|
Post by skemack on Jul 24, 2021 9:28:45 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by bruinsnorth on Jul 24, 2021 10:59:58 GMT -5
Is this pick on the level with the CFL team that drafted a dead guy a number of years ago. Maybe Les Habs did not know that the kid recused himself from this draft. That would be funny.
|
|
|
Post by bruinsnorth on Jul 24, 2021 11:03:36 GMT -5
If DK46 decided to not return I wonder if the Bs would kick tires on bringing Getzlaff in on a short term deal. He is 36 and had a poor year last year (stats wise) but I think he still has some gas in the tank. Remember him and Bergie as the top centres on the 2005 Junior team that is regarded as the best team ever to be assembled for a WJC tournament. Might give Studnicka another year to mature.
|
|
|
Post by nfld77 on Jul 24, 2021 12:10:41 GMT -5
If DK46 decided to not return I wonder if the Bs would kick tires on bringing Getzlaff in on a short term deal. He is 36 and had a poor year last year (stats wise) but I think he still has some gas in the tank. Remember him and Bergie as the top centres on the 2005 Junior team that is regarded as the best team ever to be assembled for a WJC tournament. Might give Studnicka another year to mature. If we could get him on the cheap..Certainly dont want anything remotely close to what Bruins went through with Backes..BUT he's 36 so money hopefully is not an issue,,
|
|
|
Post by nfld77 on Jul 28, 2021 16:22:50 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by madmarx on Aug 1, 2021 10:43:06 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by nfld77 on Aug 1, 2021 12:35:52 GMT -5
Awesome story MM and really hope the kid can make a future in the nhl..
|
|
|
Post by madmarx on Aug 2, 2021 15:41:40 GMT -5
Awesome story MM and really hope the kid can make a future in the nhl.. Brady Lyle was pretty impressive during Day 1 of Dev Camp. Crisp passes, good reads with the puck and an effective shot (7 goals in 25 games with Providence.) He's quickly rising up the ranks of B's prospects. Brady Lyle having a post-stretch chat with Chris Kelly at the end of the first day of development camp. As far as standouts in either group go, Brady Lyle was in a league of his own today. It’s only day one but this kid is pissed at not being drafted and has something to prove..
|
|
|
Post by nfld77 on Aug 2, 2021 17:40:49 GMT -5
Awesome story MM and really hope the kid can make a future in the nhl.. Brady Lyle was pretty impressive during Day 1 of Dev Camp. Crisp passes, good reads with the puck and an effective shot (7 goals in 25 games with Providence.) He's quickly rising up the ranks of B's prospects. Brady Lyle having a post-stretch chat with Chris Kelly at the end of the first day of development camp. As far as standouts in either group go, Brady Lyle was in a league of his own today. It’s only day one but this kid is pissed at not being drafted and has something to prove.. Yes and apparently he was really good for Pro last yr
|
|
|
Post by SeaBass on Aug 3, 2021 9:35:29 GMT -5
If things had gone well, Ryan Donato, a 25-year-old left winger who has played center, would be firing pucks from the middle for the Bruins in 2021-22.
If things had gone really well, 24-year-old Jakob Forsbacka Karlsson would be right there as well, distributing the pucks that Donato had not let fly.
Instead, Donato, the Bruins’ 2014 second-round pick, is seeking NHL employment after not receiving a qualifying offer from San Jose. Forsbacka Karlsson is out of the league entirely.
The Bruins, meanwhile, search for alternatives following David Krejci’s decision to play in the Czech Republic. At the same time, they are just a year away from Patrice Bergeron’s contract expiration.
The Bruins knew all of this was pending. It doesn’t make it any less uncomfortable.
On Monday at Warrior Ice Arena, the Bruins welcomed 28 players to their development camp. When Bergeron (2003 draft) and Krejci (2004) were selected in their respective years, the organization had yet to introduce its annual summer prep course. Bergeron and Krejci were left on their own to prepare for their first NHL training camps.
Both second-rounders were talented enough to make it just fine.
This time around, it remains to be seen whether a future Krejci or Bergeron is nestled among the wide-eyed campers, waiting for NHL pressure to harden into a gemstone. The closest, at least by draft pedigree, is 2019 first-rounder John Beecher.
The 20-year-old left-shot pivot stands 6-foot-3 and 209 pounds and motors like he was born on skates. Just that, of course, guarantees nothing except admiring glances from an ex-NHLer like Jamie Langenbrunner, for whom size and skating were anything but guaranteed.
