Tuesday, October 28, 2025

Articles by Steve Conroy

3 articles found

Bruins try to find the elusive defensive formula
Technology

Bruins try to find the elusive defensive formula

Losers of their last six games and looking nothing like the team that was hoped for and promised, the Bruins went back to the in-season version of a two-a-day on Friday at Warrior Ice Arena. No, coach Marco Sturm did not reach back for a 20th century bag skate to cure the team’s ills. Those are mostly a thing of the past as “teaching” tool. But rather he and his staff first ran his players through an extensive off-ice session to hammer home some of the finer points of his zone/man hybrid defensive system that, at the moment, his players do not seem to be grasping very well. Then, nearly 40 minutes after the appointed time, they hit the ice to reinforce the study session. While there was an air of desperation in the dressing room after Thursday’s painful 7-5 loss to the Anaheim Ducks, in which they scored two goals late in the third period to tie it up only to give up the winner 30 seconds later, Sturm is trying to stay the course. In two of the first three games for the B’s, all wins, they did in fact look like they had the system down, but it has fallen apart since them. “They’re all humans. It’s not like when you show them something, it’s going to happen over night. We know that. Unfortunately, it always comes up when you lose. If we had gotten two wins out of the last four, it’s probably never an issue,” said Sturm. “How do you fix it? It’s time and also it’s practice. Unfortunately, we don’t have many practice days. That’s why today was a very productive practice, helpful practice. We had two practices actually. One was in here and one was (on the ice). We talked about it, I showed them a lot and we did the same thing on the ice. It’s something we need and something we have to get better at.” While it already feels like the season is on the verge of slipping away, Sturm said he has to realize that what he’s trying to implement can’t be done with a flip of a switch. “We’ve only been together for six, seven weeks. They’ve never played a different system, don’t forget that,” said Sturm. “I can get mad at those guys, my players, as much as I want. And I am mad. But at the same time, I have to realize they’d never played a different system. You’ve got to be patient. When you run into a losing streak, it doesn’t help. But that’s where we’re at.” One thing he does appear to be giving up on, at least for the time being, is the Mason Lohrei-Charlie McAvoy defense pairing has been together since the start of training camp but they have had their troubles this year. They were on the ice for three goals against, including the game-winner on which McAvoy tried to get Lohrei to attack the puck carrier Nikita Nesterenko below the circle but wound up losing the slot area in the process. Nesterenko fed Troy Terry and there was your GWG. “We want to close faster,” said Sturm of one of the key messages on Friday. “That’s something we showed today and worked on. We want to close a little bit faster, we want to outnumber teams. It doesn’t matter which area of the zone. And right now, we’re just a little bit hesitant. That’s why we got caught a couple of times.” While Sturm wasn’t fully committed to the pairings, Lohrei was teamed with Andrew Peeke. Michael Callahan, who was called up from Providence on Wednesday and made his season debut on Thursday, bumped up with McAvoy. Nikita Zadorov, who crashed scarily into the boards in the second period but returned for the third, did not practice though Sturm said he expects him to play against the Colorado Avalanche. Hampus Lindholm (lower body), still not ready to be ruled in, skated with Henri Jokiharju. The message to Lohrei? “Keep it simple,” said Sturm. “He is what he is. If you’re not a sprinter, you’re not a sprinter…you will not change that. But you can change how simple you’ve got to play the game, how you’re going to respect the game. It’s a hard league. So he has to understand to just focus on his job doing nothing crazy. Just simplify things. But he cares and he wants to do something special and he wants to do more than he should be. And that’s when he gets in trouble.” It will be a tall task to keep the streak from sliding to seven games on Saturday. The Avs are atop the league with a 5-0-3 record. While the B’s could argue they could have won five of the six games in their streak of futility, the game against the Avs was the outlier. The B’s were simply outclassed in that 4-1 loss in which some of their best players, including David Pastrnak were outplayed and eventually benched. “Obviously there’s a lot of high-end skill and they’re fast. Another test for our D-zone,” said Pastrnak. “We’re going to have to make it hard to play against and don’t make it easy on them because that’s when teams like Colorado take advantage of you and you’re going to be chasing all game. Play a really good defensive structured game and see where it takes us.”… Elias Lindholm also did not practice but Sturm said that he expected him to play against the Avs.

