
Ryan Warsofsky, Team USA coach at World Championship, has a message for his Marshfield High coach: Thank you
'I loved playing for him and I think he doesn't get recognized enough in the state of Massachusetts,' said Warsofsky, reached prior to boarding a flight in San Francisco for Denmark, with a stop first in Germany. 'I think he's one of the great coaches … there was that year we won … and I'll give Dan great credit, as far as developing leadership skills, he really helped me. He let me be me, let me lead in my own way, didn't micro-manage me.
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'I wear my heart on my sleeve, get very passionate, get fired up at times and I was like that as a player. He helped me through those emotions and helped guide me through being a leader in different ways. I really have to give a lot of credit to him in helping to mold me into the kind of leader I am today.'
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By Connolly's recollection, there wasn't a lot of tailoring involved with the future Team USA coach. Warsofsky, said Connolly, was ever prepared, intense and engaged and already had the playing and leadership skills to be the Rams captain upon joining the varsity as a sophomore.
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'Everyone looked up to him,' said Connolly, who recently completed his 26th year as Marshfield's bench boss. 'Because he did things the right way. The old cliche, he did everything the right way — every single thing was 100 percent. He was focused, made sure everyone was ready, prepared. His details were great in every single thing he did. Like having another coach out there, really.'
Now in charge of Uncle Sam's stick carriers, Warsofsky will be faced with trying to lead the USA to its first World gold medal since 1933.
'I mean, it's almost laughable that it's been that long,' said Warsofsky, who wasn't laughing as he said it. 'As a group, we'll be very focused on that.'
The win, in the thick of the Great Depression, came in Prague, the USA represented by a team known as the Massachusetts Rangers. Canada, represented by the Toronto National Sea Fleas, won the prior six Worlds, dating to the tournament's inception in 1920, and finished with the silver medal. The Canucks were coached by
Harold Ballard
, who became the colorful and cantankerous owner of the Toronto Maple Leafs.
Late this past week, Team USA was still adding to its roster. Prior to the start of the Stanley Cup playoffs, Bruins
Jeremy Swayman
,
Mason Lohrei
and
Andrew Peeke
were named to the squad.
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Swayman and North Andover's
Joey Daccord
(Seattle Kraken) will be the two headliners in net. Lexington's
Will Smith
, who was part of Warsofsky's young cast in San Jose this season, was among the late adds to the USA roster, along with ex-BU defenseman
Lane Hutson
(favored to win NHL Rookie of the Year after his superb season with the Canadiens).
Five more names have been added to the 2025 U.S. Men's National Team!
Details and Full Roster:
— USA Hockey (@usahockey)
For the elite hockey countries involved each year — Canada, Czechia, Sweden, Finland and the United States — roster building is tricky because tournament dates (May 9-25) conflict with the Stanley Cup playoffs. Team USA GM and ex-BU defenseman
Jeff Kealty
worked with Warsofsky in cobbling together the best available talent, not only with an eye on trying to win this tournament but also help USA Hockey bosses get a better handle on candidates for February's Olympics in Italy.
'A lot of eyes on USA Hockey right now,' said Warsofsky. 'That is exciting and very humbling … and right now I am preparing for it, but when it's all said and done I'll look back at this as a special moment.'
The World Championship action can be followed on the internet. Connolly will be among the dedicated streaming customers. Unless there was a conflict with the Marshfield hockey schedule, said Connolly, he watched every game the Sharks played this season.
'A lot of late nights, I'll tell ya,' lamented Connolly, 'and too many games went to OT.'
Connolly watched becuse of the pride he felt in watching his old Rams captain, but also to see if he could pick up any coaching tips from his old Rams captain. The teacher-student equation has been flipped.
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'That's 100 percent true,' said Connolly with a slight chuckle. 'I reach out to him all the time. It's amazing. He's always willing to spend time with whatever … to talk about a drill, or penalty killing … as a coach his penalty kills have always been phenomenal.'
