Bruins First-Round Pick Suddenly Looks Like A Much Bigger Deal

Dean Letourneau's transformation from a rocky freshman year to a standout sophomore season at Boston College is a testament to confidence and perseverance, marking him as a rising star for the Bruins.

Dean Letourneau’s second season at Boston College changed the conversation fast.

The Bruins’ 2024 first-round pick arrived at development camp on Monday as the lone first-rounder on the roster, one of 33 players skating at Warrior Ice Arena. With no James Hagens in the mix, Letourneau naturally drew the spotlight - and he’s in a similar position when BC opens the fall.

That attention makes sense after the jump he made last season. Letourneau went from a freshman year without a goal and with just three assists to a sophomore campaign that produced 22 goals and 39 points.

He finished second on Boston College in scoring behind Hagens and led the Eagles with 10 power play goals. Once the puck started going in, he said, “it started to feel more natural.”

For the 6-foot-7 forward, the turnaround was rooted in belief.

“I think it was partly just the confidence in my ability. I knew what I could do, and I knew that wasn’t, you know, I think that was an uncommon year for me.

That wasn’t something that I was expecting,” Letourneau said to a swarm of reporters. “I always trust my abilities to bounce back and have the year I did, so I think that was the biggest part in it.”

He described his freshman season as an “uncommon year,” but he also made it clear he wasn’t ready to run from it. Bruins general manager Don Sweeney has said Letourneau might have been better served spending that year in the USHL, but the season at BC still gave him something important. Even with a broken hand, he was able to sharpen parts of his game away from the spotlight of the box score.

“It allowed me to focus on areas of my game that needed work, like in the defensive side,” said Letourneau. “So I think using that last year, [I] was able to help my offensive side. And just trusting my abilities, my coach trusting me that I was going to be on the defensive end of the puck and play the responsible way, so he allowed me to play more offense.”

He admitted transfer thoughts crossed his mind after that first year.

“Maybe, a little bit,” was Letourneau’s response when asked if he thought about transferring after his freshman year. Instead, he “stuck it out and made work with what I can.” Mark Divver reported that teams tried to lure him away with money, but Letourneau stayed with the program that believed in him.

Now he heads into his junior year as one of the more established pieces at BC. He said puck protection, creating chances from the corners, and driving the net are the areas he wants to sharpen next. The coaching staff wants him operating around the crease, and the Bruins’ development people have echoed that idea “a little bit.”

“The more I can be around the net front and pick up rebounds and tips, the more goals I can score,” said Letourneau. “I mean, I’m a big body, too.

I can take up a lot of space. So that’s an area where I feel comfortable and score a lot of goals from.”

After the camp session, he’ll head back to Ontario to keep training. He joked that his parents’ grocery bill will climb again with him and his brothers all home for the summer.

And as for what comes next, Letourneau thinks he’s getting closer.

“Definitely feel a little more ready for the next step. Goal is to go back to BC and have a more dominant year and then see what happens from there.”

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