Brad Marchand to hit Garden ice for first time as an opponent
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Brad Marchand to hit Garden ice for first time as an opponent

Brad Marchand is no stranger to big games. Now in his 17th NHL season, he’s been to the Stanley Cup Final four times, he’s experienced the peak of achievement, the excruciating pain of failure and everything in between. Well, almost. Marchand has never experienced what he will on Tuesday night. For the first time in his professional career, the 37-year-old Marchand will step on to the TD Garden ice not as a member of the Boston Bruins but as a part of the two-time defending Cup champion Florida Panthers, a team that ended the B’s season in 2023 and ‘24. As he met with reporters after the Panthers practice at the Garden on Monday, the former B’s captain was relaxed and jovial. There will be nerves and emotions on Tuesday, to be sure, but he doesn’t want that to get in the way of letting the moment sink in. “I’m just going to try and enjoy it,” said Marchand. “I don’t really know what to expect emotionally. I think the closest I got to being on the other side was being here for Team Canada against Team USA (at the Four Nations Faceoff). Even that was a little bit different, I would say, in the way that I felt. But I’m just excited about it. I’m excited to be back here. It’ll be fun to play the Bruins, it’ll be fun to play against teammates and have friends and family in the building again. These are things that down the road I think I’ll appreciate. There’s been enough moments that I went through and I didn’t take it in enough or I didn’t appreciate it. This is one that I’ll be sure that I do.” When Tom Brady returned to Foxboro to play the Patriots, the fans gave him his richly deserved ovation before the game and then treated him like an opponent during it. “I’m sure it’s going to be tough on some people. They won’t be able to cheer because they don’t like the Panthers very much, but maybe they’ll like me enough to give it a little ‘Yay’ out there or something,” said Marchand with a smirk. “No, I think there’ll be a little bit of love out there. Maybe if I do something good, or something bad, they’ll probably boo me pretty quick. They’re pretty passionate here. They might have forgotten already and treat me like any other Panther player.” With the Bruins traveling back from Utah on Monday, he had no chance to catch up with anyone on the team, but he did go out with “the old guys” for dinner on Sunday, fellow 2011 Cup winners Patrice Bergeron, Zdeno Chara, Tuukka Rask and Adam McQuaid. Asked who paid, Marchand sheepishly said, “They bullied me. I did.” He can afford it, of course. After winning the Cup with the Panthers last season, he signed a stunning – for his age, anyway – six-year deal worth $5.25 million a season. And it’s a good thing for the Panthers. They’ve been beset by major injuries with Sasha Barkov, Matthew Tkachuk and now Dmitry Kulikov all out of the lineup, with Barkov and Tkachuk on LTIR. His presence in the room has been helpful, but he hasn’t had to force anything. “Usually it takes you a couple of weeks to get to know the new guys before you’re walking around the room, chirping everybody. He did that in an hour,” said coach Paul Maurice, whose team comes into the game losers of their last four. “He’s been himself and vocal and those of you who’ve covered Boston for years, he’s incredibly positive, even when things aren’t going right. He’s the guy trying to fix it and he’s the guy talking about it. He’s been a great leader for us. Captains on teams, they learn that leadership craft over time. And he has it.” Marchand said: “I think at this point, I kind of am who I am and I just try to be myself.” And who that is has evolved over the years. He came into the league as a brash fourth-liner who was willing to do anything, within the rules or slightly outside of them, to succeed and stick. He’ll never not have that edge, as was evidenced by the way he jumped Rasmus Dahlin after the Buffalo defenseman hit him from behind on Saturday. After the dustup, he took Dahlin’s helmet to the box with him and ripped off the strap before tossing it onto the ice. He got dinged by the NHL for $5,000. “I actually thought I did a great job restraining myself because I wanted to toss it into the crowd. But it might have been a little more than a fine,” said Marchand, ever the imp. But despite his competitive soul remaining intact, he has grown and matured. He admitted that earlier in his career, he might have been a little thin-skinned whenever he or the team would come under the microscope from fans or media here. Now, with 1,107 games under his belt and 14 points away from a thousand, he’s got enough perspective to appreciate all of it. When asked what the best part of playing in Boston is, Marchand did not hesitate. “The fans, for sure,” he said. “The city’s incredible. I’ve lived in a bunch of different areas around here and the city’s incredible. But the fans make it awesome. They’re just very unique. Some of the stories and the things that I’ve seen the fans do, and a lot of them aren’t PG rated, in like playoff runs, it’s so special and unique to this area. It’s as simple as every time I’d go get a coffee, I had the same routine and I’d go to the same coffee shop every day and there’d be a message on the cup, whether I had a good game or a bad game the night before. ‘Aw tough one for you.’ So all the way down they bleed black and gold. It’s why there’s so much pressure on the team to have success and why they focus on it so much. You can’t slip. You guys see it. You’re here every day. You don’t have the ability to slip in this city or you’re going to hear about it. We wanted to produce and be good for the fans and live up to that reputation. So it makes it special to play here.”

