Sentinel & Enterprise

Krug bolts B’s for Blues

Defects to St. Louis as Bruins withdraw offer

- By Steve Conroy

With A whole new financial landscape facing nhl general managers, the league’s annual free agent grab promised to proceed a tad more slowly than usual. that promise was kept.

But at about 8:20 p.m. on friday, word filtered out that torey krug had become an ex-bruin, moving to the heartland and the team that delivered his now former black and gold teammates and him a crushing defeat, the st. louis blues. krug signed with the blues for seven years at an average annual value of $6.5 million. sportnet’s elliotte friedman reported that the b’s final offer was six years at $6.6 million, but that was taken off the table on friday as gm don sweeney presumably began to hunt a different big game. sweeney’s press availabili­ty was postponed till saturday afternoon.

Krug fell one game short of a stanley cup, to his new team two years ago in game 7 at the garden. but after arriving in boston as an undersized, undrafted free agent, krug left his mark on boston and the b’s as a tremendous power-play quarterbac­k and a battler despite his size.

Kevan Miller, who signed a one-year extension with the b’s, heard the news on his zoom call with reporters.

“did he really? ahh, man,” said miller, himself undrafted like krug. “obviously he’ll be missed from a player standpoint. from a personal standpoint i’ve been basically with the guy my entire career and

his entire career.. He’s a good friend and I wish him nothing but the best. And I’ll tell him to keep his head up when we play St. Louis. No, in all reality, it’s tough news for us, but I wish him the best and he’ll certainly be missed.”

Meanwhile, the Bruins were believed to be kicking the tires, at the very least, on one-time Hart Trophy winner Taylor Hall, who would add some punch the B’s left side.

Captain Zdeno Chara, in a somewhat expected developmen­t, was taking his time in the process he hadn’t been a part of in 14 years. He’s expressed his desire to continue playing for the Bruins, but some time may have been required for the B’s to gain some cost certainty with any new acquisitio­ns before they signed the captain. Chara, of course, is also free to look at his own options.

The only deal that the B’s made by publicatio­n time were that they were able to seal was with Miller, who is attempting to come back from multiple right knee injuries.

The 32-year-old Miller has had rotten luck the last couple of years, and that misfortune may have cost the B’s a Stanley Cup in 2019.

Near the end of the regular season, Miller broke his knee cap when he crashed into the end boards at Xcel Energy Center in Minnesota.

In the process or working his way back in the lineup during the 2019 playoffs, the kneecap split again and he had to shut it down. His size and physicalit­y would have come in handy when the groundand-pound Blues outlasted the B’s in the seven-game Stanley Cup Finals.

As he tried to come back in 2019-20, he suffered numerous setbacks that eventually led to surgery and he never played a game in the season that was interrupte­d and then extended by the coronaviru­s.

But the B’s have always loved the California-born and University of Vermontpro­duced Miller’s work ethic, and they saw enough in the results of his relentless rehab efforts to extend the one-year deal with a cap hit of $1.25 million.

Miller has been skating two to three times a week and working out in Colorado. He said he wouldn’t be cleared to play at this moment, but “come puck drop, I

have no doubt in my mind I’ll be 100 percent by then,” said Miller.

It’s been a tough road for Miller.

“I’d be totally lying to you if I didn’t say there were times I was staring myself in the mirror saying ‘I don’t know if this is going to work, if I’m ever going to make it back’ ” said Miller.

“But through the support of my family and my friends, coaches and teammates, everybody that’s been behind me — special shout-out to the docs and trainers, they’ve really helped me through this. It’s definitely been a test, but I think I’ve come out stronger from this, but I know my knee will be 100 percent and ready to go and won’t have one bit to worry about that. I’m super excited about that. I have some unfinished business to do. I remember watching up in the stands against St. Louis just knowing that I could help, and I still lose sleep over that. I’m excited to be back and chasing that again.”

The day began with a thud when Oliver Ekman-Larsson’s agent Kevin Epp announced that the Arizona Coyotes had run out of time to make a trade for the two-way defenseman and he was staying put in the desert.

Ekman- Larsson has a full no movement clause but had agreed to waive it for only two teams, the Canucks and Bruins. Increasing­ly over the past week, the B’s looked less likely to make a deal, whether it be because of the ask on a return package or Ekman- Larsson’s mammoth contract that calls for him to be paid $ 8.25 million a year for the next seven years.

 ?? AP FILE ?? Bruins power-play expert, defenseman Torey Krug, has signed a free-agent contract with the St. Louis Blues.
AP FILE Bruins power-play expert, defenseman Torey Krug, has signed a free-agent contract with the St. Louis Blues.
 ?? AP FILE ?? Torey Krug, top, checks St. Louis Blues’ Robert Thomas to the ice during Game 1 of the 2019 Stanley Cup Final in a spirited play that won him a lot of fans.
AP FILE Torey Krug, top, checks St. Louis Blues’ Robert Thomas to the ice during Game 1 of the 2019 Stanley Cup Final in a spirited play that won him a lot of fans.

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