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An Old Concern For the Bruins Has Returned
Bob DeChiara-USA TODAY Sports

At the beginning of the 2023-2024 NHL season, many wondered if the Boston Bruins had the elite centermen play to make a run at the Stanley Cup. Legendary Bruins Patrice Bergeron and David Krejci retired from hockey and left a void in the middle of the ice for Boston. There were rumors in the offseason regarding whether the Bruins would find a top-six level center to replace the former pivots, but nothing surfaced other than the signing of young forwards Morgan Geekie and Jesper Boqvist for depth at the position. The Bruins would begin the season with Pavel Zacha and Charlie Coyle as their top two centers, both solid, 200-foot players, but neither with a 60-point season to that point.

But during a regular season that saw Boston come just one point shy of an Atlantic Division title, both Zacha and Coyle produced career years. The 25-year-old Zacha registered 21 goals and 38 assists to give him a career-high 59 points, two points higher than his first season with Boston. The former first-round pick’s 54.8 faceoff percentage was also the best of his nine-year career. The 32-year-old Coyle totaled 25 goals and 35 assists for a career-best 60 points, 15 points better than during the 2022-23 season. Both players exceeded expectations and surpassed the offensive output of Bergeron and Krejci last season. Heading into the postseason, the Bruins seemed set at center again.

But as the Bruins dropped a potential series-clinching Game 5 at home in the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs, the spotlight is back on their top-six center play. Zacha and Coyle have combined for zero goals and four assists with a minus-3 rating in the first five games of the series with Toronto. In Game 5, Zacha struggled at the faceoff dot, losing 13 of 17 draws, while Coyle lost 8 of 14. Boston was carried in Games 3 and 4 by captain Brad Marchand and has benefitted from three goals from third-line forward Trent Frederic, but Zacha and Coyle need to bring more to the table.

As Game 6 approaches on Thursday night in Toronto, the focus will be on the production of Pavel Zacha and Charlie Coyle. The Bruins top-six were outplayed significantly by Toronto’s top forwards in Boston on Tuesday. In order for the Bruins to close out the series and avoid a Game 7, the top centers for Boston will need to step up and provide more offense. If this trend continues, the Bruins will struggle to win and risk blowing another three games to one series lead.

This article first appeared on Inside The Rink and was syndicated with permission.

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