Jeffrey Viel in for Bruins against Vegas, Hampus Lindholm remains out
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Jeffrey Viel in for Bruins against Vegas, Hampus Lindholm remains out

While Hampus Lindholm’s return to the lineup will have to wait for at least another game, Jeffrey Viel will be making his season debut for the Bruins when they play a stacked Vegas Golden Knights team on Thursday (10 p.m.). The 28-year-old Viel has 54 NHL games to his credit, including five with the B’s last season. He’s also got five 100-plus PIM seasons in the AHL. He will go in for Marat Khusnutdinov on the fourth line with Sean Kuraly and Mark Kastelic. “It’s not about (Khusnutdinov),” coach Marco Sturm told reporters at T-Mobile Arena after the morning skate. “I think he played great. He did his job. We just want to have a little heavier lineup today against a heavier team and Viel did an outstanding job in preseason.” After the B’s went out and signed bottom-six players Kuraly, Tanner Jeannot and Mikey Eyssimont in the offseason, the odds for Viel making the roster out of training camp seemed slim. But he had an excellent camp, even scoring the game-winning goal in a preseason game in Philadelphia. He earned his spot. Sturm expects Viel to hit the ground running. “The nice thing about him is he’s been around for a bit and he knows,” said Sturm. “I was talking with him throughout the whole process, but I was not really worried about him because his attitude was excellent, his work ethic was excellent. He knew one of these days he’d get a crack at it and I think he will be ready tonight.” Viel vowed to bring “some energy, some physicality. Just keep my game simple and help the team as much as I can, get pucks deep in the O-zone and go from there.” As for Lindholm, who left the second game of the season with a hamstring injury, Sturm is remaining cautious. “I’m not a guy who is going to put him in a bad spot. We’ve been communicating pretty good and we thought today was not the day,” said Sturm. It will be Jeremy Swayman versus Akira Schmid in net after Adin Hill left the Knights’ last game with a lower body injury. The already stacked Vegas lineup added Mitch Marner in the offseason and the Knights have been tagged by some as Stanley Cup favorites. “It’s a Stanley Cup team. But we love those challenges and I think those are the big games we all circled,” said Sturm. Vegas could get even better shortly, if the backlash the Knights are now feeling doesn’t have a deleterious effect on the team. The Knights made some waves earlier in the day when they signed goalie Carter Hart, the former Flyer netminder who was recently acquitted in a sexual assault case in an incident when he was a junior player. Four other NHLers – Michael McLeod, Dillon Dube, Cal Foote and Alex Formenton – were also acquitted but have yet to sign with NHL teams. Hart, officially signed to a tryout deal, cannot play for the Golden Knights until Dec. 1, according to the agreement they made with the NHL.