“We were laughing about it up there, Kimmer and I,” said Langenbrunner (6-foot-1, 205 pounds) of watching Beecher alongside skills coach Kim Brandvold. “It almost looks like he’s not skating at times. But when you’re standing there, he’s actually going really, really fast. Because it’s so effortless.”
Beecher wore a non-contact jersey on Monday. He is five-plus months removed from shoulder surgery that ended his sophomore season at Michigan after just 16 games. He expects to be at full health for his junior year.
The injury first occurred last August. During an on-ice session, Beecher’s arm got tangled up with a teammate.
“He pulled one way. I pulled the other,” said Beecher. “My shoulder just subluxed, which is just kind of a freak accident.”
Beecher tried to play through the injury. But his condition worsened to the point where he was at risk of additional damage. Beecher ended his year with four goals, four assists and not many answers as to what he might become as a professional.
His skating is NHL quality. It remains to be seen whether he can develop the hands, hockey sense and creativity usually required of a top-two center. Bergeron and Krejci have these qualities in abundance. Time will determine whether Beecher veers more toward becoming a defensive-minded No. 3 center.
“For him, whether he’s going to up as a second-line guy or a third-line guy or a fourth-line guy will depend on how quickly he gets those details in, how his consistency is there night in and night out, that’s going to make a coach happy and give him his opportunity,” said Langenbrunner. “His skating and his size are always going to be there. He’s learning how to do those pro habits. We’ll continue to work with him. It’s going to take a little bit of time. Good on Johnny and how he’s bought into that.”
Langenbrunner classified some of the other campers as multi-position forwards. In that way, the youngsters mimic some of the veterans whose hands are raised for Krejci’s shifts in camp: Charlie Coyle, Nick Foligno and Erik Haula. Jack Studnicka and Trent Frederic, natural centers who played wing last year, will also be in the mix in the middle. Studnicka was among a crew of local NHLers — Charlie McAvoy, Matt Grzelcyk, Chris Wagner, ex-Bruin Torey Krug, Jack Eichel and Kevin Hayes were others — that hit the ice following the wannabes.
There are other ways to chase the Stanley Cup besides a 1-2 center punch. You could argue that Montreal advanced to the final without one high-end pivot, let alone two.
It may be, then, that the Bruins’ most immediate remedy is a cohort of all-purpose forwards behind Bergeron. They have no other choice.
Center was an organizational position of strength for more than a decade. It is no longer that.
|
|
|
Post by SeaBass on Aug 3, 2021 10:21:19 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by kjc2 on Aug 3, 2021 12:04:08 GMT -5
If things had gone well, Ryan Donato, a 25-year-old left winger who has played center, would be firing pucks from the middle for the Bruins in 2021-22. If things had gone really well, 24-year-old Jakob Forsbacka Karlsson would be right there as well, distributing the pucks that Donato had not let fly. Instead, Donato, the Bruins’ 2014 second-round pick, is seeking NHL employment after not receiving a qualifying offer from San Jose. Forsbacka Karlsson is out of the league entirely. The Bruins, meanwhile, search for alternatives following David Krejci’s decision to play in the Czech Republic. At the same time, they are just a year away from Patrice Bergeron’s contract expiration. The Bruins knew all of this was pending. It doesn’t make it any less uncomfortable. On Monday at Warrior Ice Arena, the Bruins welcomed 28 players to their development camp. When Bergeron (2003 draft) and Krejci (2004) were selected in their respective years, the organization had yet to introduce its annual summer prep course. Bergeron and Krejci were left on their own to prepare for their first NHL training camps. Both second-rounders were talented enough to make it just fine. This time around, it remains to be seen whether a future Krejci or Bergeron is nestled among the wide-eyed campers, waiting for NHL pressure to harden into a gemstone. The closest, at least by draft pedigree, is 2019 first-rounder John Beecher. The 20-year-old left-shot pivot stands 6-foot-3 and 209 pounds and motors like he was born on skates. Just that, of course, guarantees nothing except admiring glances from an ex-NHLer like Jamie Langenbrunner, for whom size and skating were anything but guaranteed. “We were laughing about it up there, Kimmer and I,” said Langenbrunner (6-foot-1, 205 pounds) of watching Beecher alongside skills