Change is already underway in Boston, but the Bruins still have unfinished business before the season gets here. General manager Don Sweeney has checked off a few boxes this offseason, yet the roster is still missing pieces, and more movement could come before training camp opens in September.
That leaves second-year head coach Marco Sturm with a lineup that could look different by opening night. And if the Bruins keep reshaping the roster, these three players appear headed for the outside looking in.
Mason Lohrei is the name that keeps surfacing in trade chatter. The noise around the defenseman has been building for a while, and it feels like a deal is eventually coming.
The exact return is still anyone’s guess, but the buzz has been strong since January, when he was rumored to be part of a trade that would have brought Rasmus Andersson from the Calgary Flames to Boston. Around the league, every offseason produces a few change-of-scenery candidates, and Lohrei fits that mold this year.
Alex Steeves has already shown he can work his way into the picture. The former Toronto Maple Leafs forward signed with Boston last offseason, started the year with the Providence Bruins in the American Hockey League, and got the call in November.
He scored against his former club, then played well enough to become a regular in Sturm’s lineup. That strong stretch even led to a contract extension in the middle of the season, a move that now looks premature on Sweeney’s part.
If Boston decides it needs more youth in the lineup, or if another trade or two shakes things up, Steeves could be the one squeezed out.
Henri Jokiharju looks like the clearest candidate to go. The Bruins need to trim the right side of the defense, and he should be near the top of that list.
Boston acquired him from the Buffalo Sabres at the trade deadline in March of 2025, then signed him to a three-year deal with an AAV of $3 million last summer. That signing has not worked out.
Jokiharju spent half the season as a scratch and never settled into a consistent role. Boston cannot afford to carry a $3 million blueliner who is out of the lineup that often again in 2026-27, so Sweeney needs to move on from him in a trade no matter what the return looks like.
In Other News...
Bruins Costly Offseason Signing Is Suddenly Sparking A Very Different Debate
When Boston signed Tanner Jeannot to a five-year, $17 million deal, the move was framed as the kind of bet that could swing from savvy to expensive in a hurry. A season later, the early returns have been enough to keep the discussion going, because Jeannots first year in black and gold was not just about the contract number. He played in 77 games, chipped in six goals and 16 assists, and settled into a role that kept him on the ice for 12:39 a night.
Jeannot then carried that same steady presence into the playoffs, where he appeared in all six games against Buffalo and added a goal while putting nine shots on net. The bigger question around him now is not whether he can be useful, but what the Bruins should really expect from a player whose value is being judged through a very different lens than it was on signing day. [Read more 🡒]
Bruins Fans Have A New Reason To Watch This Week Closely
The leagues schedule release is coming into focus next week, and for Bruins fans it brings the usual mix of anticipation and calendar-watching. Opening night games are set to be announced July 15, with the full 2026-27 slate following on July 16, a reminder that the seasons shape is about to get a lot clearer for both Boston and Providence.
There is also a bit of roster housekeeping already underway. The Bruins brought back forward Riley Duran on a one-year, two-way contract, while the Providence Bruins have their home opener circled for Oct. 2 against the Utica Comets. Add in the broader league news cycle, including the latest on Chicagos Connor Bedard, and this is one of those stretches where a few updates can quickly change how fans read the months ahead. [Read more 🡒]
