• 2 months ago
Pucks with Haggs host and guest Mick Colageo look at the Bruins rookie camp roster that doesn't include Fabian Lysell and Georgii Merkulov, arguably their two biggest prospects


Prize Picks - https://prizepicks.onelink.me/LME0/CLNS
Download the app today and use Code CLNS when you sign up & Get $50 instantly when you play $5!

Gametime - https://gametime.co
Take the guesswork out of buying MLB tickets with Gametime. Download the Gametime app, create an account, and use code CLNS for $20 off your first purchase. Download Gametime today. Last minute tickets. Lowest Price. Guaranteed. Terms apply.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Welcome to the #CLNS Media Network’s YouTube channel for Boston #Bruins hockey. CLNS Media is the leading online provider of audio/video coverage for the Boston sports. Get complete inside access to the Bruins at TD Garden, the game day skates at Warrior, and everywhere on the road. CLNS #NHLBruins' credentialed insiders Mike "Trags" Petraglia, Evan Marinofski, Conor Ryan, and Joe "Haggs" Haggerty. Providing instantaneous news and analysis all in real time, as well as full access to complete videos from the players, coaches, ownership and everyone else on Causeway Street.

For the CLNS award winning Celtics, Patriots, Red Sox, College hoops, NBA History, go here to featured channels- https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCiP7KyKodc3OHuN_XhEyPPw?sub_confirmation=1

Category

🥇
Sports
Transcript
00:00Pucks with Hags is brought to you by Price Picks and the Game Time app.
00:07Welcome to the Pucks with Hags podcast powered by Price Picks, the exclusive daily fantasy
00:10partner of the CLNS Media Network.
00:12I believe this is the 122nd episode of the Pucks with Hags podcast.
00:17With me, longtime friend and colleague, Mick Colaggio.
00:20Mick, please tell everybody hello and tell them where they can find your work, my friend.
00:24Ah, you can find me at my Rink Wrap blog, which I link to social media such as X and
00:29Facebook, and I'm in the current yearbook issue of the Hockey News with the Bruins article
00:36among 31 other fabulous presentations.
00:40Very good.
00:41Check that out online and on newsstands.
00:43Hockey News is a fantastic publication.
00:46We're recording this episode on 9-11, Mick, so, you know, I just would like to give a
00:52shout out really quick in, you know, memory of Ace Bailey, Garnett Ace Bailey, two-time
00:58Stanley Cup winner for the Boston Bruins, legendary guy, gregarious guy, like a, you
01:05know, a fun player that was on those Stanley Cup winning teams with Bobby Orr.
01:10I have a little bit of a connection to Ace Bailey through my dad because my dad actually
01:14like did some work for him when my dad had a trucking company.
01:20Actually, he and Ace Bailey drove all the way up to Canada with like a truck full of
01:25hockey equipment and then drove all the way back and it was the day after the Phil Esposito
01:32Ray Bork ceremony.
01:34So Ace Bailey was in rare form, needless to say, when they were driving up to Canada and
01:40back.
01:41And my dad like was a huge Bruins fan at that time and that era, the Bobby Orr era Bruins.
01:48So it was like a super treat for him to be able to like hang out with Ace Bailey all
01:51day and he was telling me about how they went up to customs and, you know, the customs agents
01:56started asking Ace Bailey all these questions about like the equipment and where it was
01:59going and Ace is like got his Stanley Cup ring on and he's like adjusting it while he's
02:03talking to the customs agents and like kind of showing it in their face.
02:07He like had all these fun stories about Ace from those trips.
02:10So he sounded like a fantastic guy, was obviously an excellent hockey player and it just continues
02:17to bring into focus just, you know, remembering 9-11, the lives that we lost, the people
02:23that we lost, the tragic event it was and that we're never going to forget any events
02:27that happened that day.
02:28We're never going to forget any of us where we were that day when it happened and all
02:31the lives that were incredibly negatively impacted by that tragic event.
02:36So just, you know, a moment to, you know, kind of reflect on Ace Bailey here, Mike.
02:41Well, we know in our neighborhoods, big, you know, Twin Towers, it's a lot of people
02:46and it wound up getting close to home for a lot of people.
