News Article: Bruins' historic regular season has even NHL dignitaries floored. Now comes the next test: Stanley Cup or bust

Fenway

HF Bookie and Bruins Historian
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Sep 26, 2007
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Cambridge, MA
Even a Montreal columnist chimes in

The Mighty Bruins: So the Bruins (63-12-5 for 131 points with two games to play) now have more wins than any club in the history of the NHL. They’ve broken the previous record of 62 wins held by the Red Wings and Lightning, and they will almost certainly eclipse the Canadiens record of 132 points, set in 1976-77.

Would it be churlish to note that those 1976-77 Canadiens played 12 ties, so by today’s rules they would almost certainly have converted at least six of those games to wins either in overtime or the shootout, giving them 66 wins and 138 points? Or that a team that good might have won 10 of 12, giving them 70 wins and 142 points?

We’ll never know. In any case, this is one helluva Boston team, built in a way that is supposed to be impossible — without No. 1 picks that yield generational offensive stars.

Their one top pick, Taylor Hall, was drafted by Edmonton. With 16 goals on the season, Hall is not a key contributor. Instead, Boston has been led for years by Patrice Bergeron and Montreal favourite Brad Marchand, neither a high draft pick. Three of their top six forwards are Czechs: prolific scorer David Pastrnak (who picked up a hat trick Sunday to bring his season total to 60 goals) drafted 25th overall in 2014, veteran David Krejci, taken 63rd overall in 2004, and Pavel Zacha, drafted sixth overall in 2015 and acquired from the Devils in the off-season.

Their stud defencemen are Hampus Lindholm (sixth overall in 2012) and Charlie McAvoy (14th in 2016.) Goaltender Linus Ullmark, perhaps the main reason the Bruins set this record, was Buffalo’s 12th pick, 163rd overall, in 2012.

Jim Montgomery, the coach who put it all together, had washed out in Dallas because of personal, off-ice issues. When the Bruins reached out for him, it seemed like either desperation or madness. Yet here he is, a lock for the Jack Adams after a masterful performance that has the Beantown bunch marked as overwhelming favourites for the Stanley Cup.

If you’re a Montreal fan, not much you can do but doff your hat and say congratulations, Bruins. Well done. -
JACK TODD
 

Bradely

Registered User
Sep 17, 2021
3,081
2,977
Even a Montreal columnist chimes in

The Mighty Bruins: So the Bruins (63-12-5 for 131 points with two games to play) now have more wins than any club in the history of the NHL. They’ve broken the previous record of 62 wins held by the Red Wings and Lightning, and they will almost certainly eclipse the Canadiens record of 132 points, set in 1976-77.

Would it be churlish to note that those 1976-77 Canadiens played 12 ties, so by today’s rules they would almost certainly have converted at least six of those games to wins either in overtime or the shootout, giving them 66 wins and 138 points? Or that a team that good might have won 10 of 12, giving them 70 wins and 142 points?

We’ll never know. In any case, this is one helluva Boston team, built in a way that is supposed to be impossible — without No. 1 picks that yield generational offensive stars.

Their one top pick, Taylor Hall, was drafted by Edmonton. With 16 goals on the season, Hall is not a key contributor. Instead, Boston has been led for years by Patrice Bergeron and Montreal favourite Brad Marchand, neither a high draft pick. Three of their top six forwards are Czechs: prolific scorer David Pastrnak (who picked up a hat trick Sunday to bring his season total to 60 goals) drafted 25th overall in 2014, veteran David Krejci, taken 63rd overall in 2004, and Pavel Zacha, drafted sixth overall in 2015 and acquired from the Devils in the off-season.

Their stud defencemen are Hampus Lindholm (sixth overall in 2012) and Charlie McAvoy (14th in 2016.) Goaltender Linus Ullmark, perhaps the main reason the Bruins set this record, was Buffalo’s 12th pick, 163rd overall, in 2012.

Jim Montgomery, the coach who put it all together, had washed out in Dallas because of personal, off-ice issues. When the Bruins reached out for him, it seemed like either desperation or madness. Yet here he is, a lock for the Jack Adams after a masterful performance that has the Beantown bunch marked as overwhelming favourites for the Stanley Cup.

If you’re a Montreal fan, not much you can do but doff your hat and say congratulations, Bruins. Well done. -
JACK TODD
Good text. I would add, that 76-77 team was not in a cap era and parity wan not comparable to today's era either.
 
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