues hire Monty

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Don Sweeney has been the Bruins’ general manager since 2015. On Tuesday, he fired his third head coach since taking the job, again looking for a spark to awaken a slumbering, stumbling team.

No argument here after a 20-game sample of hideous hockey.

But here’s the hard truth Sweeney also faces: If this move doesn’t work, the next ax that falls has to be on him. There’s no fourth strike in baseball, nor should there be for coaching changes.

As Sweeney took his place in front of the media Wednesday, he took on all questions with candor and calmness. He was absolutely right in calling out his players, challenging them to play better, whether by a standard they set in Boston in previous years or whether by the standard they set elsewhere to earn big free agent deals to join the team. But as the architect of a roster that is missing key pieces and struggling to jell with the ones that are here, as the man behind too many unproductive drafts and not enough trade or draft capital left to work with, Sweeney is just as much on the hook for this mess as the man he fired.

This time it was Jim Montgomery taking the fall in favor of Joe Sacco, just as Bruce Cassidy once took the fall in favor of Montgomery, just as Claude Julien had been replaced by Cassidy. No surprise Sweeney went back to the same playbook, given its history of immediate payoff: Cassidy getting the Bruins to Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Final within two years, Montgomery winning a Presidents’ Trophy in his first season behind the bench.

Twenty games into this season, it’s obvious something had to change. The Bruins’ ugly stew of inconsistency (from period to period and from game to game), penchant for penalties, lack of execution, and overall malaise sealed Montgomery’s fate.

Now, we see if firing the coach works again.

“You hope you’re going to get a bounce of some kind. That’s what you expect. I certainly expect it,” Sweeney said. “I know what the pride level of our players is. I expect them to take ownership of where they are now and improve.

“If it doesn’t and we need to make personnel changes, that’s going to fall on me. Organizationally, it’ll be the same way.”

In other words, he knows who’s next in line for the chopping block.

“We’re always on notice,” Sweeney said. “The results are in this business, that’s just what you accept, when you take the job you know that you’re on notice. When you make recommended changes they could say no and you might be the change. You face that.

“You make decisions based on your experience level and what you need to do for your hockey club. That’s how I do the job. I’m appreciative they still let me make those decisions. I’m disappointed that that wasn’t moving forward with Monty.”

Sweeney could have done so much more to help the now-former coach, not the least of which avoiding the protracted and painful offseason negotiation with Jeremy Swayman. As the GM pinpointed training camp as showing the first signs of trouble, describing it as “flatlined,” the absence of Swayman was a huge part of the problem. If the Bruins were eventually going to capitulate and reset the NHL’s goalie salary market, why wait so long?

And even before spending the money on Swayman, who has yet to rediscover the shutdown form we saw in last season’s playoffs, it sure seems Sweeney could have made better use of the cash he freed up by trading Montgomery’s best security blanket, fellow goalie Linus Ullmark. Neither Elias Lindholm nor Nikita Zadorov are living up to their combined $84.25 million in free agent contracts, with very little hope they might duplicate the best free agent addition in this team’s recent memory, Zdeno Chara.

With the towering defenseman and former captain in mind, it’s hard not to see how unable Sweeney has been to re-create the core that established the Bruins’ identity for grit and toughness — Chara, Patrice Bergeron, David Krejci, Tuukka Rask. Some decent attempts have come and gone, from Rick Nash to Tyler Bertuzzi to Dmitry Orlov to Taylor Hall, but these latest swings on Lindholm and Zadorov so far look like major misses, though the GM isn’t ready to admit it.

“I don’t think there’s a concern they’re not a good fit, they have not played to the level we expected them to,” Sweeney said. “From a fit standpoint, the identification that those are players that will help us, I’m not second-guessing where they are right now, I’m second-guessing the performance of them and their group.”

Again, absolutely right to insist they are not alone.

“It’s hard to wrap your head around the fact that you’ve got upwards of 10 players off of what their norms would be, not even their high sides from a year ago. That’s concerning,” Sweeney said. “We’re not executing. And that again falls back on the players in a lot of ways.”

But it also falls back on him. Historically, the Bruins have fired only two GMs in the half-century of Jacobs family ownership, Mike O’Connell and Peter Chiarelli, the latter getting replaced by his then-assistant, Sweeney. Team president Cam Neely, a former Bruins teammate of Sweeney’s, might not relish the idea of firing his friend. But if not him, then who? You can’t fire an entire roster.

“These guys are more than capable of playing and executing and performing,” Sweeney said. ”That’s what we want to find. We want to find out what this team is capable of. Sixty games to go, that’s a lot of season. But you can’t stay in neutral.”