02:50I was on the highway going north to Wilmington for Bruins training camp when I heard on WBZ
02:59AM 1030 that there had been a plane that struck one of the skyscrapers in New York and I'm
03:08thinking, huh?
03:09Like, I'm thinking like a Cessna or something, when a Cessna hit the Empire State Building,
03:15you know, and I'm not even talking about King Kong, but I didn't realize the full extent
03:22of it until they said the second one hit and this was now a terrorist attack on the United
03:29States.
03:30Got to Wilmington, watching it on the big screen and Jerry Chevers walks in and says
03:35Ace was on the plane.
03:39And we also know Mark Bavis, Boston University terrier.
03:44They were both working for the Los Angeles Kings and were flying out to camp.
03:48And my brother did a wonderful painting of Ace Bailey's dramatic gold at late in game
03:53one of the 1972 Stanley Cup Final, where he turned Brad Park and roofed it on Eddie Jockerman.
04:02You know, the Bruins had led that game like five to one.
04:05Rangers came back and everybody's, oh, no, here we go, because they still have 1971 and
04:09Ken Dryden still firmly in their minds.
04:11And so the regular season, even though they knocked another one out of the park, didn't
04:15mean anything.
04:16So the fans, well, Ace came to the rescue that day and set the Bruins on course to win
04:20the Stanley Cup again in 72.
04:24It was him.
04:25It was an individual move by a guy who was playing fourth line with Mike Walton.
04:28The Bruins was top nine, was a hard nut to crack.
04:33And he got in there and, you know, late in the game, like less than three minutes of
04:36regulation and he did it and the Bruins never looked back.
04:43But my brother did this painting of Ace and I don't know why so many years went by before
04:48we finally made him aware of this painting that was at the end of my parents' hallway
04:53in East Walpole all those years.
04:55But my brother started making small prints of it and I brought an 8x10 to Ace to have
05:00him autograph one and give him one.
05:02And he was beside himself that this had ever happened.
05:05And you know, it's been, it's been, you know, in the sports museum, in the garden, you know,
05:11since then.
05:12And it was even on TV 38 when he was doing it in the early 70s when my brother was showing
05:18it with Tom Larson between periods.
05:21But anyway, Ace, the last thing he did before he got on the plane was tell his, you know,
05:26tell his wife, make sure you get this framed.
05:29Really?
05:30Oh, I didn't even know.
05:31Wow.
05:32This is an incredible story that has, it's just, I'll remember more and more if I keep
05:37talking.
05:38So I'll stop now.
05:39Yeah.
05:40Yeah.
05:41But, but, but yeah.
05:42So there's our family connection, you know, through my brother Don, who's an amazing artist.
05:47He did these scoreboards and, and yeah, but that was something he did when he was in,
05:55when he was just out of high school.
05:58And we brought it to a Bruins game back when you could sit on the visiting bench during
06:01the pre-games.
06:02Last game of the 72-73 regular season, the Bruins had just traded Ace Bailey to get Gary
06:07Doak back and the Canadians came over to the, saw us sitting there and Don's got his painting
06:12there and everybody starts autographing the thing.
06:14Peter Mohavlich, all the way across Sunrise, big, big signature.
06:18Bob Wilson did it, Johnny Busick signed the back of it, Jimmy Roberts, and the list goes
06:24on.
06:25Even got John Kiley's, the organist's autograph on it.
06:28So yeah, so that's a long history of that one and commemorating Ace and fortunately
06:36we were able to make contact with the family and get them some, you know, deluxe versions
06:42of it.
06:43So in the aftermath, so, but Ace, awesome guy, loved knowing him, you know, later in
06:49life as when he was a pro scout visiting the garden on behalf of the Kings.
06:54So it's pretty cool that the Monarchs, when they were in the American League, commemorated
06:59him as well, the way they did.
07:01They really, they really, they really did a lot, you know, and Barbara Poitier with
07:07the foundation and just amazing the work that they did with the Bailey family in the wake
07:13of all of that and extended his legacy and for a long time, it was really awesome.
07:19Yeah, all of it well-deserved because he was such a well-liked person, a great hockey
07:25player, obviously, but like touched a ton of lives and was, you know, within that fabric
07:31of the hockey community that we always talk about where everybody takes care of everybody
07:34else.
