The Boston Bruins didn't realize a big turnaround after their coaching change, so now they could be sellers ahead of the trade deadline.
Leadership. Every successful team needs it. The Celtics and Bruins returned to work on Monday, hoping to find it from their top players. They missed it over the weekend, especially during each team’s overtime loss on Saturday.
The Bruins blew a two-goal lead and lost to Ottawa Saturday. And that leads Adam Proteau to wonder — what types of changes are ahead for Boston the rest of the way this year?
Things were going well for the Boston Bruins after Joe Sacco replaced Jim Montgomery behind the bench but as Adam Vingan writes, the momentum from the “new coach bump” has since ceased.
Things have not really been going particularly great for the Boston Bruins in 2024-25. From the slow start that led to the firing of head coach Jim Montgomery
The Bruins entered the season with hopes of chasing the Stanley Cup. With over half the season gone, Boston brass is getting pragmatic.
WEEI’s Rich Keefe is doubling down on his take that there's a problem between Bruins captain Brad Marchand and David Pastrnak.
But the Bruins are not out of the woods. At their current pace, they may never be. They are in third place in the Atlantic Division and three points ahead of the Tampa Bay Lightning, who have five games in hand. The Bruins dropped every game of their recent three-stop trip.
Cam Neely acknowledged the Bruins are at a crossroads, but Charlie Jacobs continues to frolic in the vernal land of unicorns and Black and Gold rainbows.
Bruins CEO Charlie Jacobs offered up his support for both Cam Neely and Don Sweeney in the midst of a difficult season.
Joe Sacco offered a rather vague explanation for keeping Boston Bruins forward Brad Marchand on the bench during overtime in their game against the Ottawa Senators.