And you can’t wait forever. Not for a coach, and maybe for these Bruins, not for the GM.
 
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Aussie Bruin

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I agree Dan. I didn’t start out as a big Sweeney guy, and still wouldn’t say I’m a fanboy, but I have to admit the guy has done his job. Best record in the league since he was hired. G7 of the Cup Final, GM of the Year… There was going to be a price to pay for going all in for 15 years and that’s the thin prospect pool. Yes, his off season acquisitions have struggled thru 20 games and that could be really bad, but it’s a little early in the game for me to make that determination.

Even if this team misses the playoffs. I think his track record of icing consistently strong teams for 9 years should buy him the opportunity to right the ship. For me to think it's time for Sweeney to go... it would probably take back to back DNQ’s and a team that looks like it can’t climb out of the hole. That’s what Chiarelli’s teams looked like when he was let go.

Sure, Sweeney's done a good job, a very good one in some ways. But that's not a definitive argument in itself for keeping him. Even had the Bruins landed a Cup in 2019, or even in 2023, it still wouldn't be. People in senior, high pressure positions wear out and grow stale. Every GM has weaknesses. Don's had a pretty long run, and now he's put together a roster that is looking very problematic. How much rope does he get to sort that out and fix it?

The arguments to keep him because he's generally competent, or because there's no obvious replacement, or because the new guy might be worse, are all hyper-conservative. Very Bruins, but not really a good thing. Sometimes you need to take a risk and aim higher. I'm not saying Sweeney should definitely be shown the door. We have to see how the rest of this season plays out. If this roster really ends up being a bust, then I think serious questions have to be asked about whether he's still the right person to start the repair job, whatever that looks like. Keeping him purely on his past record isn't sufficient justification IMO.
 

PlayMakers

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Sure, Sweeney's done a good job, a very good one in some ways. But that's not a definitive argument in itself for keeping him. Even had the Bruins landed a Cup in 2019, or even in 2023, it still wouldn't be. People in senior, high pressure positions wear out and grow stale. Every GM has weaknesses. Don's had a pretty long run, and now he's put together a roster that is looking very problematic. How much rope does he get to sort that out and fix it?

The arguments to keep him because he's generally competent, or because there's no obvious replacement, or because the new guy might be worse, are all hyper-conservative. Very Bruins, but not really a good thing. Sometimes you need to take a risk and aim higher. I'm not saying Sweeney should definitely be shown the door. We have to see how the rest of this season plays out. If this roster really ends up being a bust, then I think serious questions have to be asked about whether he's still the right person to start the repair job, whatever that looks like. Keeping him purely on his past record isn't sufficient justification IMO.
The argument to keep him isn't that he's "generally competent." The argument to keep him is that he's done a really good job. Not an okay job. First in points since he was hired nine years ago. Not top5, or top10, first. Built a team that got to G7 of the Cup Finals. Built the best regular season team in NHL history. GM of the Year. Highly regarded around the league and considered one of the best in the league.

No GM is perfect and you can list mistakes for any GM but at the end of the day, does he win? Does he ice teams that can contend? Do people want to sign here? Do players want to stay here? By any reasonable metric he has done a very good job.

This year's team may stink. They might miss the playoffs, or get swept in the first round, but I still don't toss out 9 good years and a proven track record because of 1 bad one. Everybody swings and misses occasionally. I'd need to see 2 bad years, a trend of things going south, to think that he's no longer good at his job.
 

GordonHowe

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They simply have to get over their aversion to driving to the net (Brazeau and the 4th line are about the only ones who do it on a regular basis) and to shooting the puck because this is the only way they're going to be able to score and win games.

They were also instructed by you know who to prioritize shot "quality over quantity."

Genius.

The predictable result:

Far fewer shots on goal in the 2024 playoffs. Or, recently, none at all in the third period; overthinking rather than reacting automatically, intuitively in developing plays and shooting lanes; comical over passing in the offensive zone, particularly on the power play; therefore, a tentative, passive, risk averse offensive attack.

A recipe for success.

Put the puck on the net and good things will happen.
 

chizzler

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I’d like to see Sweeney without Neely over him. Who’s better than him? Pittsburgh hires Dubas. How could that be with the disaster in Toronto. He trades for Karlsson and buries the team. It’s one example. He makes mistakes but he’s had a good run. Not sure there’s better out there.
 

Aussie Bruin

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The argument to keep him isn't that he's "generally competent." The argument to keep him is that he's done a really good job. Not an okay job. First in points since he was hired nine years ago. Not top5, or top10, first. Built a team that got to G7 of the Cup Finals. Built the best regular season team in NHL history. GM of the Year. Highly regarded around the league and considered one of the best in the league.

