The bolded is the entire point of this thread
All of those guys outside of an aging Marchand are gone, and yet they’re still a top team in the league.
No other franchise has avoided falling off and bottoming out at some point the same way that the Bruins have since like 2008.
I absolutely agree that not falling off a cliff is impressive and I find the Bruins impressive.
I also find it interesting that in many other discussions there seems to be a binary definition of success in team sports -- championships.
My question was, before we discuss WHY they have been so successful, should we fist define SUCCESS in this context.
Would Pittsburgh apply? They (barely) missed the playoffs twice now, but the Bruins did a couple of years ago too. The Penguins have more cups.
Now, we could argue that the Pens tanked and drafted high, won and are now about to bottom out and that would be a fair position, but it needs to start with an agreed upon definition of success.
So, what is it? Making the playoffs regularly? Being a "contender" (however that is defined)? Not being terrible ever?