VANCOUVER — Their goal-scoring mine all but stripped to rubble, the Bruins on Saturday panned for gold on the waiver wire by claiming
Oliver Wahlstrom, the 24-year-old former Boston College forward, from the Islanders.
Wahlstrom, best known for a
dazzling goal he scored on Garden ice in his pre-teen days, was not here for the Bruins’ game in the evening against the Canucks.
Per coach
Joe Sacco, the club by early afternoon had no definitive fix on when Wahlstrom will join his new teammates. But logic, in tandem with the Bruins’ desperate need for goals, would suggest he’ll meet the club in Calgary ahead of Tuesday night’s game — stop No. 4 on the club’s five-game road swing.
It remains in question where Wahlstrom, with his modest bounty of 36 goals in 220 NHL games, fits into the lineup. Sacco hinted that the club’s newest puck slinger will get a shot at playing high in the order.
If that means filling a spot at right wing, Wahlstrom’s natural position, it could mean subbing in for
Justin Brazeau (two goals since Nov. 3) on a top-six line with
Brad Marchand and
Elias Lindholm. Another option could be the third line, on which
Mark Kastelic was scheduled to open vs. the Canucks at right wing with
Charlie Coyle at center and
Trent Frederic at left wing.
“Just from knowing the player a bit, watching him the last few years,” said Sacco after the morning workout, “we’ve had a lot of games against the Islanders … the one thing that sticks in my mind is that he has a good shot, you know, a guy that can score some goals.”
By Sacco’s memory, Wahlstrom has been an option at the elbow and bumper on the power play with the Islanders. The Bruins for weeks now have ranked last, or next to last, in the league’s PP stats. They’ve toggled back and forth with the Islanders for that spot.
“If [Wahlstrom’s] going to be a guy that can help us offensively, he’s going to have to be put in a role where he has an opportunity — maybe that’s somewhere up in the lineup — we’ll see,“ said Sacco. ”It could be the third line with Coyle and Freddy. I don’t know yet. And maybe play on [the second] power-play unit. I just don’t know yet — I don’t want to get ahead of myself here. But certainly when you pick up a player like that you want to give him the best opportunity to succeed when he comes in and joins us.”
In the 5½ years since, Wahlstrom has struggled to play into the promise. He has NHL speed and skills, but none of that has translated into substantive production, either at the AHL or NHL level.
The sticking point: at the NHL level, Wahlstrom’s failure to work within the offensive structure put in place by Islander bench bosses
Barry Trotz,
Lane Lambert, and most recently,
Patrick Roy.
Having waited what he felt was long enough, Islanders president of hockey operations
Lou Lamoriello on Friday put Wahlstrom up for waiver grabs. Nearly half the league, including bottom feeders Chicago, Nashville, San Jose, Anaheim, and Montreal, didn’t think it was worth putting in a claim. By the time the Bruins hit the ice for their morning workout (2:30 p.m. ET), Wahlstrom had a new team.
The Bruins, with a meager two goals in losses at
Winnipeg and
Seattle, made the claim hoping a change of scenery and fresh start will rejuvenate the 6-foot-2-inch, 205-pound Wahlstrom. It cost them nothing other than cap space to fit Wahlstrom’s modest $1 million salary. Perhaps as early as Tuesday, they’ll begin to find out if there is any payoff.