No GM is perfect and you can list mistakes for any GM but at the end of the day, does he win? Does he ice teams that can contend? Do people want to sign here? Do players want to stay here? By any reasonable metric he has done a very good job.

This year's team may stink. They might miss the playoffs, or get swept in the first round, but I still don't toss out 9 good years and a proven track record because of 1 bad one. Everybody swings and misses occasionally. I'd need to see 2 bad years, a trend of things going south, to think that he's no longer good at his job.

I'll happily concede he's done a 'really good' job - basically said as much in my first sentence. But it doesn't change my position. Cassidy did really good for years too, then things started to go sour and he got fired. Monty, not as long, but he had an outstanding W/L record over 2 years. Then things got rocky, fired. Why should Sweeney be exempt from a similar logic and the same fate?

As much as Don's done well in many areas, the basic purpose and goal of his role was to win a Cup. When he took over, he had the pieces to work with to make that happen. Sure the roster was coming off a comparatively down year, but an excellent core was still there and just needed a bit of a boost. Anything less than a Cup would be a failure, IMO. I know how close they got, I acknowledge that it's the players who have to get it done at the end of the day, I admit it's hard. But bottom line is they didn't win. For all his achievements and strengths, he hasn't done what he was hired to do. Nearly a decade of opportunities, didn't deliver. Fail.

I just don't agree with the logic that because a GM is really good at their job, they should stay indefinitely. In these sorts of roles, everything has a season and a shelf life. Even if this year does turn into a total bust, it doesn't mean Sweeney's no longer good at his job. It just means he's made some mistakes and it might be a sign that his vision has worn thin, the freshness of his ideas and input have ossified, and it's time for change. Every GM has certain traits and priorities and ways and means of roster building. These tend not to change much. We've seen Sweeney's now for 9 years. His methods are known, they're effective in lots of ways, but they have weaknesses too, and as good as they've been they've always fallen short in the end. And eventually the weaknesses tend to compound and become more and more damaging over time.

Don's had more than a fair chance to implement his vision for this franchise. At some point you simply have to say that that vision has run its course and it's time for a new one. It might suck, but that's the nature of the beast. No risk, no reward. And if Sweeney were to go off and win a Cup elsewhere, it doesn't at all mean that sacking him wouldn't have been the right call for Boston. It was the same with Cassidy. Good people are going to get results in the right circumstances. And that's the key word - right. Are Sweens and the Bruins still right for each other? Maybe for not much longer.
 
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Festy1986

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How can anyone give Sweeney credit for all the bruins success but not give him credit for how awful drafting he's been.

He should have gone before Montgomery
 
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Beesfan

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The argument to keep him isn't that he's "generally competent." The argument to keep him is that he's done a really good job. Not an okay job. First in points since he was hired nine years ago. Not top5, or top10, first. Built a team that got to G7 of the Cup Finals. Built the best regular season team in NHL history. GM of the Year. Highly regarded around the league and considered one of the best in the league.

No GM is perfect and you can list mistakes for any GM but at the end of the day, does he win? Does he ice teams that can contend? Do people want to sign here? Do players want to stay here? By any reasonable metric he has done a very good job.

This year's team may stink. They might miss the playoffs, or get swept in the first round, but I still don't toss out 9 good years and a proven track record because of 1 bad one. Everybody swings and misses occasionally. I'd need to see 2 bad years, a trend of things going south, to think that he's no longer good at his job.
I agree that Sweeney's overall track record is too good to let go. The exception is drafting. I think Sweeney needs to identify someone outside the org that has an equally good record in that department and delegate it completely.
 
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Caper Bruins fan

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I won't be thrilled on getting a WC spot. It more than likely means either getting curb stomped by Florida again or finally losing to Toronto in the playoffs. I'm tired of the first scenario and not ready for the second.
Even if they move up into a division spot they likely meet one of those two teams in round 1 . I still think Tampa is catchable.
 

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Gee Wally

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Joe Sacco isn’t looking to reinvent the wheel. Time isn’t on the side of the Bruins’ interim head coach, not with a reeling roster in need of results.

Lapses in execution, erosion in the defensive structure, and a dearth of scoring conduits cost Jim Montgomery his job Tuesday.

With only a short runway before Thursday’s home game vs. Utah, Sacco’s message was clear in his first days at the helm.

“It’s being harder to play against,” Sacco said Wednesday. “I want teams to know again that it’s going to be hard to score goals against us.

“Our offense will come. There’s enough players in here that are going to score goals, and I think the focus has been too much on that. Let’s focus on keeping the puck out of our net, being hard to play against, and I’m very confident that this group will score goals.”

