Don Sweeney made the Bruins’ stance pretty clear before the draft: he wants Pavel Zacha to stay put, even if other teams have already started poking around.
That’s the tension hanging over Boston right now. Zacha just put together the best season of his career, finishing with 65 points on 30 goals and 35 assists, and he’s become a center on one of the league’s most productive lines. At 29, he’s also eligible for an extension that would begin on July 1, 2027, since his current deal runs through the 2026-27 season.
For a Bruins team that has been hunting for its 1C answer since Patrice Bergeron left, Zacha has become a central piece of the conversation. Cam Neely said two months ago that the club still does not have that player, and finding one is far easier said than done. That reality makes Zacha’s next contract a major priority.
“Yeah, I’d prefer to be proactive in that,” Sweeney said before the draft about Zacha’s extension. “No, I mean, I got asked earlier in terms of whether or not, what’s the trade noise and I can’t control those things.
Teams are going to ask me. Other people have asked other players to get out, and sometimes that’s a domino effect.
My goal is to extend [him]. He had a really good year.
He’s an important player for us. If you ask Marco, he’d say the same thing, how important he is.”
Zacha appears to feel the same way. On breakup day, he said he hopes to remain in Boston and pointed to the Bruins as the team that helped revive his career.
The chatter around his future has already reached around the league. On Monday’s season-closing episode of 32 Thoughts: The Podcast, Elliotte Friedman called Zacha’s looming extension “one of the most fascinating things that’s going to happen this offseason.”
“I do think they talked to other teams about him. I heard that there were some conversations.
And I kind of thought one of them might be Montreal, but I had a couple people deny that, but it seemed to make sense,” Friedman said. “But, you know, he’s the kind of guy now like a 1C or, at worst, a 2C, which is what he is now.
Those are big tickets, Kyle. I’m curious to see how far or how comfortable Boston’s going to be with what it could take to extend him.”
Kyle Bukauskas added that if Zacha keeps scoring around 30 goals, the price could climb quickly.
“looking at not seven figures, but eight, where this is all going. Especially as a center. Big, big bucks.”
AFP Analytics projects a five-year extension with a $7.32 million cap hit, but that number may not tell the whole story. With the cap rising, Zacha’s role in Boston, and the Bruins’ lack of an immediate replacement, he could end up costing more than that.
Boston spent much of last season using a committee approach down the middle, and Sweeney defended that setup before the draft. He said the team feels good about its center depth and pointed to several internal options, including James Hagens potentially playing in the middle, Dean Letourneau coming in behind him, and Will Moore also capable of playing center.
“Our centers are by committee. And [Zacha] had a tremendous year.
If you can go out and make a trade, in your description of who might be a true number one, then clearly every team wants to do that,” Sweeney said. “I think I said this before, I’ll repeat myself, the price was high for a certain player on a team because he looks around and says, ‘I don’t know if there are 32 of those players you might want to describe.’
We feel very good about where our guys are at, and they did a good job this year. So for me, I don’t look at this as a negative right now.
I think the depth of our center position is really good. I think with James [Hagens] potentially going in the middle of the ice, Dean [Letourneau] coming in behind it, Will Moore plays the center.
We’re positioned.”
For now, the Bruins are keeping the door open while they sort out the future down the middle. But the mission is obvious: keep the 30-goal scorer in Boston, even as the search for a true No. 1 center continues.
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