The Boston Bruins set themselves up for a Stanley Cup run by staying true to their identity.
The Bruins acquired hard, character players who have skill at the trade deadline in forwards Tyler Bertuzzi and Garnet Hathaway, and defenseman Dmitry Orlov.
Orlov is a hard player, hard to play against. He's mobile but he plays a physical game. Hathaway is just a pain in the butt to play against. He adds more identity to the bottom half. Bertuzzi is another guy who is hard to play against. He has skill but has jam too. He goes to the net. He plays an ugly net. He gets there. He'll fit right in with that group.
You've got a guy like Bertuzzi possibly on the third line, that's pretty good. When I was with the Bruins back in 2011 and we won the Stanley Cup we had Michael Ryder playing on the third line and he was a heck of a player. Same with Rich Peverley and Chris Kelly. When you have that depth with those types of players it's just tough to matchup against them.
I don't know Don Sweeney's style as a general manager, but I have to think the Bruins coaching staff was in the loop and involved in the discussions about the players they were looking at because it's all part of the identity they want as a team and the staff is a big part of that.
From a coaching staff perspective, there's different terms that are used but when it comes to the deadline it all comes back to the same exact thing, being harder to play against and making sure we're adding players that play on their toes, fast, physical, grinding, etc.
The Bruins did that.
They're now eight deep on defense and 14 or 15 forwards deep, and that's a great recipe. Obviously, they've got the goaltending. They have just a lot of pieces there and it makes a difference when you get into the playoffs.
The New Jersey Devils made a couple moves that I really like.
Curtis Lazar was a nice depth add. He's a real character guy. But obviously Timo Meier was one of the top guys out there and it was a great move on their part to get him without giving up any of their core group of young players. They gave up some picks and prospects, but general manager Tom Fitzgerald did a great job not losing a guy like Dawson Mercer or even Simon Nemec to get a guy who is 26 years old and locked in for, at the very least, another year.
If you look at the Devils they have a lot of skill, a lot of guys who can fly up and down the ice, but the one question was do they have the guy who is going to go to the front of the net, score the dirty goal, win a battle in the corner to create a loose puck that gest to the slot and he gets there too?