It was far from flashy, and a one-goal victory over a sub-.500 club won’t dispel fears that the team’s sleepwalking start to the season is more than a blip. But 2 points are still 2 points. And with Sacco and his reworked staff opting to simplify Montgomery’s systems, the Bruins have a template in place that can lead to white-knuckle wins more attuned to the current personnel.

“It always feels different when there’s a new coach on the bench,” Brad Marchand said after Thursday’s win. “There’s a couple good things that we tweaked. Mind-sets, I think, were the biggest thing.”

Unlike in February 2017, when Bruce Cassidy injected speed and shot volume into Claude Julien’s measured, stringent structure, Sacco isn’t looking for sweeping changes — at least not yet. An emphasis on urgency and best practices in the defensive zone made life easier for goalie Joonas Korpisalo Thursday.

Bruins skaters, perhaps shocked into action following Montgomery’s ouster, found their legs. Puck battles were won, and stretch passes were abandoned in favor of low-risk chips up the ice. Defensemen such as Nikita Zadorov finished checks and pinned skaters against the boards without the added snarl that too often leads to a penalty. Mark Kastelic provided some punch via a pair of scraps with Robert Bortuzzo.

The odd-man rushes that put Korpisalo and Jeremy Swayman under duress for 20 games were snuffed out against Utah, and steady puck support created layers of black-and-gold sweaters in front of Korpisalo.

Utah landed 15 shots on goal during five-on-five action (per Natural Stat Trick) but just two high-danger scoring chances.

It wasn’t a game that will be featured on highlight reels, but Sacco’s strategy should steady a team that needs to start playing to its strengths.

If there’s any appetite for immediate tweaks, it’s down the other end of the ice.

Montgomery’s emphasis on quality over quantity with shot selection led to an uptick in the Bruins’ five-on-five scoring output. At least for a time.

But passing up shots in search of selective, high-danger looks in the slot is a fruitful approach only if you have the finishing talent.

On Wednesday, general manager Don Sweeney acknowledged that the Bruins might need to pepper the net moving forward.

“To your point on whether or not we can play a little more north-south and direct and get it a little more volume-oriented and score the greasy part of it? Yeah, I think that we probably have to get back to a little more simplistic approach because we haven’t been able to execute a system that was pretty damn successful,” Sweeney said.

Given the size of the forwards — and the apparent lack of finishing touch — sending volleys of pucks toward the net might be the right move.

Shunning tic-tac-toe passing and slot shots for tips and rebounds won’t win style points, but it’s a strategy that paid dividends on the power play Thursday. With Sacco shifting Marchand from the right half-boards to the net-front and goal line, the coach was looking to funnel more pucks around the net.

Sure enough, Marchand’s net-front tip off a David Pastrnak faked-shot feed created a skittering puck that Elias Lindholm jammed home for his first goal since Oct. 12. Even though the Bruins cashed in just once across seven power plays, they generated 18 shots on goal and 10 scoring chances on the man-advantage.

“We said that we wanted to attack the net more, especially down low,” Sacco said. “Created some more chaos in front of the goaltender … more around the goal line, the bumper. I thought we really used the bumper efficiently today on the power play, was able to spread them out a little bit.”

The Bruins still have plenty of work to do in the offensive zone. Even with Thursday’s win, they have just six goals in the last four games. But so long as they continue to disentangle their D-zone lapses and limit risk, Sacco believes the offense will arrive — as unsightly as the process might be.

”Typically, when you have the work ethic and you have good energy in your practice and you have some enthusiasm, the execution will take care of itself after that,” Sacco said Wednesday.


“We have good players in this room and they’re capable of more, and it’s our job as a coaching staff to make sure that we get it out of them. I think it starts there with our work ethic.”
 
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Gee Wally

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Elias Lindholm was not the only new Bruin who hopes Thursday’s 1-0 victory provides a foothold for him as he tries to establish himself in Boston.

Nikita Zadorov, whose play had been up and down through the first 20 games and who said on Friday he’s still trying to find his voice with his new team, delivered what was most likely his best performance as a Bruin on Thursday. He delivered a game-high five checks in 19:51 of icetime, including a game-high 5:03 in shorthanded time in the B’s 4-for-4 penalty-killing performance.

“I thought his reads were really good on the kill, I thought he had a good stick,” said coach Joe Sacco after Friday’s workout at Warrior Ice Arena. “And I just thought he brought a physical presence to the game. That’s what we were looking for. We were looking for someone to step up physically.”

With Hampus Lindholm out, Zadorov is relishing his opportunity to be first over the boards in the man-down situations with Brandon Carlo. Thursday’s perfect performance on the PK bumped the B’s up from 25th to 22nd in the league.

