"I think it should motivate us a lot,"
Bergeron said. "I mean, every year that you don't necessarily
accomplish what you're there for, it's always motivation extra
motivation that should help you the next year. I think refocusing is
very important also. We can't really think too much about last year,
but we need to use that as motivation for sure."
There are some key new faces among the forward
corps, but the strength of the Bruins remains down the middle of the
ice. Bergeron has proven himself as one of the top two-way centers in
the sport, finishing in the top four in Selke Trophy voting the past
three seasons. His play in 2012-13 and in the 2013 Stanley Cup
Playoffs reinforced the notion that Bergeron is one of the top
players in the sport, regardless of position or label. He would be a
true No. 1, franchise-type center on many NHL teams, but he and David
Krejci are in a 1A/1B situation for the Bruins. Krejci rarely
gets mentioned among the top players at his position, but he's led
the NHL in postseason scoring two of the past three seasons,
including 26 points in 22 games last season. Chris
Kelly and Campbell will center the bottom two lines, and if
Campbell and Bergeron show no ill-effects from their injuries, the
Bruins again will have one of the deepest collections of two-way
talent at a critical position. The wings on the top three lines will
look quite different for the Bruins in 2013-14. Gone are Nathan
Horton, Jaromir
Jagr, Tyler
Seguin and Rich
Peverley, The first two were lost to free agency while the latter
two were sent to the Dallas
Stars in a major offseason trade. Boston signed Jarome
Iginla to replace Horton, and Loui
Eriksson, acquired from the Dallas
Stars as part of the Seguin trade, will slide into the
Jagr/Seguin spot on Bergeron's line. Both Iginla and Eriksson could
excel with the Bruins, but how the club replenishes the third line
could play a large role. Reilly
Smith and Matt
Fraser, two players obtained along with Eriksson in the deal for
Seguin and Peverley, have been competing with Carl
Soderberg, Jordan
Caron and Ryan
Spooner for the wing spots alongside Kelly. Campbell, Daniel
Paille and Shawn
Thornton should be reunited on the fourth line, or as it’s
better known, the "Merlot Line." The Bruins are one of the
best teams in the League at even strength, and the diverse abilities
of its forward group are a big reason why.
"I plan on just being myself,” Iginla
said. “I definitely don't come in thinking that they need any
leadership help or anything. They're a very strong crew and they've
had a lot of success together, been together a long time, know each
other well. I want to come and be myself. I don't want to be just a
fly on the wall. But I think the biggest thing is just play hard and
compete, and I think that's what these guys do so well."
SUMMER MOVES
IN:
Loui Eriksson, RW (trade, Stars); Jarome Iginla, RW (free agent,
Penguins), Reilly Smith, RW (trade, Stars); Matt Fraser, RW (trade,
Stars); Joe Morrow, D (trade, Stars); Chad Johnson, G (free agent,
Coyotes); Nick Johnson RW (free agent, Coyotes)
OUT: Tyler Seguin, RW (trade, Stars); Rich Peverley , C/RW (trade, Stars); Nathan Horton, RW (free agent, Blue Jackets); Andrew Ference, D (free agent, Oilers); Kaspars Daugavins, LW (free agent); Jay Pandolfo, LW (retired); Wade Redden, D (free agent); Aaron Johnson, D (free agent, NY Rangers); Jaromir Jagr, RW (free agent, Devils)
OUT: Tyler Seguin, RW (trade, Stars); Rich Peverley , C/RW (trade, Stars); Nathan Horton, RW (free agent, Blue Jackets); Andrew Ference, D (free agent, Oilers); Kaspars Daugavins, LW (free agent); Jay Pandolfo, LW (retired); Wade Redden, D (free agent); Aaron Johnson, D (free agent, NY Rangers); Jaromir Jagr, RW (free agent, Devils)
Bergeron paired with the defense tandem of Zdeno
Chara and Dennis
Seidenberg has become what Pavel
Datsyuk (or Henrik
Zetterberg), Nicklas
Lidstrom and Brian
Rafalski were to the Red Wings during their back-to-back trips to
the Final, a devastating defensive triangle. Coach Claude
Julien went away from that trio against the Blackhawks in the
2013 Final, possibly in part because of injuries to Bergeron and
Chara. Still, Chara and Seidenberg are a menace to play against,
though Julien could split them up for stretches of the regular season
like he has done the past couple of seasons. Chara remains a
consistent Norris Trophy candidate, while Seidenberg might be one of
the top defense-first defensemen in the League. Johnny
Boychuk also is a big, physical defenseman who would likely play
with Chara if Seidenberg does not. He offers more offensive aptitude
than Seidenberg, but lacks some of his tactical savvy. The fourth
spot among Boston's top four belonged to Andrew
Ference, but he left for the Edmonton
Oilers in free agency, and replacing him has been another key
battle during training camp. Dougie
Hamilton offers the most upside, and likely will get the first
opportunity to claim the job in the regular season. Torey
Krug passed him on the depth chart during the postseason, and
could continue to exceed expectations despite his diminutive frame
(5-foot-9, 180 pounds). Another young defenseman, Matt
Bartkowski, also is in the mix, but he is more likely to either
serve as the team's seventh defenseman or split time with the steady
Adam McQuaid.
"Obviously there are guys that are fixed
in their position, but when you look at those three [Hamilton, Krug
and Bartkowski], there's really three [defensemen] for two spots,"
general manager Peter Chiarelli said. "So I guess that
doesn't rule out other [defensemen] that may be the seven. But common
sense would dictate right now that it would be those three guys for
those two spots. And they have embraced it and they've played well."
Tuukka
Rask watched Tim
Thomas help the Bruins win the Stanley Cup in 2011, but the net
will be his for a long time in Boston. Rask finished fifth in the
Vezina Trophy voting last season, and then was a top candidate for
the Conn Smythe Trophy for helping the Bruins to the Cup Final. Rask
then signed an eight-year, $56 million contract, and the expectations
for him to repeat his 2012-13 success will be immense. Anton
Khudobin had a nice season as Rask's backup but left as a free
agent. Chad
Johnson was signed to a one-year contract to be Rask’s backup,
but the Bruins also have a pair of enticing options in the system.
Niklas
Svedberg had a quality regular season with the club’s American
Hockey League team in Providence before a disappointing Calder Cup
Playoffs, and Malcolm
Subban was the club's first-round pick (No. 24) in the 2012 NHL
Draft. Svedberg and Subban could split time in Providence, or
Svedberg could push his way into the backup role behind Rask.
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