"Just the potential in my game," Krug said Tuesday in a town hall arranged by the Bruins for season ticket holders. "For so long -- right when I signed my name on that line to play for the Boston Bruins -- I'd been stereotyped in being just an offensive defenseman. For a long, long time I've been fighting that stereotype and that stigma.
"As [coach Bruce Cassidy] has always mentioned, I want my legacy to be a 200-foot player. I want to be remembered [with] the likes of Patrice [Bergeron] and Zdeno [Chara], the legacies they've left, the ones [Brad Marchand] and [David Pastrnak] are working on continually, daily. I want to be up there in that group of guys."
Chara has made a particularly big impact on the Krug, even if their games aren't exactly similar.
"In all honesty, he's been one of the most influential people in my career as a professional hockey player, especially in this town," Krug said. "It's funny, people always ask if I can really look at him and learn things from him -- him being 6-foot-9 and I'm a whole foot shorter than him, at 5-9. It's like, how can you learn stuff from him on the ice? His professionalism, the way he prepares is something that I've noticed from Day One and I try to do things that he does, just to prepare for games and practices."
One of the ways Krug learns is by talking with Chara before every game, discussing tendencies, things to be aware of, sharing what they've gleaned from studying opponents and from Chara's long memory in the NHL.
"He's just been so influential in my career in the way he prepares," Krug said. "I've been very honored that I could sit next to him in the locker room as long as I did in the old TD Garden locker room and just pick up little things here and there."