“I love it. I love killing,” said Zadorov on Friday. “I think it’s real important and it gets me going. It’s a pleasure when you see the trust from the coaches on that particular thing. We did a pretty good job (Thursday) against two skilled units. Obviously there was a lot of bounces going against us in the past, in the PK especially, so I think it’s just really important to be good at that during the game because that gives you a chance too win some hockey games.”

Th 29-year-old Zadorov has been in the NHL since he was a teenager and he had Sacco as an assistant with the Sabres during his rookie season, Sacco’s only year in Buffalo in 2013-14. While he’s seen a few things, what happened on Tuesday when Jim Montgomery was fired has brought him into uncharted territory. He said the reset had to happen.

“I haven’t had a coach be fired middle of the year so it’s a new experience for me,” said Zadorov. “But I saw Joe Mazzulla’s quote – ‘Coaches get hired to be fired.’ At the end of the day, it was a business. We weren’t playing well. We weren’t where we were supposed to be and something had to change. That’s where we’re at right now. Joey’s a good coach. I had him in Buffalo as an assistant coach. I spoke to a lot of guys in Colorado who he was coaching there and I got some tips about that. We’re just going out there and playing for him right now.”

What those tips were, Zadorov was keeping it to himself.

It’s been at times a rough immersion for Zadorov as a Bruin. He still holds the league lead in minor penalties with 13 (Charlie McAvoy is holding down the No. 2 spot with 12), though he hasn’t taken any in his last three games. He chalks some of those calls up to early season over-exuberance, plus being in message-sending mode with two early games against Florida. Zadorov said he’s starting like his game better lately.

“I thought maybe like seven or eight games I’ve been playing good. I like my hockey. Obviously I can clean up some stuff to be perfect. Nobody’s perfect but you’re looking for it all the time,” said Zadorov. “You’re trying to be the best of yourself every night and at the end of the day, you have to get uncomfortable sometimes to help your team wins some hockey games. You have quiet guys in the room who are not used to fire the guys up, or talk or be active or bring some energy. Those guys have to pull it in and buy in and help us, because we’re in the same boat right now. Same as me. There are somethings maybe uncomfortable I wasn’t doing in the past but in this situation, you have to pull it out of yourself to be better and do anything to help your team win some hockey games.”


Asked what those “uncomfortable” things may be, Zadorov talked about needing to refine his comportment in the room so he can help others and himself, as well as immerse himself in the culture of which he signed up.

“I’m an active guy, I’m an emotional guy. I try to keep it loose in the room all the time, try to keep the young guys loose. We have a young team.,” said Zadorov. “But also I see that when I do that too much before the game, it affects my performance because I get too over-excited and I lose my focus for my personal game. So I just have to find that balance, to be a voice in the room and help the team. Especially, I’m a new guy in here and I’m getting settled and I’m getting to know guys, they’re getting to know me, so they can take it sometimes not the right way, the way I said it.

“I’m a pretty direct person. Sometimes for people it takes time to understand me. So I think just to find the middle (ground) and just bring the joy. Bring the joy to the room, bring the excitement to go play games and compete and try to win hockey games. I thought we were playing soft the first 20 games. I don’t think that’s the Boston Bruins hockey. I don’t think that’s what fans expected from us. We’ve got blue collar fans. They expect hard work up there, they expect toughness, to be hard. So I think that’s the message I got and I got it to the guys to bring it to the game on a nightly basis. If we do that, we’re going to be a hard to play against and
good things will happen.”…

Sacco said he’s taking the goaltending situation day-by-day at the moment. Though he acknowledged Joonas Korpisalo’s strong play, he said he was leaning toward going with the Jeremy Swayman for Saturday’s game in Detroit…

The B’s made a roster move, sending Georgii Merkulov back to Providence and bringing up Marc McLaughlin, who has scored goals in five straight games.

“Marc has been playing very well in Providence, so he deserves an opportunity here at some point. From what I understand, his his game as been the best it’s been since he’s been in Providence,” said Sacco.

Judging from Friday’s lines, though, it looks like McLaughlin will have to wait for his chance. Tyler Johnson took over Merkulov’s spot on the Charlie Coyle-Trent Frederic line and Johnson also was on the right elbow on the second power-play unit.
 

quietbruinfan

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Several coaches used Bourque on lw, going back to Cheevers. It worked like a charm, especially against defensively weak teams like the Nords and Kings. Pederson centering Middleton and Bourque was formidable to say the least.
 
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PB37

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Elias Lindholm was not the only new Bruin who hopes Thursday’s 1-0 victory provides a foothold for him as he tries to establish himself in Boston.

