It was his fourth NHL suspension. He has been suspended twice more since.
"That one hurt pretty bad," Marchand said of the Borowiecki suspension. "I had a lot of people in town for [the Winter Classic]. I was really looking forward to being at Gillette, all the things leading up to it and the hype. And the game before I make a mistake like that.
"To miss such a big event, potentially a once-in-a-lifetime thing, I was pretty upset about it. I never thought that I'd have another opportunity to play. So I'm really looking forward to this one. I don't want to play until that game so I don't do anything to miss it this time."
For someone who grew up in Canada playing on backyard and outdoor rinks, Marchand always had hoped to play outside in the NHL. There was, he said, nothing better than that feeling of being in the elements, on bumpy, lumpy ice, playing through rain or snow, narrowly avoiding broken ankles, having a ball.
As his father, Kevin, recalled a few weeks before the 2016 Winter Classic, "Every year I would always make ice in the yard or on the lake, depending on where we lived. I would always have ice in the backyard. That way whenever the weather would permit, they would be out there shooting pucks on the real ice, skating, working on their balance, things like that.
"The boys loved the outdoors with the ice, playing hockey. And you can't get a [more fun] atmosphere than out on the lakes. … That's why when you look at the Winter Classic coming up, outdoor game, I'm really, really excited for Brad to participate in this outdoor experience there."
Marchand had missed playing for the Bruins in the 2010 Winter Classic at Fenway Park after being sent to Providence of the American Hockey League on Nov. 20, 2009, and then getting injured. The Bruins called him up March 5, 2010, and he's been in the NHL ever since.
It wasn't easy to go back to playing in the AHL during the 2009-10 season, but when the season started he hadn't counted on making it to Fenway. He was a rookie, things were uncertain and his expectations were measured.