07:35And it's, it's pretty neat that you have that personal connection and that, you know, that,
07:40that painting was so meaningful to him and his family.
07:44That's really cool.
07:45I mean, even on paintings, he's wearing his trademark white turtleneck.
07:48I mean, Espo always wore a black turtleneck, Ace always wore a white turtleneck.
07:52It's a funny thing that guys would just have their little idiosyncratic things that they
07:57did back when they played, but that was his.
08:01Very cool.
08:03So you know, it's great just going over some memories and then we both had, you know, somewhat
08:10personal connections to him, but no doubt, I mean, when you cover the Bruins for long
08:13enough and even when you just follow hockey long enough, you begin to develop these like
08:16connections that you never thought you would.
08:20And it's just one of the great parts of being part of the hockey culture.
08:23So you know, let's, we'll never forget Ace Bailey.
08:28We're always going to remember him.
08:29It's you know, it's, it always comes up on September 11th.
08:35It's one of the first names and people that I think about every September 11th.
08:38So we're thinking about Ace and his family again this September 11th.
08:43Let's move on to the hockey and the Boston Bruins and like things are starting to crank
08:48up now with the Bruins Mick first day of rookie camp.
08:52They're going to the prospect showcase in Buffalo on the weekend.
08:57An interesting roster.
09:00No Fabian Lysel, no Jerzy Merkulov.
09:04You know, Riley Duran's on the roster, Trevor Kuntar, John Farinacci, Frederick Brunet,
09:12Jackson Edwards.
09:13So there, there are some guys on there that'll be interesting to watch.
09:19But it's interesting that they left them off of that rookie camp roster, perhaps.
09:24And we talked about this before the podcast started, perhaps a nod to them that they're
09:28kind of viewed now as NHL players or, you know, NHL hopefuls, but not prospects anymore.
09:35But like, there's a part of me too, though, that feels like going to that prospect showcase
09:40and really like going in and dominating would have been a nice start to NHL training camp
09:45for them.
09:46You know, a little bit of a kickstart going into a camp where they're going to be competing
09:50for jobs.
09:51And if I were Fabian Lysel or if I were Jerzy Merkulov, I might have pushed to go to that
09:59camp and be a dominant player and kind of ride that momentum going into regular training
10:02camp, knowing how much is on the line and also just wanting to make a good impression.
10:06You know, like I feel like wanting to do more makes the better impression rather than sort
10:11of holding out of stuff or being held out of stuff.
10:15Yeah, I guess there's a few different prisms to look at this.
10:19I can certainly see the one you're angling toward there.
10:23I'm assuming that the Bruins must have tried to send a message to both guys that, look,
10:28you've been in professionals now for two years.
10:31I mean, note that Brett Harrison is back in the rookie camp here.
10:35Yeah, Ryan Mast too.
10:36He's been around for a while.
10:38Yeah, right.
10:39I feel like Ryan Mast is like the oldest 21-year-old I've ever seen.
10:44There's a funny couple of names in here.
10:47Drew Bavaro.
10:48Is he Mark Bavaro's kid or something?
10:50No, he is not Mark Bavaro's kid.
10:51I think he's from Florida.
10:52He is from Florida, but that doesn't mean Mark Bavaro's.
10:56Is he still around?
10:57Yeah, I don't think he's I'm like 99.9% sure he's not Mark Bavaro's kid and I don't think
11:04he's.
11:05Bavaro had a brother, too, that played in the NFL.
11:06I don't think it's his brother.
11:07That's right.
11:08I don't think there's any relation.
11:09OK.
11:10And then there's defenseman Loke Johansson, who I'm assuming is Luke.
11:16No, it's Loke.
11:17Oh, is it Loke?
11:18No, it's Loke.
11:19OK.
11:20He was a draft pick.
11:21He was a draft pick this past year.
11:22He was like a 6th or 7th round pick out of Sweden.
11:25OK.
11:26Well, I guess what goes in Finland doesn't necessarily go in Sweden because we found
11:29out that Younis Korpisalo is actually Younis, even though there's two O's.