coach Kim Brandvold. “It almost looks like he’s not skating at times. But when you’re standing there, he’s actually going really, really fast. Because it’s so effortless.” Beecher wore a non-contact jersey on Monday. He is five-plus months removed from shoulder surgery that ended his sophomore season at Michigan after just 16 games. He expects to be at full health for his junior year. The injury first occurred last August. During an on-ice session, Beecher’s arm got tangled up with a teammate. “He pulled one way. I pulled the other,” said Beecher. “My shoulder just subluxed, which is just kind of a freak accident.” Beecher tried to play through the injury. But his condition worsened to the point where he was at risk of additional damage. Beecher ended his year with four goals, four assists and not many answers as to what he might become as a professional. His skating is NHL quality. It remains to be seen whether he can develop the hands, hockey sense and creativity usually required of a top-two center. Bergeron and Krejci have these qualities in abundance. Time will determine whether Beecher veers more toward becoming a defensive-minded No. 3 center. “For him, whether he’s going to up as a second-line guy or a third-line guy or a fourth-line guy will depend on how quickly he gets those details in, how his consistency is there night in and night out, that’s going to make a coach happy and give him his opportunity,” said Langenbrunner. “His skating and his size are always going to be there. He’s learning how to do those pro habits. We’ll continue to work with him. It’s going to take a little bit of time. Good on Johnny and how he’s bought into that.” Langenbrunner classified some of the other campers as multi-position forwards. In that way, the youngsters mimic some of the veterans whose hands are raised for Krejci’s shifts in camp: Charlie Coyle, Nick Foligno and Erik Haula. Jack Studnicka and Trent Frederic, natural centers who played wing last year, will also be in the mix in the middle. Studnicka was among a crew of local NHLers — Charlie McAvoy, Matt Grzelcyk, Chris Wagner, ex-Bruin Torey Krug, Jack Eichel and Kevin Hayes were others — that hit the ice following the wannabes. There are other ways to chase the Stanley Cup besides a 1-2 center punch. You could argue that Montreal advanced to the final without one high-end pivot, let alone two. It may be, then, that the Bruins’ most immediate remedy is a cohort of all-purpose forwards behind Bergeron. They have no other choice. Center was an organizational position of strength for more than a decade. It is no longer that. Honestly I think we are just a couple of years away from becoming a version of the Red Wings. In the last couple of seasons we lost Chara, Krug, Krejci and Rask, that’s approximately 20 million off the cap which is great. I’m fine with our choices and in most cases the choices were made for us. We replaced Rask with a 5 million dollar goalie who in my opinion the jury is out on. I also feel it was an overpayment but it’s something we had to do or come away with nothing. Chara wasn’t replaced, Krejci wasn’t replaced, Krug wasn’t replaced unless you count Grz who is a watered down version. So with no cap space remaining to speak of, all I can say is I believe our bottom six should be improved. This is where our drafting has really let us down. We haven’t been able to fill holes with incoming prospects so we overpay on the UFA market. It’s a losing proposition, you can’t win cups without stars and you can’t get stars without good drafting. I don’t have to even say it around here that the 2015 draft absolutely killed us. We needed to go 2 for 3 on those picks or at worst 1for 3. It’s looking very much like we were shut out at this point. When we look at what Pastrnak and McAvoy bring to this team we can just see the importance of nailing it on draft day. Bergeron is basically into his last year, whether he retires or re-signs he is going to be too old to carry the load of #1 Center. I really don’t see us having a happy ending here. If we miss the playoffs this year or next Sweeney will be done and the new GM will have no loyalties, clean slate, every player will be on the table in trade talks. Sweeney has to be reading those same tea leaves, I’d like to see him pull a rabbit out of the hat but it has to be something very fucking bold.
|
|
|
Post by madmarx on Aug 3, 2021 15:32:18 GMT -5
Jack Studnicka running some drills this afternoon here at Warrior. He’s had some solid shifts in these drills and the reports of him gaining weight, adding size appear to be valid. Studnicka looks to be more deliberate and noticeably more commanding in battles.