Warsofsky played a year post-grad at Cushing Academy before playing at both Sacred Heart and then Curry College. After a brief twirl in the minor pros, he launched his coaching career as an assistant at Curry (2012-13), followed by two years at ECHL South Carolina, two more at AHL Charlotte, and another two at AHL Chicago before joining
David Quinn's
staff as an assistant in San Jose. He moved up to the top job last summer, replacing Quinn.
'You don't always have to rush to the next best thing,' said Warsofsky, asked the overall value of his Mass. high school experience. 'I took that from playing to coach. There were times I could have left the American League a little earlier and gone on to be an NHL assistant. I never really reached and coached for another job. I just let that next job come to me — and I give Dan Connolly and my time at Marshfield High School for helping me with that.'
Marshfield's Ryan Warsofsky, coach of the San Jose Sharks, will be the head coach for Team USA at the world championship.
Jeff Chiu/Associated Press
Zellers leads way
Bruins prospect tops in USHL
Will Zellers
, largely unknown to Bruins fans until he was acquired in
Zellers grew up outside Minneapolis (Minnesotans have become a trending theme for the Black and Gold) and will begin his freshman year at North Dakota in the fall. A downsized left winger (5 feet, 10 inches/170 pounds), he led the USHL in goals (44) and ranked third in points (71) this season.
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Originally an Avalanche pick (No. 76 in 2024), Zellers separated himself from the pack this season with that goal-scoring acumen.
'When he has the biscuit, there aren't many better — he can finish,' said
Kirk Luedeke
, the Green Bay Gamblers assistant GM. 'We would have been dead in the water this season without him.'
Will power 💪
New B's prospect Will Zellers is the
— Boston Bruins (@NHLBruins)
Sioux City forward
Giacomo Martino
, headed to Northeastern in September, topped the USHL scoring chart (32-42—74). Teammate
Landen Gunderson
, from Plymouth, Minn., was second in league scoring (28-45—73). He'll suit up for Ohio State in 2025. Not drafted by NHL teams, they're positioned to turn pro as unrestricted free agents if they can keep up their offensive beat in college.
Zellers will need at least one year, maybe two, at North Dakota before weighing whether to turn pro. Only 19, Zellers will need to add some thickness to a slight frame and, like most kids at all levels, build in game details, and develop a 200–foot mind-set. Scorers typically are given a longer runway to work their way through the full-sheet compulsories.
Zellers, said Luedeke, who is also Green Bay's director of player personnel, is 'fast and dynamic — with the puck on his stick, he is a threat to score in any situation.'
Luedeke added that Zellers may need two years at North Dakota before taking his shot at the pros.
'But I think a lot of that will depend on his role and how quickly he adapts to NCAA play,' he said. 'So whether it's one year or longer, he has the natural ability to be an impact player in one of college hockey's top conferences. We're all just grateful we got to be part of the historic season he had in Green Bay.'
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The Bruins finished the season with three Minnesotans on the varsity roster:
Casey Mittelstadt
,
Cole Koepke
, and
Vinni Lettieri
. Some of that 'Land of 10,000 Lakes' invasion on the Atlantic seaboard is the influence of
Jamie Langenbrunner
, proud son of Cloquet, Minn., who is the Bruins' assistant GM-player personnel.
Help for Bruins?
Hall, Bertuzzi would fit again
Less than 24 hours after helping Carolina eliminate New Jersey in Round 1, ex-Bruins winger
Taylor Hall
signed a three-year extension for $9.5 million (about 50 cents on the dollar compared with the four-year/24 million pact he signed with the Bruins in July '21). Hall will be 34 in November, and it's common for player leverage and payout to erode at the bargaining table after age 30.
The Bruins these next months will be hunting for NHL-caliber wingers, as stated by GM
Don Sweeney
on autopsy day (April 23) and Hall would have been worth a second look, particularly at that comfy dollar level.
As Round 1 ended, Hall was slotted at LW2, riding with
Jesperi Kotkaniemi
in the middle and
Sebastian Aho
at the opposite wing. Which is to say, he can still keep pace, leg speed always one of his better skills.
Sweeney's trade chips are few, but one has to wonder if he'd inquire on another alum,
Tyler Bertuzzi
, who has three years remaining (cap hit: $5.5 million) on his deal with the going nowhere Blackhawks.