11:34And then the one the one other birthday I want to note here is Charlie Hilton, six foot
11:40five.
11:41He's the youngest guy in the rookie camp.
11:43He actually is 17 years old.
11:46Yeah.
11:47He doesn't turn he doesn't turn 18 until the day that I turned 68.
11:55So I got exactly 50 years on this dude.
12:01So that's crazy.
12:02I hope he I hope he makes it so I can discuss this with him sometime and maybe we can share
12:07a cupcake or something.
12:10Yeah, you get to share a birthday cupcake, kick around, sing each other happy birthday.
12:18Are you one?
12:19Are you to go through the whole list?
12:20I'm only I'm only 50, only 50 years older than the youngest guy in Bruins rookie camp.
12:26I remember how the morning when Reggie Lemelin retired, because I think that was the day
12:30that there was not a single NHL or left that was older than me.
12:34See, like, I remember I go back to my moment like that is when Sagan was a rookie and drafted
12:44and he was I'm old enough to be his father, basically, like biologically, like that was
12:52the one where like when I saw they was born in 1992.
12:55That was the year I graduated high school.
12:57I was like 17, 18.
12:58I was like, oh, man, like that's that's crazy.
13:02Oh, and by the way, this camp is one goaltender away from being the first Brook Bruins rookie
13:08camp ever without a 1990s birthday.
13:11I know.
13:12My initial July 5th, ninety nine.
13:15It's crazy.
13:16Not in there.
13:17Everybody's a two thousand or more.
13:18Yeah.
13:19Now it's starting to get old, Mick.
13:20It's time to get old.
13:22No longer creep it up on us.
13:23It's there.
13:24It's no longer about the teenage hockeys hockey anymore that this is rather than the like
13:30esoteric kind of vague sort of names or like names that aren't that familiar, that seem
13:36kind of out there.
13:39What names are you looking at that when we and I believe the games are going to be streamed
13:44on the Bruins website, we're going to be able to see them in their entirety.
13:49That was the word on the street today.
13:50I was wondering that what players are you going to be sort of looking at or what?
13:56Who are you curious to watch of the players that are on that list?
13:59Kutar is the one that really because this kid, this kid, even when he was at B.C., if
14:07a guy came up to him when he was like a freshman at B.C. and gave him any grief, he was like
14:13grab the guy with one arm and twist him into a pretzel without moving like like he was
14:19swatting a fly.
14:20And I'm thinking, oh, this guy might be a pro.
14:23Well, here he is.
14:25And and and he's going to about to play his age, 23 hockey season, and he's from a great
14:33town to produce players, Buffalo.
14:37And I love how this kid plays.
14:39I just hope he can keep up with the NHL pace, because I feel like his foot speed zone to
14:47zone is probably the only question whether or not this kid could develop into a real
14:53bottom six kind of a pill and help an NHL club like the Bruins.
15:00He can play center.
15:01He can play wing.
15:03This kid's pretty versatile and he's pretty nasty.
15:06I think it's just looking forward to seeing whether or not we got an NHL here.
15:11And I think speed is a question.
15:12Ice Picks is the largest daily fantasy sports platform in North America and the easiest
15:17and most exciting way to play daily fantasy sports.
15:19Instead of battling thousands of other players that could be pros or sharks, you simply pick
15:23more or less than in two to six player stat projections and you watch the winnings roll
15:28right in.
15:29Right now, you can take advantage of Caitlin Clark racking up triple doubles and dropping
15:32dimes in every game she's playing or hop on the Jaron Duran train as he's posting big
15:37offensive numbers in just about every statistical category imaginable.
15:43One Caleb Williams passing yard gets you one win on Prize Picks every week in September.
15:48That's right.
15:49Only one yard gets you an automatic win every football weekend in September.
15:53Four weeks of free W's.
15:55Don't miss the deal on Prize Picks because it's gone when September ends.
15:59You can now win up to 100 times your money on Prize Picks with as little as four correct
16:02picks.
16:03Download the Prize Picks app today and use the code CLNS to get $50 instantly when you
16:09play five bucks.
16:10That's code CLNS on Prize Picks to get $50 instantly when you play $5.
16:16You don't even need to win to receive the $50 bonus.
