The Bruins have spent this summer acting like a team that believes the window is open right now, and the cost of that approach is already showing up in the 2027 NHL Draft.
Boston has moved two first-round picks, a second-round pick, and a third-round pick as part of its push to turn a first-round exit into something deeper. That leaves the club with just one pick in the first three rounds of the 2027 draft, and even that picture is messy: Toronto’s unprotected first has slid to 2028, while all signs point to the Philadelphia Flyers keeping their 2027 first.
From there, the board thins out fast. Boston owns two fourth-round picks - its own and Winnipeg’s, the latter coming to the Bruins in a draft-day pick swap with the Pittsburgh Penguins.
The Bruins do not have a fifth-round pick. They do keep their own sixth- and seventh-round selections.
A few of the missing pieces are easy to trace. The fifth-rounder went to Edmonton in the Viktor Arvidsson deal.
Boston’s 2027 third-round pick went to Columbus in the Andrew Peeke trade. The second-round pick is with the New York Rangers as part of the Borgen trade.
That’s the shape of things for now, and it could get even leaner depending on how the season unfolds. General manager Don Sweeney would have the chance to recoup some of those draft assets if the year goes sideways.
The contract picture also matters. Boston’s 2027 UFAs include Pavel Zacha, Casey Mittelstadt, and Sean Kuraly, while Mason Lohrei will be a restricted free agent.
For now, the Bruins have clearly pushed their chips toward being a contender in 2026-27. The downside is that their 2027 draft cupboard is already looking pretty bare, and there are still 11 months to go before that draft arrives.
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