Boston Herald

BEAR RESPONSIBI­LITY OF REPLACING KRUG, BIG Z?

B’s cub blue liners must step up

- Steve conroy

On your mark, get set, go. The first on-ice session for this short NHL season is Monday at Warrior Ice Arena, and it’s going to be an elongated sprint.

While we’ll miss some of our old rivalries, this 56-game schedule in 116 days with geographic­ally realigned divisions has a chance to be pleasing to old-school fans. Teams in the East division will play each other eight times and, if you didn’t have a fully developed opinion about, say, Tom Wilson or Brendan Lemieux, then you will soon. This should be fun.

Let’s look at a few pressing non-Covid questions for your Bruins:

1. Can team defense remain a strong suit? The B’s have finished in the top 5 in goals against the last three seasons, including first overall last year with a 2.39 GAA. Obviously, losing two thirds of their left defense in Zdeno Chara and Torey Krug presents the major challenge for this Bruins season.

But defending has never been just about what’s on the blue line for the Bruins. Tuukka Rask and Jaroslav Halak remain one of the top goalie tandems in the league. The B’s also added strong two-way player Craig Smith to an already pretty responsibl­e group of forwards. Those forwards must continue to do their part, and maybe then some. While the right side of the D is strong with Charlie McAvoy, Brandon Carlo, Kevan Miller and Connor Clifton, the B’s need to determine who is ready for prime time on the left, and it may take longer than the 10-day training camp.

They’ve invested in left shot D-men over the past five years, with the only thing to show for it is Jeremy Lauzon’s work on the right side in the second half of last season. 2015 first round pick Jakub Zboril and 2017 first rounder Urho Vaakanaine­n will get looks and Lauzon, a 2015 second rounder, could also see some action.

Throw in veteran John Moore, who’s had his Bruins career upended by major shoulder urgency, and you’ve got a a lot of bodies. Two of them need to distinguis­h themselves.

2. Can Matt Grzelcyk replace Torey Krug on the power play? Krug improved his defensive game throughout his Bruins career, but when it came to his work on the man advantage, he was simply a natural. That’s not to say that he didn’t continue to work on that part of his game, but ever since he was an emergency call-up in the 2013 playoffs, it was clear he knew what he was doing in the offensive zone.

Grzelcyk is not the same explosive offensive force as Krug. He certainly doesn’t have the slapper that Krug possesses. But the Charlestow­n native is smart. He sees the ice fairly well. And from the dot on down, he’s got a sneaky dangerous wrist shot. As a left shot, Grzelcyk will most likely get the first look on the top unit and, if he proves he can handle the job, it will be the least disruptive solution. If not, McAvoy could get a look.

As it is, with the B’s starting the season without two PP stalwarts in Brad Marchand (groin surgery) and David Pastrnak (hip surgery), don’t be surprised to see a few different looks to start the season.

3. What, exactly, do the Bruins have in Ondrej Kase and Nick Ritchie? One would have hoped the B’s had the answer to this question by now, but the pandemic and subsequent health issues in the bubble for both players prevented the B’s from getting a full view of either of them.

They are different birds, for sure. When playing well, Kase looks like he could be the right wing for David Krejci the B’s have been seeking for years. He hunts pucks well and has an amazing ability to control it — until, that is, it comes to putting it in behind the goalie. He’s still in search of his first goal as a Bruin.

Ritchie, meanwhile, was obtained to address the B’s need to bulk up a bit and regain a touch of the nastiness that was once a part of their DNA. On some nights he brought that, on other nights his difficulty in keep-

ing up with centerman Charlie Coyle was his most pronounced attribute. Consistenc­y in big, physical wingers can be elusive, but Ritchie will need to have more productive nights on average than he’s had in his short time with the B’s.

4. Who holds down the fort until Marchand and Pastrnak return? There are a plethora of possibilit­ies for guys who can fill in on Patrice Bergeron’s wings. For me, the priority is not so much loading up to create another top line — Marchand and Pastrnak are not that easily replaceabl­e — but rather take the opportunit­y to give some quality prospects a look.

Give me Anders Bjork on the left and Jack Studnicka on the right. Could Bruce Cassidy manufactur­e a more bankable line than this? Of course. But presuming Marchand and Pastrnak will be back before the season is too old (Marchand is even threatenin­g to be ready for opening night), the more important considerat­ion should be to create chemistry in the middle six combos.

Krejci should start with Kase on his right and Coyle should be with Smith on his right. Give Jake DeBrusk another crack at Krejci’s left wing and choose your third line left wing of choice — Ritchie, Trent Frederic, Sean Kuraly, take your pick — for Coyle’s line.

By the time Marchand and Pastrnak are back, you might know if Studnicka is truly ready to contribute at the NHL level and you may finally know who Bjork is. Just a thought.

5. Is there a break-out player among the young forwards? Studnicka, Anders Bjork, Trent Frederic. The B’s pool of high-end prospects is not particular­ly deep, but there is promise at the top. Can Studnicka force the hand of B’s management to rethink how the team lines up down the middle?

We’ve seen a lot of Bjork, but how much more does he have to give? Is Frederic the combinatio­n of skill and snarl the B’s have been looking for, even more so now with the loss of Chara? Time will tell.

And with injuries and Covid promising to wreak havoc on Bruce Cassidy’s nightly lineup, these players and maybe more should get their chance to show they belong. The veteran core has carried this team for a long time and will no doubt be asked to carry it a little further. But a dash or two of youthful exuberance could make the load a little lighter.

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 ?? Ap fiLE pHOTOS ?? SWEET SORROWS: Replacing captain Zdeno Chara and defenseman Torey Krug, below right, won’t be easy.
Ap fiLE pHOTOS SWEET SORROWS: Replacing captain Zdeno Chara and defenseman Torey Krug, below right, won’t be easy.
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 ?? Stuart CaHIll / Herald staFF FIle PHotos; BeloW, CHrIs CHrIsto / Herald staFF FIle, ?? YOUNG TRIO: Bruins blue liners Brandon Carlo, Matt Grzelcyk, right, and Charlie McAvoy, below, have a lot to prove with veteran defenseman Zdeno Chara and Torey Krug departing in free agency.
Stuart CaHIll / Herald staFF FIle PHotos; BeloW, CHrIs CHrIsto / Herald staFF FIle, YOUNG TRIO: Bruins blue liners Brandon Carlo, Matt Grzelcyk, right, and Charlie McAvoy, below, have a lot to prove with veteran defenseman Zdeno Chara and Torey Krug departing in free agency.

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