16:19It's guaranteed.
16:20Prize Picks run your game.
16:22Yeah, I mean, the reality of, you know, some of the players that we're watching here, some
16:29of the interesting players that are on the radar, Trevor Quintar is definitely one of
16:34them.
16:35He's one of those gritty sandpapery, you know, net front presences.
16:40We were actually laughing during the practice today because I think a puck, like, bounced
16:44off his, like, shoulder or elbow and went to the net for a goal and we're like, that's
16:48exactly how he's going to score at the NHL level, just, like, plopped in front and having
16:52a puck deflect off him, that kind of stuff.
16:56Don't use them all up.
16:57Yeah, he's definitely a Bruin-style player and I like the way he plays, like, the skill
17:01level's not off the charts, the skating level's not off the charts, but I think he brings
17:06other things to the table.
17:07Could be a really interesting sort of third, fourth line guy with a little bit of, you
17:12know, offensive touch.
17:14I'm really going to be curious to actually watch Riley Duran because he's a guy, I think,
17:20that rides into this rookie camp and this training camp with a lot of momentum and,
17:26frankly, like, he played in the AHL last year, like, he's one of those guys that I guess
17:32you could argue that he could have skipped this prospect camp and this rookie camp if
17:37he really wanted to.
17:38Like, he probably is one of those guys that could have just, like, said no thanks and
17:42waited until NHL camp, especially when he got name-checked by Don Sweeney on July 1
17:48as a guy that's going to be competing, potentially, for a roster spot at the NHL level just based
17:53on the way he looked in Providence at the end of the year.
17:57But he's going to the prospect showcase.
18:00He's going, he's kind of the leader of that team now at rookie camp and he could go in
18:05and really give himself a leg up on some of these other young players potentially competing
18:11for an NHL spot if he has a really good weekend.
18:15And I think it's good on him.
18:17I'm really going to be interested to see what he does, what kind of impact he can have,
18:21if he's a little bit more of a dominant player against maybe some guys that are a little
18:25bit younger than him or, you know, some of his peers.
18:30He's a right shot.
18:31They need right shots.
18:32And the Bruins, you know, they're not looking at the stats.
18:36They know that Providence was down last year compared to the year before.
18:41So Duran was cast in a more of a checking role and that's probably what the Bruins are
18:49happy to see, playing in different roles and seeing his game mature in ways that it's going
18:53to need to in order for him to be useful to them in the short term, at least.
18:59I mean, he won't have to, like, grow a game from ground floor.
19:03He's got that two-way kind of style already and similar to Kunter, but not with as much,
19:09a little more with skill, a little less with the edge, but with sufficiency in both departments
19:15to be a good bottom six player.
19:17That's why they're looking at him.
19:18And I think that you're right.
19:19I think that they're looking at their right wings and they're saying, we have a lot of
19:26keeping an open mind about how this thing turns itself out.
19:30They're not ruling him out for anything right now.
19:31No.
19:32And he's a lot bigger than Kunter, too.
19:35He's a big sort of rangy forward that has ideal NHL size.
19:39Not the fastest guy in the world, but his skating is good.
19:42All of his skills, I think, are pretty good.
19:44And I think he's one of those players, frankly, that he's got a high hockey IQ.
19:51So I think part of the reason he had so much success in the AHL after jumping from Providence
19:57to the AHL was he was surrounded by smart hockey players like himself.
20:01And I think that really put him in a better environment to succeed, where everybody sort
20:06of was on the same page and the same wavelength, thinking the same way.
20:10You know, once you get to the pro level, everybody's got really good hockey IQ.
20:13So they're all sort of like, you know, doing the right things.
20:16Yeah.
20:17As varying skills as they may have, they all understand their roles very, very well and
20:23what they can and cannot do in a game.
20:26The big boys.
20:27And it's amazing.
20:29You can see these little things happen that reveal themselves about how guys, they have
20:33a deeper toolkit than you might realize within their role.
20:38Just like take, for instance, when the Bruins got Pat Maroon.
20:42It was kind of fun watching to see the different ways that Pat Maroon's pretty good.
20:47I didn't really give a long look to when he was playing for the opposition.