|
|
|
Post by madmarx on Aug 3, 2021 18:34:54 GMT -5
2-year AHL deal with Providence for J.D. Greenway
Jamie Langenbrunner on JD Greenway: "We see an athletic kid that has some molding to do as a player. There's some raw skill to his game, his length, his skating ability ... We have some time with him. We like the athletic ability and we'll see where it goes"
|
|
|
Post by kjc2 on Aug 3, 2021 18:58:20 GMT -5
Jack Studnicka running some drills this afternoon here at Warrior. He’s had some solid shifts in these drills and the reports of him gaining weight, adding size appear to be valid. Studnicka looks to be more deliberate and noticeably more commanding in battles. I think we almost have to pray that Studnicka defies all logic and becomes our #2 Center.
|
|
|
Post by kjc2 on Aug 3, 2021 19:09:00 GMT -5
Is Lauko at Development Camp?
|
|
|
Post by bruinsnorth on Aug 3, 2021 20:01:49 GMT -5
If things had gone well, Ryan Donato, a 25-year-old left winger who has played center, would be firing pucks from the middle for the Bruins in 2021-22. If things had gone really well, 24-year-old Jakob Forsbacka Karlsson would be right there as well, distributing the pucks that Donato had not let fly. Instead, Donato, the Bruins’ 2014 second-round pick, is seeking NHL employment after not receiving a qualifying offer from San Jose. Forsbacka Karlsson is out of the league entirely. The Bruins, meanwhile, search for alternatives following David Krejci’s decision to play in the Czech Republic. At the same time, they are just a year away from Patrice Bergeron’s contract expiration. The Bruins knew all of this was pending. It doesn’t make it any less uncomfortable. On Monday at Warrior Ice Arena, the Bruins welcomed 28 players to their development camp. When Bergeron (2003 draft) and Krejci (2004) were selected in their respective years, the organization had yet to introduce its annual summer prep course. Bergeron and Krejci were left on their own to prepare for their first NHL training camps. Both second-rounders were talented enough to make it just fine. This time around, it remains to be seen whether a future Krejci or Bergeron is nestled among the wide-eyed campers, waiting for NHL pressure to harden into a gemstone. The closest, at least by draft pedigree, is 2019 first-rounder John Beecher. The 20-year-old left-shot pivot stands 6-foot-3 and 209 pounds and motors like he was born on skates. Just that, of course, guarantees nothing except admiring glances from an ex-NHLer like Jamie Langenbrunner, for whom size and skating were anything but guaranteed. “We were laughing about it up there, Kimmer and I,” said Langenbrunner (6-foot-1, 205 pounds) of watching Beecher alongside skills coach Kim Brandvold. “It almost looks like he’s not skating at times. But when you’re standing there, he’s actually going really, really fast. Because it’s so effortless.” Beecher wore a non-contact jersey on Monday. He is five-plus months removed from shoulder surgery that ended his sophomore season at Michigan after just 16 games. He expects to be at full health for his junior year. The injury first occurred last August. During an on-ice session, Beecher’s arm got tangled up with a teammate. “He pulled one way. I pulled the other,” said Beecher. “My shoulder just subluxed, which is just kind of a freak accident.” Beecher tried to play through the injury. But his condition worsened to the point where he was at risk of additional damage. Beecher ended his year with four goals, four assists and not many answers as to what he might become as a professional. His skating is NHL quality. It remains to be seen whether he can develop the hands, hockey sense and creativity usually required of a top-two center. Bergeron and Krejci have these qualities in abundance. Time will determine whether Beecher veers more toward becoming a defensive-minded No. 3 center. “For him, whether he’s going to up as a second-line guy or a third-line guy or a fourth-line guy will depend on how quickly he gets those details in, how his consistency is there night in and night out, that’s going to make a coach happy and give him his opportunity,” said Langenbrunner. “His skating and his size are always going to be there. He’s learning how to do those pro habits. We’ll continue to work with him. It’s going to take a little bit of time. Good on Johnny and how he’s bought into that.” Langenbrunner classified some of the other campers as multi-position forwards. In that way, the youngsters mimic some of the veterans whose hands are raised for Krejci’s shifts in camp: Charlie Coyle, Nick Foligno and Erik Haula. Jack Studnicka and Trent Frederic, natural centers who played wing last year, will also be in the mix in the middle. Studnicka was among a crew of local NHLers — Charlie McAvoy, Matt Grzelcyk, Chris Wagner, ex-Bruin Torey Krug, Jack Eichel and Kevin Hayes were others — that hit