Call & Times

B’s Ullmark thriving

- By STEPHEN WHYNO

Linus Ullmark moved to the Boston area in the summer of 2021 with his wife, their two young children and thieir dogs after signing with the Bruins. Settling in with his new team didn’t happen right away.

Fresh off signing a $20 million, four-year contract, Ullmark shared the net with rookie Jeremy Swayman and then, briefly, with Tuukka Rask, the organizati­on cornerston­e who was trying to come back from hip surgery. Ullmark allowed eight goals in two playoff games before losing the starting job to Swayman and went into an offseason of change unsure what his role would be.

Turns out, it’s a starring one as the best goaltender in the NHL.

Ullmark leads the league in wins, save percentage and goals-against average, and is one of the biggest reasons the Bruins are atop the standings and on pace for the best regular season in NHL history. Along with fellow All-Stars Stuart Skinner and Logan Thompson, who respective­ly have the Edmonton Oilers and Vegas Golden Knights on track to make the playoffs, Ullmark tops the list of the biggest goalie surprises of the season.

“He’s been standing on the head,” Bruins leading scorer and fellow MVP candidate David Pastrnak said. “He’s been playing unbelievab­le. It’s just fun to watch him, honestly, this year. He’s playing confident. He’s big. He’s very confident in the net, and he’s having a special year.”

Ullmark credits being more comfortabl­e in his new surroundin­gs and it has shown in his play: He already has tied his career high with 26 victories, his .937 save percentage is more than 10 points higher than the next-closest competitor and his 1.90 GAA would be the lowest by a goalie with 40 or more games since Hall of Famer Martin Brodeur in 1997-98.

The 29-year-old Swede has been thinking a lot about what changed in his game and finds it hard to pinpoint.

Feeling more “at home” in Boston is one piece of many.

“I just think it’s just small pieces here and there that are just falling into place,” Ullmark said. “We have a great team, as well, and it goes kind of hand in hand with my performanc­e and also with Sway’s performanc­e. It’s not just a one-man show. It’s a team effort.”

The Bruins lead Eastern Conference behind Pastrnak’s 38 goals, captain Patrice Bergeron’s two-way dominance at the age of 37 and the coaching of newcomer Jim Montgomery. But Bruce Cassidy, who was fired after coaching Boston to six playoff appearance­s, called Ullmark’s emergence “the big one” when asked about his former team’s consistenc­y.

“He finished really well last year, and he’s carried that into this year,” Cassidy said. “Now you’re creating competitio­n with Swayman at that position. I think that’s a great thing for Boston.”

Cassidy, now behind the bench for the Golden Knights, has had Thompson on top of his game after Vegas learned late in the offseason Robin Lehner would be out for the season rehabbing from hip surgery.

Thrust into a leading role by injuries last season, Thompson won 20 of his first 35 starts this season before himself getting sidelined last week. Before that, the undrafted late bloomer earned All-Star honors and put himself in the conversati­on for the Calder Trophy as rookie of the year.

“There was a lot of times when I was really close to just quitting and giving up,” Thompson said. “That competitiv­eness in me never went away. That’s the biggest thing is never stop working hard at what you want.”

Oilers coach Jay Woodcroft saw similar tendencies in Skinner when they were together in the minors last year. Edmonton’s American Hockey League affiliate in Bakersfiel­d, California, was desperate for a starter one night; Skinner rushed to the rink after travel issues, getting there 5 minutes before warmups and then backstoppi­ng a win.

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