Boston Herald

Frederic gets an itch from scratch

Responds with goal on first shift

- By STEVE CONROY

When a coach decides to give a player a healthy scratch, the hope is that it will light a fire under that player to get him to perform better.

BRUINS NOTEBOOK

Rarely does it work as well and as quickly as it did for Bruce Cassidy and Trent Frederic on Saturday. On Frederic’s first shift after getting scratched on Thursday, he won a puck race to keep a play alive, then bolted for the net where he scored on the rebound of a Craig Smith shot just 49 seconds into the Bruins’ 2-1 win over the Pittsburgh Penguins.

It was exactly the kind of play that Cassidy had been looking for not just from Frederic but the whole third line.

“Good for (Frederic),” said Cassidy. “Sometimes guys don’t respond well and then they come back and they’re bitter or whatever word you want to use Freddy wasn’t that way. It was explained to him why. And I thought he went out and practiced well (Friday) and got rewarded right away by going to the right spot. I like that Smith attacked the net. That line, as a I said the other day, was getting farther and farther away from the net. That’s what I mean. Smitty didn’t walk up any farther than he had to. He got good possession, collected the puck, saw a seam and got it to the net for a second chance. And that’s how they’re effective, that line, and we need more of that from them.”

It was Frederic’s sixth goal of the season and he could have had his seventh in the second period but he fanned on a good chance off the rush.

He had been scratched

after taking a bad roughing penalty that helped sink the Bruins against the Blues on Tuesday. He got the message.

“I just wanted to play hard and help the team, play discipline­d and obviously try to get a win. Any time they’re winning, that’s good” said Frederic of the scratch. “Smitty made a good play, put it to the net. When our line’s successful, that’s what we do. I just got a good bounce and was lucky to put it in the net.”

Of his short time in the press box, Frederic said what many before him have said.

“It’s a lot easier up there,” said Frederic with a laugh.

“You just see how much more time you have, you pick up on little things. I’m trying to watch the wingers now and seeing what other teams are doing. I think it helps any time you go up there. It happened to be me in college where I hurt my hand and I had to watch for a month or so and I thought it helped me then as well. We have a lot of good players so it’s hard to be in this lineup every night.”

Carlo in, Brown out

With Brandon Carlo returning to the lineup, Josh Brown took a seat. The 6-foot-5, 217pound Brown dropped the gloves on his first shift as a

Bruin a couple of weeks ago, but Cassidy believes he can bring a little more nastiness to his game.

“Be a little more engaged in the game for what he brings. The other night, Ottawa had some big hits against us. One on (Taylor) Hall, maybe a counter hit on (Jesper) Froden. So we’ve got to respond with some physicalit­y,” said Cassidy. “That doesn’t mean you go grab somebody. It’s just when you think it was a dirty hit — I think (Curtis Lazar) thought it was high on Hall. He responded and we want guys to stick up for each other. Not on every clean hit, but if we feel there’s one that might be a little across the

line, whether it was right or wrong. I know the refs didn’t see it that way. At the end of the day, those are good responses for the team. And just maybe be a little more physical in front of our net in clearing out. They had some power-play opportunit­ies, second chances, where you can send a message and put some of those younger guys on their (butt) in front of the net. Little things like that that he’s able to bring better than a smaller guy. He had a couple of chances to clear pucks on the PK that I think he could have been stronger on. Just more urgency in his game. Sometimes it’s partner-oriented, too. I don’t know that he and (Derek Forbort) would be a great pair yet.”

Carlo, meanwhile, looked good in his return, logging 21:13 of icetime, finishing at plus-1 and helping the B’s to a 3-for-3 penalty kill…

With Frederic coming back, it was Tomas Nosek’s turn for a healthy scratch. Cassidy expects it to be a quick reset for Nosek, who hasn’t scored a goal since Jan. 2.

“(Nosek’s) game has slipped a little. He’s like some other guys. Tomas can give us a little more,” said Cassidy before the game. “We’ve moved him around, we like what he brings to the team. Freddy wasn’t going to be long-term. That line has been excellent for us, just

not as much recently. We addressed that. And (Marc) McLaughlin, he’s produced. We didn’t know how it would play out. We didn’t expect him to have three goals in six games. Good for him. He’s pushing guys.”

McLaughlin, meanwhile, played just 7:21, including just three shifts in the third period. It was his fourth Garden game and first one without a goal. Nick Foligno saw just two shifts in the third.

Injury report

Hampus Lindholm (knee) and David Pastrnak (core) remained out and Cassidy did not want to venture a guess on whether either would travel for next week’s two-game roadie to St. Louis and Pittsburgh. But they’ve both been out almost two weeks and their timing is starting to be a concern.

“We’re not going to rush anybody, but they’re going in when they ready,” said Cassidy…

There was no tearful reunion between Brad Marchand and Penguins goalie Tristan Jarry, whom Marchand punched and high-sticked to earn a bloated six-game suspension back on February 8. Jarry suffered a lower-body injury and is out on a week-toweek basis for the Pens, tough news for Pittsburgh this late in the season.

 ?? PAUl CoNNors pHoTos / BosToN HErAlD ?? FIRED UP: Trent Frederic pumps his fist in celebratio­n after scoring a goal against the Pittsburgh Penguins during the first period at TD Garden on Saturday afternoon.
PAUl CoNNors pHoTos / BosToN HErAlD FIRED UP: Trent Frederic pumps his fist in celebratio­n after scoring a goal against the Pittsburgh Penguins during the first period at TD Garden on Saturday afternoon.
 ?? ?? GOOD TIPPER: Erik Haula attempts to deflect the puck past Pittsburgh Penguins goalie Casey DeSmith during the Bruins’ 2-1 win on Saturday afternoon.
GOOD TIPPER: Erik Haula attempts to deflect the puck past Pittsburgh Penguins goalie Casey DeSmith during the Bruins’ 2-1 win on Saturday afternoon.

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