the ice following the wannabes. There are other ways to chase the Stanley Cup besides a 1-2 center punch. You could argue that Montreal advanced to the final without one high-end pivot, let alone two. It may be, then, that the Bruins’ most immediate remedy is a cohort of all-purpose forwards behind Bergeron. They have no other choice. Center was an organizational position of strength for more than a decade. It is no longer that. Honestly I think we are just a couple of years away from becoming a version of the Red Wings. In the last couple of seasons we lost Chara, Krug, Krejci and Rask, that’s approximately 20 million off the cap which is great. I’m fine with our choices and in most cases the choices were made for us. We replaced Rask with a 5 million dollar goalie who in my opinion the jury is out on. I also feel it was an overpayment but it’s something we had to do or come away with nothing. Chara wasn’t replaced, Krejci wasn’t replaced, Krug wasn’t replaced unless you count Grz who is a watered down version. So with no cap space remaining to speak of, all I can say is I believe our bottom six should be improved. This is where our drafting has really let us down. We haven’t been able to fill holes with incoming prospects so we overpay on the UFA market. It’s a losing proposition, you can’t win cups without stars and you can’t get stars without good drafting. I don’t have to even say it around here that the 2015 draft absolutely killed us. We needed to go 2 for 3 on those picks or at worst 1for 3. It’s looking very much like we were shut out at this point. When we look at what Pastrnak and McAvoy bring to this team we can just see the importance of nailing it on draft day. Bergeron is basically into his last year, whether he retires or re-signs he is going to be too old to carry the load of #1 Center. I really don’t see us having a happy ending here. If we miss the playoffs this year or next Sweeney will be done and the new GM will have no loyalties, clean slate, every player will be on the table in trade talks. Sweeney has to be reading those same tea leaves, I’d like to see him pull a rabbit out of the hat but it has to be something very fucking bold. Maybe if things go South we will be welcoming Shane Wright and Connor Bedard over the next couple of years.
|
|
|
Post by SeaBass on Aug 4, 2021 6:45:09 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by SeaBass on Aug 4, 2021 9:23:10 GMT -5
Mason Lohrei is everything the Bruins need on the left side of their blue line. He is a 6-foot-4, 205-pound left-shot defenseman who controls the game in all three zones. He is fast, agile, strong and smart. Lohrei is equally comfortable walking the blue line on the power play as he is negating sticks in front of his net.
It is a pity, then, that Lohrei is 20 and yet to play his first college game.
“Mason hasn’t done a lot of shaving in his life,” said Pat Mikesch, Lohrei’s coach at Green Bay of the USHL. “He’s still growing up a lot with his body. So there’s still going to be a lot of growth.”
The Bruins required immediate left-side assistance. It’s why they invested $6 million annually in Mike Reilly and Derek Forbort.
Lohrei, meanwhile, is developing into a mix of the mobile Reilly and the stay-at-home Forbort. The incoming Ohio State freshman led the Gamblers with 19 goals and 40 assists in 48 games in 2020-21. Lohrei was the USHL Defenseman of the Year.
His stay with the Buckeyes may not last long. It is a nice timeline for the Bruins’ 2020 second-round selection. Lohrei is arguably the organization’s brightest amateur prospect.
“I knew he was going to be good. I didn’t know he was going to become special,” Mikesch said. “That’s what he’s kind of become now. He’s just a different defenseman than you get to see very often these days with his size, skating and offensive instincts.”
Late bloomer In 2019, the 18-year-old Lohrei became eligible for the NHL Draft. He did not get picked. NHL Central Scouting did not even rank Lohrei among their 217-player list of North American skaters.
It may have been because Lohrei, who played most of 2018-19 at Culver Military Academy, was still learning how to play defense.
Lohrei played forward until he was 16. He made the switch to defense, where he felt more comfortable processing the entire rink.
With the move came a career-changing series of adjustments under Culver coach Steve Palmer. It took time. Lohrei tried things at both ends of the ice. He often failed.
But he learned.
It was around February or March 2020 when the gangly Lohrei’s parts started to align more neatly. He wasn’t repeating mistakes. Pucks stuck to his stick instead of bobbling onto opponents’ blades. Lohrei became an offensive play-driver while defending against top players.
Green Bay’s season, like everyone else’s, came to an abrupt and unexpected stop. But by then, Lohrei had made enough of an impression.
