The Bruins are heading into this stretch with a depth chart that still feels very much in motion.
That’s the big takeaway after the draft, after the first wave of free agency, and after Don Sweeney’s July 1 presser left Boston with more bodies than obvious answers, especially on defense. Add in the weekend bombshell that the Philadelphia Flyers signed Anaheim Ducks center Leo Carlsson to a five-year offer sheet with an average annual value of $18 million a season, and the league’s financial picture suddenly looks a lot less settled.
If Anaheim matches, or if it takes the four first-round picks, the ripple effects figure to be real. The Ducks still have to sign 41-goal scorer Cutter Gauthier, and the math gets tight fast.
That kind of pressure could force someone out, with Chris Kreider, who has one year left at $6.5 million, or Alex Killorn, who has one year left at $6.25 million, mentioned as possible moves. The Bruins could also benefit from that kind of shakeup down the line, especially if they need a bridge before young prospects like Will Zellers, Dean Letourneau and/or Chris Pelosi are ready to step in during 2027-28.
For now, though, Boston’s real logjam is on the blue line. The Bruins have nine defensemen with NHL experience, plus Frederic Brunet, whom Sweeney has said will get plenty of consideration for NHL ice time.
That almost certainly means some kind of trimming before long, whether it happens in the summer or later in training camp. Pavel Zacha is also entering the final year of his contract, and his future needs to be sorted out.
The same goes for Casey Mittelstadt.
Up front, the top line could look very different, and very dangerous, if the Bruins go with J.J. Peterka, Zacha and David Pastrnak.
Peterka is the major offseason addition, and at 24 he should get every chance to show what he can do. He had a 68-point season two years ago in Buffalo, and there’s reason to think there’s more offense in him than he showed in his one season in Utah.
That setup could also free Pastrnak to do what he does best: shoot. Or it could help Peterka become a 30-plus goal scorer.
The next line in this projection has Casey Mittelstadt, Fraser Minten and Morgan Geekie. Minten’s rookie year gave the Bruins plenty to like, but the expectations are higher now.
A run of one goal in 13 games at the end of the regular season won’t be waved away with “he’s just a kid” talk forever. Even so, he’s already strong defensively and should give Geekie some cover.
He also reads the game well enough that the scoring droughts he had as a rookie shouldn’t become a habit.
The third line is where things get especially interesting: James Hagens, Elias Lindholm and Marat Khusnutdinov. If Lindholm can stay healthy and manage the nagging back issue that has bothered him, that could alter the picture.
But even Sweeney has acknowledged this may be the right spot for him. The Bruins need their young players to keep moving forward, not slide backward, and that means Hagens and Khusnutdinov have to matter.
Hagens showed at the World Championships that he looks better at center than wing, and there’s a chance he and Lindholm could switch at some point.
The fourth line would be Tanner Jeannot, Matt Poitras and Mark Kastelic. That kind of setup helped Minten get rolling, with Jeannot and Kastelic acting like a pair of granite blocks around him.
They can give a younger player space to work and build confidence. The trio only played one game together last season, but it looked promising.
Now it’s time to see whether Poitras, who is 22 and an RFA, is ready for a full NHL role. He could bring more scoring to that line than it had a year ago.
There are still forwards left out of this picture, including Sean Kuraly, Alex Steeves and Mikey Eyssimont. Kuraly is hard to ignore because of what he brings as a bottom-six leader, but the younger players need ice time too.
On defense, the projected pairs start with Jonathan Aspirot and Charlie McAvoy, followed by Hampus Lindholm and Will Borgen, then Nikita Zadorov and Connor Clifton. That’s a group that could change quickly.
Mason Lohrei, Jordan Harris, Brunet on the left side and Henri Jokiharju on the right all remain in the mix, and there’s a strong chance some of them won’t be there by the time camp opens. Borgen and Clifton figure to get the first crack at those spots, while Aspirot and McAvoy deserve another look together.
Zadorov and Clifton might work, or they might be a handful to sort out, but they should be fun to watch. Lindholm’s health may be the biggest factor in whether the second pair holds up.
And with McAvoy set to miss the first six games because of suspension, the Bruins may keep an extra defenseman or two around to begin the season.
In goal, the chart is simple: Jeremy Swayman and Michael DiPietro. Giving DiPietro a shot was the right move, and his AHL track record made it clear it was time to move on from Joonas Korpisalo.
Still, there’s always risk in handing the job to someone unproven. For Boston’s sake, the hope is that DiPietro follows the path of Brandon Bussi and Daniel Vladar.
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