20:52Yep.
20:53No, he's got some skill.
20:55There's no question about it.
20:56You know, he's he's definitely like skating speed wise.
21:00He is ultra slow.
21:01There's no question about it.
21:02You know, there's really no other way to put it when you were watching him out there.
21:07And the skating part of it is rough.
21:09And that's what's going to ultimately, I think, make it harder for him to hang on to a spot
21:13at the NHL level.
21:14But you could see the skill level.
21:16You could see the way he thought the game, what he did with the puck, like all those
21:19different things.
21:20He was good.
21:21The game checking routes were amazing.
21:23Yes.
21:24And the way he could cut off and read transition plays and interrupt the you'd think he was
21:31a guy who was a video coach, you know, the way he would think out there.
21:34He just did stuff that was like, wow, he mitigates his lack of speed and then has a lot of tricks
21:41and craftiness when he gets into the contact areas that really got to appreciate him as
21:47a hockey player.
21:49And after that acquisition, sometimes you get a you can see much better close up than
21:54you can from a distance sometimes.
21:56Yeah.
21:57Another guy that'll be interesting to watch is John Ferenacci.
22:00Had a decent season in Providence last year.
22:04Talking to Ryan Mugenel after the rookie camp session today kind of alluded to that the
22:09schedule and the rigors of the HL season and pro hockey kind of made him wear down in the
22:15second half of the year.
22:16He wasn't as effective as he was in the first half.
22:17And that makes sense.
22:19He played like 20 games his last year at Harvard.
22:21So like you went from playing on the weekends and just playing Friday, Saturday or Saturday,
22:26Sunday, whatever, two games a week on the weekends to the HL schedule that's much heavier
22:31and they play, you know, 70 to 80 games.
22:34Providence had a terrible schedule last year.
22:36They got a ton of those three and threes.
22:37Yep.
22:38Looking for concert tickets for the rest of this summer, early fall.
22:41Last year I used game time to get tickets to Def Leppard, Poison, Motley Crue and Joan
22:48Jett at Fenway Park.
22:50And you can go out and get Fenway Park concert tickets this summer and this fall with game
22:55time.
22:56Pearl Jam is coming in September.
22:57I believe Post Malone is also coming to Fenway Park in September.
23:00So why not use game time to get your tickets for those concerts in addition to the football
23:06action that you're going to have that's just starting up as well that you can use game
23:09time to get Patriots tickets or any tickets to either NFL or college football all around.
23:16So it's fantastic using game time right now, taking the guesswork out of buying concert
23:21tickets with game time.
23:23You can have all in pricing, which is the feature shows you the total up front with
23:27no surprise fees at checkout.
23:29Seat views, you can get a panoramic view from your seat in the app before you buy.
23:33The lowest price guarantee, which is my favorite, or game time will credit you 110% of the
23:39difference.
23:41Download the game time app, create an account and use the code CLNS for $20 off your first
23:46purchase.
23:47Terms do apply again, but create an account and redeem the code CLNS for $20 off.
23:52Download game time today.
23:54Last minute tickets, lowest price guaranteed.
23:58So like, you know, it's understandable that the consistency and that the performance level
24:02wasn't quite the same in the second half as he adjusted to that schedule and sort of made
24:07the adjustments diet conditioning wise, like all the stuff that you have to do when you're
24:10pro because much more is demanded of you physically.
24:13It's going to be interesting to see what he does in his second year of pro because there
24:17were a lot of good things he did in the first half of the year when he was one of their
24:20leading scores and he was really effective.
24:21It'll be good to see if he can transition that into like that consistency from beginning
24:26to end this year.
24:28And you know, he was a guy that I think is similar to Riley Duran, who Mujanel mentioned
24:36was a Monty and Chris Kelly kind of player.
24:39I think Farinacci is that same kind of player.
24:41So I would suspect that he's he may see some NHL time this year as well at some point,
24:47but I think he's a guy that I want to see what he does in this rookie camp because he's
24:50another one that should probably be a dominant player at this point in his career.
24:54Yeah, I don't know.
24:56I'm not sure how I feel about about him.
25:00I kind of feel like I need to see him, you know, I suppose I guess the last memory of
25:09him wasn't as impressive as the next one will be for the reasons you just went through.