Nikita Zadorov, whose play had been up and down through the first 20 games and who said on Friday he’s still trying to find his voice with his new team, delivered what was most likely his best performance as a Bruin on Thursday. He delivered a game-high five checks in 19:51 of icetime, including a game-high 5:03 in shorthanded time in the B’s 4-for-4 penalty-killing performance.

“I thought his reads were really good on the kill, I thought he had a good stick,” said coach Joe Sacco after Friday’s workout at Warrior Ice Arena. “And I just thought he brought a physical presence to the game. That’s what we were looking for. We were looking for someone to step up physically.”

With Hampus Lindholm out, Zadorov is relishing his opportunity to be first over the boards in the man-down situations with Brandon Carlo. Thursday’s perfect performance on the PK bumped the B’s up from 25th to 22nd in the league.

“I love it. I love killing,” said Zadorov on Friday. “I think it’s real important and it gets me going. It’s a pleasure when you see the trust from the coaches on that particular thing. We did a pretty good job (Thursday) against two skilled units. Obviously there was a lot of bounces going against us in the past, in the PK especially, so I think it’s just really important to be good at that during the game because that gives you a chance too win some hockey games.”

Th 29-year-old Zadorov has been in the NHL since he was a teenager and he had Sacco as an assistant with the Sabres during his rookie season, Sacco’s only year in Buffalo in 2013-14. While he’s seen a few things, what happened on Tuesday when Jim Montgomery was fired has brought him into uncharted territory. He said the reset had to happen.

“I haven’t had a coach be fired middle of the year so it’s a new experience for me,” said Zadorov. “But I saw Joe Mazzulla’s quote – ‘Coaches get hired to be fired.’ At the end of the day, it was a business. We weren’t playing well. We weren’t where we were supposed to be and something had to change. That’s where we’re at right now. Joey’s a good coach. I had him in Buffalo as an assistant coach. I spoke to a lot of guys in Colorado who he was coaching there and I got some tips about that. We’re just going out there and playing for him right now.”

What those tips were, Zadorov was keeping it to himself.

It’s been at times a rough immersion for Zadorov as a Bruin. He still holds the league lead in minor penalties with 13 (Charlie McAvoy is holding down the No. 2 spot with 12), though he hasn’t taken any in his last three games. He chalks some of those calls up to early season over-exuberance, plus being in message-sending mode with two early games against Florida. Zadorov said he’s starting like his game better lately.

“I thought maybe like seven or eight games I’ve been playing good. I like my hockey. Obviously I can clean up some stuff to be perfect. Nobody’s perfect but you’re looking for it all the time,” said Zadorov. “You’re trying to be the best of yourself every night and at the end of the day, you have to get uncomfortable sometimes to help your team wins some hockey games. You have quiet guys in the room who are not used to fire the guys up, or talk or be active or bring some energy. Those guys have to pull it in and buy in and help us, because we’re in the same boat right now. Same as me. There are somethings maybe uncomfortable I wasn’t doing in the past but in this situation, you have to pull it out of yourself to be better and do anything to help your team win some hockey games.”


Asked what those “uncomfortable” things may be, Zadorov talked about needing to refine his comportment in the room so he can help others and himself, as well as immerse himself in the culture of which he signed up.

“I’m an active guy, I’m an emotional guy. I try to keep it loose in the room all the time, try to keep the young guys loose. We have a young team.,” said Zadorov. “But also I see that when I do that too much before the game, it affects my performance because I get too over-excited and I lose my focus for my personal game. So I just have to find that balance, to be a voice in the room and help the team. Especially, I’m a new guy in here and I’m getting settled and I’m getting to know guys, they’re getting to know me, so they can take it sometimes not the right way, the way I said it.

“I’m a pretty direct person. Sometimes for people it takes time to understand me. So I think just to find the middle (ground) and just bring the joy. Bring the joy to the room, bring the excitement to go play games and compete and try to win hockey games. I thought we were playing soft the first 20 games. I don’t think that’s the Boston Bruins hockey. I don’t think that’s what fans expected from us. We’ve got blue collar fans. They expect hard work up there, they expect toughness, to be hard. So I think that’s the message I got and I got it to the guys to bring it to the game on a nightly basis. If we do that, we’re going to be a hard to play against and
good things will happen.”…

Sacco said he’s taking the goaltending situation day-by-day at the moment. Though he acknowledged Joonas Korpisalo’s strong play, he said he was leaning toward going with the Jeremy Swayman for Saturday’s game in Detroit…

The B’s made a roster move, sending Georgii Merkulov back to Providence and bringing up Marc McLaughlin, who has scored goals in five straight games.