Bertuzzi, 30, was effective in his short stint as one of Sweeney's primo deadline pickups prior to the '23 playoffs. He wanted too much dough in an extension and the market proved otherwise, ultimately leading him to a one-year spacer deal with the Maple Leafs at $5.5 million.
The market again didn't bid up Bertuzzi last summer and he settled for four years at the same money (total $22 million) with the Blackhawks. The deal allows him limited trade protection (ability to say no to 10 teams). He delivered 23–23—46 last season, fourth on the motley Backhawks — now with five consecutive playoff DNQs.
Bertuzzi's pay now is middle of the reload for a top-six winger, especially with the cap projected to edge over $113 million (from the current $88 million) over the remaining three years of his deal. Nearly half of Bertuzzi's production with the Blackhawks came on the power play (10-10—20). He was a good fit here in the spring of '23. He looks like an even better one now, especially with the Bruins' power play in a Mass Eye and Ear study for incurable eyesores.
Former Bruins winger Taylor Hall signed a three-year extension with the Hurricanes for $9.5 million.
Karl B DeBlaker/Associated Press
No-nonsense officials
Worlds to have IIHF referees
The World Championship and the Olympics will employ IIHF on-ice officials, which alone will give the games a different look than what we're accustomed to in the NHL — or what we saw during February's 4 Nations Face-Off. NHL officials worked whistle at 4 Nations, with games, and especially tolerance levels among the referees, feeling very familiar for audiences in North America.
'They let things go, right' said a smiling
Andrew Raycroft
, the former Bruins goalie and now commentator. 'Hockey the way we know it.'
The IIHF officials, noted Raycroft, adhere more stringently to the rule book, with referees more inclined (if not mandated) to whistle off players for stick fouls and other forms of obstruction (read: interference). In turn, noted Raycroft, individual national team bosses must be aware of that when filling out their rosters.
'Because you're going to see more power plays,' said Raycroft. 'There's no question about it.'
All of which should have GMs and coaches making some personnel decisions with an eye on making sure both their power play and penalty killing are buttoned up. Special teams won't necessarily rule the day, but teams short on talent there could be in for a short tournament.
Fuzzy math in standings
Loser points for — losers
As the years go by, the NHL's accounting methods to determine the standings, specifically factoring in the so-called loser point, continue to feel more like a scam.
Consider: of the 16 teams to qualify for the playoffs this season, 15 would have made the cut solely on their win totals. The so-called 'loser' points continued to be nothing but a confusing, unnecessary contrivance.
In the West, the eight teams that qualified were the same eight teams that finished with the most wins in the conference. Pretty simple, basic, what we see in most adult sports that shape standings around W's and L's.
In the East, the same played out for seven of the eight postseason teams.
The loser point only factored in the Canadiens locking down the No. 2 wild-card spot with a record of 40-31–11 for 91 points. The Habs edged out the Blue Jackets, who finished 40-33-9 for 89 points. A pair of loser points carried the day for Montreal — a thought that must be funny to more than just your faithful puck chronicler.
Really, all that math, smoke and mirrors to sort out one of 16 qualifiers? Ridiculous. Even more absurd is that coaches and players, when losing in OT, constantly note they're happy 'at least to get a point out of it.'
Fellas, in the overall picture, that loser point only means you didn't win. Worse, by feeling it's OK to bank those points, you're ignoring the greater truth that they hardly mean a thing.
Loose pucks
One former highly touted scoring prospect who played at North Dakota and did not live up to the hype:
Lee
'Scorin' '
Goren
. Drafted by the Bruins in 1997 (No. 63), he drove in 60 goals across his final two seasons at ND, only to fall short on foot speed and playmaking at the NHL level. He left the dream behind in 2007 after playing 67 NHL games (35 in Black and Gold) and finished out with six seasons in Europe before calling it quits at age 35 … Even with Hall's $3 million-plus written into the books, the budget-wise Hurricanes have some $33 million in cap space as the July 1 UFA market approaches. If they want to retain rising UFAs
Brent Burns
and
Dmitry Orlov
on their blue line, the combined price should be well short of the $15.25 million they banked last season. If, like Hall, their new deals reflect around a 50 percent drop, then that savings alone will cover Hall and leave another $4 million or so in GM
Eric Tulsky's
pocket for his shopping. The former Forever .500s, up against the Capitals in Round 2, enter their 15th playoff series dating to the spring of 2019. The win over New Jersey left them 8-6 in 14 series, and a 39-37 mark in 76 games … Prepare the dunk tank, but I'm picking the Maple Leafs over the defending champion Panthers in Round 2. The sons of
Punch Imlach
haven't made it to Round 3 since 2002. Surfing the internet now for that 40-regular wetsuit.