25:15So I am looking forward to seeing, OK, this kid's going to be 24 in January.
25:22And so it's kind of time for him to decide what his level is going to be as a pro.
25:28And, you know, especially from a skill standpoint, that's going to get determined fairly soon.
25:34You know, he's one of those Crossroads guys and the Crossroads kind of came up for him
25:38rather quickly.
25:39You know, some people seem like they're prospects with a five year window.
25:43His seems shorter to me.
25:45Yeah, I mean, it's hard to have that window when you started college late and then you
25:49went to college for like almost close to the full duration or the full duration.
25:53And then, you know, all of a sudden you're being released in the NHL.
25:56You're at twenty three, twenty four, twenty five.
25:58You really don't have too many years to develop before you're going to start knocking on the door.
26:02It's not going to happen.
26:03Yeah.
26:04Yeah, that's true.
26:05I mean, as much as we want to, you know, think that, look, just when we start getting sick
26:13of guys because they're not there yet and they're not the shiny new toy anymore, a lot
26:19of times they're hiding in plain sight and they're getting better and we're not looking
26:23at them anymore and they're getting better looking all the time.
26:27So you never want to take your eyes off a guy like that.
26:29And that's the discipline that the management teams have.
26:33And that's how they have to go about their business.
26:37The forgotten prospects, the ones that, you know, aren't getting any headlines and they're
26:42still hanging around, they're still farming up those players.
26:45And sometimes they sneak up on a later date.
26:48You just don't know when somebody is going to spike.
26:50I think that Loco was kind of like that, you know, he was sort of in the in Providence
26:54for a couple of years and sort of weren't sure what, you know, he was going to turn
26:58into.
26:59And then all of a sudden he like he turned into like a fourth line option and a guy that
27:03for a couple of years they got some good mileage out of as an energy sort of player.
27:08And then we're able to trade him for a useful part that they brought back in Loteri.
27:12So let's not forget, they still get Parker Wotherspoon, who went through this with the
27:16Islanders.
27:17It's kind of a poster boy for this with the Islanders, you know, behind what was a stack
27:21D the year they went to the conference final in 21.
27:26And it's changed around a little bit.
27:28But the things that he does well in his overall game is just, you know, there were more appealing
27:34options when it comes in physically larger packages to get so many guys, you know, Pula,
27:41Pelic, you know, it's like three or four other ones that I'm mental blocking on right now.
27:49But Wotherspoon wound up becoming an available guy and the Bruins wound up capitalizing on
27:53having a late blooming prospect whose NHL game has been pretty good for them when needed.
28:00And now he's going to be probably going in needing to just compete to make sure he stays
28:06at seven.
28:08And it'll be the left shot option who can slide to the right.
28:12And he's probably the you know, the odds on favor to be the seventh D when the season
28:16opens.
28:17But that's not what he wants.
28:19So it's going to be it's going to be some competition back there.
28:22It sure will be.
28:24And speaking of the back end, I think that's another area to look at a couple of the players
28:29here.
28:30I think Frederick Brunet is a guy that I think, you know, should take a step forward in the
28:35HL this year.
28:36It'll be interesting to watch him play at a, you know, developmental year last year
28:40in Providence was very young for the HL level.
28:44And I think it was an adjustment for him going to pro going against bigger, stronger, faster
28:47opponents.
28:49And then Jackson Edwards, a guy I really want to watch a bit and see how he plays, because
28:53he's raw, but he's got some skills, certainly plays with an edge physically and an attitude
28:59that I think is very Bruins like.
29:01And that's the kind of guy I think could eventually in a year or two turn into a player on the
29:05Bruins back end and a guy that develops into an NHL player.
29:08And I kind of want to see where he's at developmentally right now.
29:12Edward headed into his first full NHL season.
29:15Yeah, it's funny when you look at the both he and Brunet are both 6'3", Edward only weighs
29:21three more pounds.
29:22But by all accounts, Edward is a much more physical player, even though he is a half
29:28a year younger.
29:29Well, Brunet, Brunet fancies him and he was talking about that he kind of fancies himself
29:33an offensive defenseman, a puck moving defenseman.
