It was a workout and team bonding and history lesson all in one, even for those -- like Brad Marchand -- who decided to take on the Great Wall in flip flops.
"It's been pretty incredible just to be in a different culture, to see things that are so out of the norm, that's such a big part of history that very few people ever have the opportunity to do in their lifetime," Marchand said, sitting at a small cafe atop the Wall, squeezed next to Pastrnak on a bench.
"To be able to be over here with the group of guys that we have and to be able to do it the way that we do, it's been pretty special."
The anticipation started days before, with some research. Defenseman Charlie McAvoy, not long removed from his days at Boston University, looked up the Seven Wonders of the World, building his excitement for the trip. It had not waned as the trip neared its end on Sunday afternoon.
"I took a lot of pictures to show my family and my friends back home," he said. "It's amazing. I don't think the pictures do justice to coming here and being able to experience it, which this game allowed us to do. Because I don't think I would have been here otherwise. I'm fortunate for that. I'm fortunate to have gone with all these guys. I think it really does help build an even stronger bond."
This Bruins team is tight. It was a team that felt cheated out of a longer stay in the Stanley Cup Playoffs last spring, a team that believed it had been destined for more than it got, with an exit in the Eastern Conference Second Round.
But that was a bond that took time to build. It's a bond that's being rebuilt now, with every experience in China, every step on the Great Wall, every piggy-back ride.
"I don't know if he worked out or just ate all summer," said Marchand, who lost an unidentified bet to Pastrnak, resulting in the back-testing ride. "But he got a lot heavier."