The Bruins made splashes in free agency in each of the past two seasons but remained relatively quiet this year. They believe many of their prospects are NHL-ready and can be mentored by homegrown veterans and experienced players who were brought in during the first two years of Don Sweeney's tenure as general manager.
Boston qualified for the 2017 playoffs, where it lost to the Ottawa Senators in six games in the Eastern Conference First Round. Injuries to several players, including four regular defensemen, derailed the regular season, when the Bruins finish third in the Atlantic Division, three points behind the Senators.
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The only acquisitions from outside the organization were free agent defenseman Paul Postma and forward Kenny Agostino. But the Bruins aren't content with reaching the postseason and lasting two weeks, nor are they being shy with their resources. They simply believe some of their prospects are ready to blossom and compete for lineup spots in the NHL.
"We've been fairly committed to allowing our young prospects to try and grow and take some opportunity," said Sweeney, who helped add free agent forward Matt Beleskey in 2015 and forward David Backes in 2016. "Now we've got competition, internal competition, set up. I do believe there will be a couple players ... that will challenge, particularly up front.
"On the back end, probably not as much, which has led me to continue to look outside. ... But I think the most exciting part is the internal competition piece that we've set a plan in motion, and I think there are players that will step forward and grab the opportunity."
Although the Bruins continue to work on a contract for restricted free agent forward David Pastrnak, who was second behind Brad Marchand in goals (39-34) and points (85-70) last season, they agreed to terms with every other restricted free agent they qualified. That includes center Ryan Spooner, who had 39 points (11 goals, 28 assists) last season. The Bruins hope he will solidify their third-line center position.