“Marc has been playing very well in Providence, so he deserves an opportunity here at some point. From what I understand, his his game as been the best it’s been since he’s been in Providence,” said Sacco.

Judging from Friday’s lines, though, it looks like McLaughlin will have to wait for his chance. Tyler Johnson took over Merkulov’s spot on the Charlie Coyle-Trent Frederic line and Johnson also was on the right elbow on the second power-play unit.

Zadorov gets it.
 

PlayMakers

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I'll happily concede he's done a 'really good' job - basically said as much in my first sentence. But it doesn't change my position. Cassidy did really good for years too, then things started to go sour and he got fired. Monty, not as long, but he had an outstanding W/L record over 2 years. Then things got rocky, fired. Why should Sweeney be exempt from a similar logic and the same fate?

As much as Don's done well in many areas, the basic purpose and goal of his role was to win a Cup. When he took over, he had the pieces to work with to make that happen. Sure the roster was coming off a comparatively down year, but an excellent core was still there and just needed a bit of a boost. Anything less than a Cup would be a failure, IMO. I know how close they got, I acknowledge that it's the players who have to get it done at the end of the day, I admit it's hard. But bottom line is they didn't win. For all his achievements and strengths, he hasn't done what he was hired to do. Nearly a decade of opportunities, didn't deliver. Fail.

I just don't agree with the logic that because a GM is really good at their job, they should stay indefinitely. In these sorts of roles, everything has a season and a shelf life. Even if this year does turn into a total bust, it doesn't mean Sweeney's no longer good at his job. It just means he's made some mistakes and it might be a sign that his vision has worn thin, the freshness of his ideas and input have ossified, and it's time for change. Every GM has certain traits and priorities and ways and means of roster building. These tend not to change much. We've seen Sweeney's now for 9 years. His methods are known, they're effective in lots of ways, but they have weaknesses too, and as good as they've been they've always fallen short in the end. And eventually the weaknesses tend to compound and become more and more damaging over time.

Don's had more than a fair chance to implement his vision for this franchise. At some point you simply have to say that that vision has run its course and it's time for a new one. It might suck, but that's the nature of the beast. No risk, no reward. And if Sweeney were to go off and win a Cup elsewhere, it doesn't at all mean that sacking him wouldn't have been the right call for Boston. It was the same with Cassidy. Good people are going to get results in the right circumstances. And that's the key word - right. Are Sweens and the Bruins still right for each other? Maybe for not much longer.
I was against the Cassidy firing and don’t think it was the right thing at the time (neither did Sweeney). I would have loved to see him in charge of the 22-23 team in the playoffs. I think Monty’s 2 years were spotty. Great regular season record but I didn’t like his playoff performance. I didn’t want him re-signed/extended. So I don’t equate his performance with Sweeney.

I also can’t fault Don for not winning a Cup. He built a team good enough to get to the Finals and another that was the heavy favorite. At some point the players have to have some responsibility for not delivering. IMO, Sweeney did his job, the players didn’t.

I’m not suggesting that he stay indefinitely. I’m just saying that it should take more than 1 bad year to offset 9. For me it’s 2 bad years and a team that looks like it’s being built wrong. I’m not there yet.
 

Aussie Bruin

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I was against the Cassidy firing and don’t think it was the right thing at the time (neither did Sweeney). I would have loved to see him in charge of the 22-23 team in the playoffs. I think Monty’s 2 years were spotty. Great regular season record but I didn’t like his playoff performance. I didn’t want him re-signed/extended. So I don’t equate his performance with Sweeney.

I also can’t fault Don for not winning a Cup. He built a team good enough to get to the Finals and another that was the heavy favorite. At some point the players have to have some responsibility for not delivering. IMO, Sweeney did his job, the players didn’t.

I’m not suggesting that he stay indefinitely. I’m just saying that it should take more than 1 bad year to offset 9. For me it’s 2 bad years and a team that looks like it’s being built wrong. I’m not there yet.

In pointing to Cassidy and Monty I'm primarily asking why shouldn't Sweeney be held to the same standard? Fair point that Monty's time was shorter and more patchy, but insert Julien then instead. When these long-term and mostly successful coaches stumbled and arguably went past their used by date in Boston, rightly or wrongly Sweeney fired them. I think it only reasonable that the GM himself should expect the same treatment.

On the lack of a Cup we simply see it differently. There is plenty of blame for falling short to go around but I believe Sweeney should bear his share too. No GM can be perfect and all rosters have flaws, but there are certain things, like the beyond-obvious black hole on Krejci's right in 2019 that Sweeney didn't even attempt to fill, that IMO were simply erroneous and inexcusable. In my mind I cannot ignore those, few as they may be perhaps, while also giving credit for a lot that Don has done right over the years.