“That’s where I give the Boston Bruins’ scouting staff huge credit,” Mikesch said. “Our season, all of a sudden, gets stopped because of COVID. But they had seen enough of that transition already that they were like, ‘There’s something big-time going on here.’ ”
From what Mikesch could gather, the Bruins and Kings were hottest for Lohrei in the 2020 draft. Boston’s first pick was in the second round as the club had wheeled its first-rounder to Anaheim in the Ondrej Kase trade.
In the second round, the Kings took defenseman Helge Grans at No. 35 and defenseman Brock Faber 10 slots later. The Bruins took Lohrei at No. 58. By Mikesch’s recollection, the TV draft experts were caught off guard, not expecting the 132nd-ranked North American skater to go so high.
“No offense to the NHL Network people that were covering it, but they had no idea who Mason Lohrei was,” Mikesch said. “It was hysterical. We were laughing, because we were like, ‘They have no idea.’ But they wouldn’t have known. Because he didn’t get to go on a great playoff run with us or do something special like he would have done had we finished out that season. Here’s this unknown kid. ‘What is Boston doing?’ Well, Boston did a great job, along with a couple other teams, that really thought that highly of him.”
The next step In 2020-21, the Resch Center, Green Bay’s home rink, was among the facilities that opened its doors to college and pro scouts. Jamie Langenbrunner took advantage of the opportunity, watching Lohrei about six or eight times in person.
“You’ve got an offensively talented defenseman,” said the Bruins’ director of player development. “Long. Rangy. Continuing to add strength to him is going to be important.”
Lohrei extended the attack mentality he learned as a forward. He also emphasized his net-front work and shutdown play. It came with a cost: a three-game suspension for a hit to the head of Dubuque’s Matthew Savoie.
“My first year I went to Green Bay, offensively, I was kind of a wild card,” Lohrei said. “I think I tried to be more offensive my first year than last year. Last year, I really focused on defense and playing in my own end and letting the rest of the game unfold.”
Adding weight has not been easy for Lohrei. He checked in for development camp at Warrior Ice Arena at 200 pounds, below his previous playing weight.
This summer, Lohrei has been busy with plyometrics to increase his explosiveness. Putting on muscle and keeping it steady during the season will be a priority at Ohio State to improve his shot and puck-protection skills.
How long he stays a Buckeye is unknown.
“I’m not going to even pretend I saw Mason, in the two years we had him, going as far as he did,” Mikesch said. “He went from being a pro prospect to a future NHLer. It changed that much.”
|
|
|
Post by SeaBass on Aug 5, 2021 10:23:53 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by nfld77 on Aug 5, 2021 12:02:24 GMT -5
In a couple years or maybe next yr, this MIGHT be a very special player..
|
|
|
Post by madmarx on Aug 5, 2021 16:34:56 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by nfld77 on Aug 5, 2021 17:12:23 GMT -5
Quote from above article about Bruins search for krejci replacement as #2 centre>>> The common theme amongst Bruins fans is that Coyle is not suited to skate with the top-6 on a nightly basis.
Yes that's how most of us feel BUT if he can stay healthy for the entire season, I truly hope he proves us all wrong.
|
|
|
Post by kjc2 on Aug 6, 2021 1:53:28 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by kjc2 on Aug 6, 2021 2:01:35 GMT -5
Quote from above article about Bruins search for krejci replacement as #2 centre>>> The common theme amongst Bruins fans is that Coyle is not suited to skate with the top-6 on a nightly basis.
Yes that's how most of us feel BUT if he can stay healthy for the entire season, I truly hope he proves us all wrong. I’ve always thought of Coyle as a good player but just not someone who could come in and be our 2nd line center. I want him to succeed but honestly I’d love to see Studnicka come in and steal the job. Not realistic right out of camp but maybe impress enough to be our third line guy and build on it.
|
|
|
Post by KSJ08 on Aug 6, 2021 20:41:23 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by nfld77 on Aug 17, 2021 12:59:37 GMT -5
/photo/1
Of course Habs have the best schedule when it comes to rested teams..
|
|
|
Post by KSJ08 on Aug 17, 2021 20:04:53 GMT -5
/photo/1 Of course Habs have the best schedule when it comes to rested teams.. Tied W/Cindy's Pens, Yet Bruins only have 3 gms of being rested ,playing a tired team!:-(
|
|
|
Post by crafar01 on Aug 18, 2021 6:31:52 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by SeaBass on Aug 18, 2021 12:23:42 GMT -5
We all knew it was coming... The TD Bank, Dunkin, Jet Blue Bruins
|
|