Well, the Boston Bruins went 0-3-0 in the round robin and dropped from the 1 seed to the 4th seed and will face the Carolina Hurricanes in the official first round of the 2020 NHL Playoffs. Let’s look back at the three round robin games and break them down.
Game One: Lost to Flyers 4-1
Bruin’s were off to a slow start, with choppy passes which didn’t connect. This was after an exhibition loss to the Columbus Blue Jackets (4-1). The Flyers won their exhibition game (4-0) over the St Louis Blues. Halak was in net and let in four goals on 29 shots, as Rask was not feeling well. This was also the only game in which Jack Studnicka played on Krejci’s LW, he was scratched in the two games after. While both teams had an equal amount of PIM, both teams killed penalties well. The Bruins had more giveaways, and less take aways. The Bruins only goal came from Chris Wagner in the second period, assisted by Nordstrom and McAvoy. The Bruins went from the number one seed to the fourth seed in their division, while the Flyers took the number one seed, winning all of their RR games.
Lineup:
Brad Marchand – Patrice Bergeron – David Pastrnak
Jake DeBrusk – David Krejci – Jack Studnicka
Anders Bjork – Charlie Coyle – Karson Kuhlman
Joakim Nordstrom – Sean Kuraly – Chris Wagner
Zdeno Chara- Charlie McAvoy
Torey Krug – Brandon Carlo
Matt Grzelcyk – Jeremy Lauzon
Jaroslav Halak
Dan Vladar
Tuukka Rask (not feeling well)
Game Two: Lost to the Lightning 3-1
The Bruin’s played slightly better, but still lost to a Lighting team with out Steven Stamkos. The Bruins really came alive in the second period, even though Jake DeBrusk was playing on his off wing and not with Krejci but on Coyle’s line. The Lighting scored two goals in the first, with one coming on a PP for them. Krug got into a fight after a hit on Carlo by Blake Coleman. This game was filled with a lot of urgency and hard hits, as spilling over from the regular season. In the second, McAvoy scores, with assists from Krug and Bergeron. Nick Ritchie drew into the lineup for a more physical presence but still needs to work on adding scoring depth to the team. Tampa is reseeded to the number two seed, while Boston drops to number four seed. Rask let in three goals on 35 shots.
Lineup:
Brad Marchand – Patrice Bergeron – David Pastrnak
Nick Ritchie – David Krejci – Karson Kuhlman
Anders Bjork – Charlie Coyle – Jake DeBrusk (on his off wing) (doesn’t look as good)
Joakim Nordstrom – Sean Kuraly – Chris Wagner
Zdeno Chara – Charlie McAvoy
Torey Krug – Brandon Carlo
Matt Grzelcyk – Jeremy Lauzon
Tuukka Rask
Jaroslav Halak
(Rask, Richie back, DeBrusk moved down)
Game Three: Lost to the Caps 2-1
Finally, the Bruins were decent against the Capitals. The team needs more production from its top line, as Jake DeBrusk scored in the third period, with assists from Krejci and Kase. Kase makes his first appearance since mid March, on the second line with Krejci and DeBrusk. Both teams took 10 PIM and were 0/2 on the powerplay. The Bruins had more take aways, with 11 versus 7. Clifton subbed in for Grzelcyk, Kase for Kuhlman and Jake DeBrusk played on his correct LW. Rask let in two goals on 25 shots, although the first goal (scored by T.J. Oshie went off of Chara’s stick to Oshie). The Capitals take the number three seed, while Boston drops to the fourth seed.
Lineup:
Brad Marchand – Patrice Bergeron – David Pastrnak
Jake DeBrusk – David Krejci – Ondrej Kase
Nick Ritchie – Charlie Coyle – Anders Bjork
Joakim Nordstrom – Sean Kuraly – Chris Wagner
Zdeno Chara – Charlie McAvoy
Torey Krug – Brandon Carlo
Connor Clifton – Jeremy Lauzon
Tuukka Rask
Jaroslav Halak
(Clifton subs in for Grzelcyk, Kase for Kuhlman, JD on his CORRECT wing)
Looking ahead, the Bruins take on the Carolina Hurricanes, starting August 11th at 8pm. Let’s go Bruins.

Until Next Time
∼RJ