Boston Bruins

September 6, 2025

EdgeHockey Staff

Jeremy Swayman Boston Bruins

A Disastrous Bruins Season and a Gold Medal Performance…Is Jeremy Swayman Ready?

The weight of an eight-year, $66 million contract can be a heavy one. For a goaltender, that weight is magnified tenfold. Every soft goal, every ill-timed rebound, every night the red light flashes too often is scrutinized through the prism of that massive dollar figure. In the 2024-25 season, that weight threatened to crush Jeremy Swayman. Now, as the crisp autumn air signals the dawn of a new campaign, the question echoing from TD Garden to the sports bars of New England is a simple but profound one: can Boston’s franchise netminder bounce back? Also on the EDGE – Boston

September 4, 2025

EdgeHockey Staff

Marco Sturm Boston Bruins

Boston Bruins Enter a Pivotal Training Camp with More Questions Than Answers

The chill in the air that signals the start of hockey season feels different in Boston this year. Gone is the swagger of a perennial contender, the “Stanley Cup or bust” mentality that has defined the Bruins for the better part of a decade. In its place is a cloud of uncertainty. After a stunning collapse that saw an eight-year playoff streak snapped and the team plummet to the bottom of the Atlantic Division, the Boston Bruins enter the 2025-26 season not in a full-scale rebuild, but in a “retool.” It’s a precarious balancing act between holding onto a winning

Fraser Minten Boston Bruins

Rebuilding the Bear: Who Steps Up for the Boston Bruins in 2025-26?

The Hub of Hockey finds itself in an unfamiliar position heading into the 2025-26 season. After a genuinely dismal 2024-25 campaign that saw them plummet to the league’s fifth-worst record, the Boston Bruins are in full retool mode. The glory days of recent memory feel distant, and the organization is now looking inward, focusing on youth and potential to claw their way back to contention. This isn’t just a transition year; it’s a foundational one, with new head coach Marco Sturm at the helm, tasked with forging a fresh identity. For us die-hard fans, this preseason isn’t just about knocking

Boston Bruins owner Jeremy Jacobs and team president Cam Neely

Crisis on Causeway: The Mounting Case Against the Bruins’ Front Office

The Boston Bruins, a proud Original Six franchise, find themselves at a perilous crossroads. The on-ice product has sputtered, culminating in what can only be described as a disastrous 2024-25 season. Yet, the discontent simmering among the B’s faithful runs deeper than a single losing campaign. The fanbase’s gaze is fixed firmly on the executive suite, where President Cam Neely and General Manager Don Sweeney preside over a team that seems to have lost its identity, its direction, and most critically, its future. The criticism isn’t just noise from the cheap seats; it’s a chorus of condemnation from analysts, insiders,

James Hagens Boston Bruins

A Deep Dive Into the Boston Bruins’ Reborn Prospect Pool

For years, analyzing the Boston Bruins’ prospect pool was an exercise in bleakness. It was the NHL’s barren wasteland, a system consistently ranked at or near the very bottom of the league. Pundits, including the respected analysts at The Athletic, had them pegged dead last—32nd out of 32 teams—for two consecutive seasons. It was a running joke, a testament to years of trading away draft picks for “win-now” pieces. But the hockey world is cyclical, and tides, even in the frozen rinks of the NHL, have a way of turning. Under the often-scrutinized leadership of General Manager Don Sweeney, the

Don Sweeney Boston Bruins

Inside the Boston Bruins’ Risky Forward Corps Retool

For the first time in a long time, the air around TD Garden this fall doesn’t carry the familiar scent of Stanley Cup contention. After a season that saw them on the outside looking in come playoff time, finishing near the bottom of the league, the Boston Bruins are a team in transition. General Manager Don Sweeney has been busy, but if you’re looking for a blockbuster, headline-grabbing acquisition to fix the team’s offensive woes, you’re looking in the wrong place. This isn’t a teardown; it’s a “retool,” a word that can either signal a shrewd, forward-thinking pivot or a

David Pastrnak Charlie McAvoy Boston Bruins

Sturm’s Mandate: Can a Healthy Bruins D-Corps Erase the Memory of 2024-25?

The Boston Bruins are banking on a simple, yet notoriously fickle, hockey truth: health is the best offseason acquisition. After a 2024-25 campaign that saw their blue line decimated by injuries and defined by a chaotic, revolving door of personnel, General Manager Don Sweeney and new Head Coach Marco Sturm are betting the house that the return of their two defensive pillars will be enough to right the ship. It’s a calculated gamble. On paper, the plan is sound. In reality, it places an immense amount of pressure on the surgically repaired ligaments and bones of a few key men.

Boston Bruins Jeremy Swayman

Bruins in the Hot Seat: Which Players Need a Big Bounce-Back Season?

Another season has come and gone, and for the Boston Bruins, the 2024-25 campaign was one to forget. After the historic, record-breaking season of 2022-23, last year felt like a cold shower. The B’s missed the playoffs for the first time since 2016, a bitter pill to swallow for a team and a fanbase accustomed to contending. While there were a few bright spots – David Pastrnak doing Pastrnak things and Morgan Geekie having a career year – there were also a handful of guys who, to put it bluntly, didn’t pull their weight. The Bruins made some big moves

Elias Pettersson Vancouver Canucks

Time to Hit the Panic Button? 6 Players Who Need a Big Bounce-Back Season in 2025-26

Well, another NHL season is in the books, and as the dust settles on the 2024-25 campaign, it’s time to start looking ahead. For some guys, the offseason will be a time for some well-deserved rest and relaxation. For others, it’ll be a summer of soul-searching and hard work, a chance to right the ship after a season they’d rather forget. Every year, there are players who, for one reason or another, just don’t live up to expectations. Whether it’s due to injury, a new system, or a good old-fashioned slump, some guys just can’t seem to find their game.