I respect your position. We are not miles apart. I'm not yet firmly in the 'Don must go' camp. But I'm leaning in that direction, pending how the next 5 months or so play out. The issue that probably stands out most to me is something I said in my previous post - weaknesses tend to compound over time. For example, even allowing for the lack of high picks I think Sweeney is not very good at drafting forwards. Defenders, sure, but not the guys up front. And he has never prioritized sheer goal scoring talent, or perhaps even offensive/playmaking talent more broadly, enough. The longer you leave the same guy in charge, the deeper those issues run and the more damage they can cause, however much he brings on the positive side. Couple that with an offseason where he may well have gotten it very wrong indeed (TBC), and questions on whether it's time to move on inevitably arise.

All we can do for now is wait and see what unfolds from here.
 

Over the volcano

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Mar 10, 2006
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Watertown
In pointing to Cassidy and Monty I'm primarily asking why shouldn't Sweeney be held to the same standard? Fair point that Monty's time was shorter and more patchy, but insert Julien then instead. When these long-term and mostly successful coaches stumbled and arguably went past their used by date in Boston, rightly or wrongly Sweeney fired them. I think it only reasonable that the GM himself should expect the same treatment.

On the lack of a Cup we simply see it differently. There is plenty of blame for falling short to go around but I believe Sweeney should bear his share too. No GM can be perfect and all rosters have flaws, but there are certain things, like the beyond-obvious black hole on Krejci's right in 2019 that Sweeney didn't even attempt to fill, that IMO were simply erroneous and inexcusable. In my mind I cannot ignore those, few as they may be perhaps, while also giving credit for a lot that Don has done right over the years.

I respect your position. We are not miles apart. I'm not yet firmly in the 'Don must go' camp. But I'm leaning in that direction, pending how the next 5 months or so play out. The issue that probably stands out most to me is something I said in my previous post - weaknesses tend to compound over time. For example, even allowing for the lack of high picks I think Sweeney is not very good at drafting forwards. Defenders, sure, but not the guys up front. And he has never prioritized sheer goal scoring talent, or perhaps even offensive/playmaking talent more broadly, enough. The longer you leave the same guy in charge, the deeper those issues run and the more damage they can cause, however much he brings on the positive side. Couple that with an offseason where he may well have gotten it very wrong indeed (TBC), and questions on whether it's time to move on inevitably arise.

All we can do for now is wait and see what unfolds from here.
Sweeney's future lies in the hands of the club he's built. If Lindholm and Zadorov find their footing and the club can win a round again he should be in a pretty good place, having transitioned the team from one of the oldest in the league to one of the youngest and all without bottoming out, or taking a dip at all really.

The Ullmark deal is looking golden as well, which should give him a bit more rope around here.
 
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Gee Wally

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Tomorrow’s Globe:

Montgomery could have options​

Jim Montgomery, collecting his Bruins wage (believed to be $2 million per season) through the end of the regular season, soon will field job offers to resume his life as a bench boss. His dazzling points percentage (.715) with Boston over 2¼ seasons guarantees it, as it did for Bruce Cassidy, summarily ditched in the spring of ‘22 after going 245-108-46 (.672) during his Black-and-Gold tenure.

Cassidy and Pat Burns went right back to work after their coaching days on Causeway Street, and both promptly got their name on the Stanley Cup, Burns with the Devils in ‘03, and Cassidy with the Golden Knights in ‘23.

Don Sweeney said during Wednesday’s news conference that there had been talks of a contract extension with Montgomery — something the Bruins GM said was a goal upon the completion of last season. The sides couldn’t find a landing spot.

Rumors late in the week were that talks stalled when a three-year deal offering upward of $11 million didn’t entice Montgomery to sign. High-end compensation for coaches is now around $5 million per season, so not too much of a stretch to believe Montgomery calculated he would field three years/$11 million as a base offer in the open market.

Now, where does Montgomery land next? Keep an eye on St. Louis, where his wife is from and where the Montgomerys live in the offseason, as well as Montreal. He grew up in Montreal as a Habs fan and is bilingual — two bold checkmarks for any prospective coach for Les Glorieux. The Blues and Canadiens are both tracking for playoffs DNQ’s.

The Predators also remain an unfathomable mess, tied entering Friday with the Blackhawks for the fewest points (15) in the league. Hard to fathom, given the Predators ranked No. 1 on the penalty kill (91.3 percent) and No. 10 on the power play (22.2 percent). If hired in Nashville, Montgomery would inherit a top-six forward group that includes Filip Forsberg, Ryan O’Reilly, and Steven Stamkos.
 

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