Things are different this year for
Matt Poitras.
Oh, the boyish grins are still there (he easily could be mistaken for a senior trying out for the Malden Catholic varsity), but there’s no longer any mystery surrounding the 20-year-old Bruins forward.
Poitras took training camp by storm last summer, first flashing with the rookies and then shining with the big boys.
He made the opening-night roster and continued to flourish to the point where the Bruins brass
decided to keep him up rather than return him to his junior club. Stashing Poitras in Providence was not an option.
Along the way to becoming a big hit, Poitras absorbed his share of them, and eventually shoulder surgery
cut short his campaign after 33 games.
“He caught us by surprise to some degree last year, and really until the injury was on target to stay with us,” said Bruins general manager
Don Sweeney. “This year is a little different, where we have some options in terms of possibly playing some games in Providence.”
“His goal is to make the team and pick up where he left off. It might take a little bit of time for him to get reacclimated timing-wise and such.”
For the second straight camp, Poitras is out to prove he belongs.
“I want to be here,” said Poitras, who put on a noticeable 8 pounds during the offseason and is up to 189 on his 5-foot-11-inch frame. “I want to be able to show that I belong here and that they don’t have a choice, that they have to keep me here.”
Poitras is getting a look at both right wing and center after playing mostly center last season. He was on the right side with
Trent Frederic at center and
Cole Koepke on the left side on Wednesday. He centered
David Pastrnak and
Pavel Zacha on Thursday with top center
Elias Lindholm taking a maintenance day.
“It’s good to get reps in at both,” Poitras said.
He made it clear either spot is fine with him.
“I’ve played wing in the past and I’m comfortable there,” said Poitras, who had five goals and 15 points last season. “Obviously it’s a little bit less skating than center, so it’s maybe reserving a bit more energy for playing offense, where I like to hold pucks down low and having more energy for that would be good.
“I’m ready to play wherever, whether it’s center or winger. It’s just wherever I fit in best.”
Poitras said an area of concentration for him is getting rid of the puck quicker when there isn’t a play to be made. He frequently took punishment from defenders when he kept possession too long.
“I think it’s just better decision-making around the red line and blue lines,” he said. “You don’t always have to make a play. I was the guy last year who always wanted to hold on to it and sometimes it would put me in a bad position to get hit and stuff like that.
“Also, I had a real long summer. I had three months where I was just lifting and not really skating. For me, it was just about putting on weight and lifting and not really having to worry about the hockey part.
“Then as the summer went on, just gaining as many reps with pucks as possible. When you don’t skate for three months, some of that stuff goes away a bit.”