29:36He's but he said today like he needs to start playing more physical and sort of focus on
29:42that area of the game, because that's where he was maybe a little light last year.
29:46Well, he's he's like Brett Harrison.
29:49But as a defenseman, he's a guy who just needs pro hockey against grown men and then and
29:55then build himself up physically.
29:58And it's kind of for some of these guys, they got the skills, they got the vision, they
30:03got the attitude, but they're string beads.
30:07And I think that he's a guy who who a little like Harrison, maybe not as severe, just needs
30:14time as a pro to build up a body that can withstand the game and that level.
30:22And then and then let's see how far his skills take him, because those are two guys with
30:26a lot of skill.
30:27Yeah.
30:28Edward's I would call it what he's got sneaky skill.
30:32I'm sorry.
30:33I was just saying I was referring to Brunei and Harrison.
30:37But yeah, but I know I know you started this out with Edwards, Edward, excuse me.
30:43And yeah, but I but I like maybe maybe the left shot Kevin Miller there in the making.
30:48Yeah.
30:49Harrison Harrison, to me, is like he's he like he's got a good shot.
30:54There's some things he does.
30:55Well, his size is very good.
30:56There's no question about that.
30:58But like to me, like I've seen enough of him now that he is not fully jumped out enough
31:04at me from a speed point of view, from a, you know, a playmaking point of view, from
31:11a like notice me point of view when he's at these development camps and like he was development
31:15camp this year.
31:16And like that's a point where like when you're his age with his experience level, you should
31:20be dominant, like you should be very noticeable in that kind of environment atmosphere.
31:26Like I do notice his shot occasionally, like he's got a good shot.
31:30He's got a good one timer.
31:31He's got a good, you know, snap the wrist off in tight spaces like that part is, I'd
31:37say the only real thing that I've noticed about him that stands out having watched him
31:42multiple times in the last few years.
31:45So I think he's going to add some dimensions to his game if he's going to continue to,
31:50you know, further advance and maybe get a taste of the NHL.
31:54I just don't think he's a good enough player to get by on like offensive skill.
31:58Yeah.
31:59I mean, probably only Wayne Gretzky could, you know, make it in that body.
32:05I think that he's a kid who's got a great attitude, but I think he's got a long way
32:11to go to get himself there physically and how long that window the Bruins can give him
32:16to make that happen as a minor leaguer.
32:19We'll see.
32:20But he does have a kind of a kind of handsy, you know, in a way that makes you say, well,
32:26maybe this is a guy that, you know, that we'll be hearing about in a few years, but maybe
32:32he'll never get there.
32:33Some people just can't can't pack it on.
32:35Yep.
32:36No.
32:37Yeah.
32:38It'll be interesting to see, like what if he can develop further.
32:42But like, I feel like he's getting to a point where it's either now or never, like very
32:47shortly within the next year or two.
32:49I feel like he's going to really start to bump up what he's doing and, you know, really
32:55sort of like raise his profile as to what he's or go a different direction and like
33:01change the identity of who is a player.
33:03You know what I mean?
33:04Like undergo like a like a Brian Boyle sort of transformation of being, you know, winning
33:10face offs, you know, blocking shots, doing that kind of stuff.
33:16If it's if the offense isn't going to truly come at the pro level, you know, he's definitely
33:21going to get, I'd say, another probably year or two to show what he can do and to really,
33:25you know, push it further.
33:27But but he's you know, you're going to want to see more if he's going to continue down
33:31the path of being a potential like top six guy.
33:34Just not he's not doing enough yet for that.
33:36I think if there's some incremental progress there, then they'll probably keep an eye on
33:41him.
33:42I don't think it's going to be cut bait like in a year from now.
33:46But I do think that I do think that, you know, he has to make some progress physically in
33:51order for him to have a shot at even becoming an effective American League player before
33:57we even start talking about the show.
33:59Absolutely.
34:00All right.
34:01Now, that is some solid NHL rookie camp Bruins rookie camp prospect showcase talk right there.
34:08Mick, thank you very much for joining us to get the ring.
34:13Everybody else out there.
34:14Thanks for listening.
34:15And we'll see you at the ring.

Recommended