Kevin Paul Dupont can be reached at
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USA Today
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- USA Today
BetMGM Bonus Code WIREBG150 Delivers $150 in Bonus Bets for Stanley Cup Game 5, More
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USA Today
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- USA Today
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Boston Globe
an hour ago
- Boston Globe
Mark Kastelic plans to use hard work to impress new Bruins coach Marco Sturm
Related : 'I think my mind-set will be the same as a year ago,' mused Kastelic, reached via telephone at his dessert home in recent days. 'Just try to earn the coach's trust, prove what kind of player I am and what I can bring to the team, try to earn everything out on the ice and just be hungry, as always.' Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up That attitude, particularly given roster needs in the wake of general manager Don Sweeney's wheelings and dealings around the March trade deadline, could lead to expanded playing opportunities for the hard-nosed 'Nasty Kasty.' Advertisement The strapping (6 feet 4 inches, 225 pounds), right-shot forward proved last season to be a strong, dependable, and valued force in the bottom six. Prior to suffering a late-season concussion, he showed impressive flashes of speed, abundant willingness to play a contact game, and an old-time Bruins penchant for fisticuffs (total: 10 bouts). The 2025-26 Bruins not only need Kastelic, they need more like him, from the top six on down. Advertisement One potential area of opportunity for Kastelic, one that neither Jim Montgomery nor Joe Sacco explored in his first season in Boston, could be the power play. Framed another way, after seeing how the Bruins struggled on the advantage last season, why not give the big beast a try? Tell him to park that frame at the top of the blue paint and don't come back till that red light starts flashing like a five-alarm fire. For the record, the power play would not be a novel role for Kastelic. He played a lot of net-front PP in his latter junior days with WHL Calgary. He scored 95 goals across his last two seasons with the Hitmen, a total beefed up by his work on the advantage. Granted, playing roles in junior often don't translate to the NHL, especially at the skill spots, but there's no denying he has the size, will, and reach to be, at the very least, a worthy candidate. Kastelic also would be the last guy to knock on Sturm's door and even so much as suggest it. 'I don't think I've ever asked for a lot of things in my life, and my career,' he said. 'I think my mind-set is just to earn everything I get, whether that's power-play time or penalty-kill time, or just more ice time. If something's not going well, or I want more, I just try to prove by my action that I want more, or just being early in the rink, just showing that I care. That's my approach. Advertisement 'Obviously, I'd love an opportunity on the power play, and I have that confidence in me — even in the junior and minor league level, I feel I had success at that. It's just a matter of getting an opportunity then hopefully have success.' Related : Now feeling '100 percent' recovered from lingering concussion symptoms that led to his season getting cut short, Kastelic remained in the Hub until just after Memorial Day. He worked out frequently at Warrior Arena, crediting Kevin Neeld (director of performance) and Tim Lebbossiere (assistant performance director) for their guidance, and enjoyed exploring the city, particularly around his Seaport neighborhood. Kastelic said he enjoyed frequent visits with Rip , his golden retriever, to a local dog park, though they had yet to bump into Seaport neighbor Charlie McAvoy and Otto , the defenseman's celebrity dog about town. Among the fittest members of the Black and Gold, Kastelic spends long hours training in the summer. Though he didn't share roster time with Zdeno Chara here, Kastelic has a Z-like work ethic. He said he often logs two off-ice workouts a day in the weight room and sometimes incorporates outdoor track work as a third session. 'So when September comes,' he said, 'and it's two sessions — one skating, one lifting — it feels easy by comparison.' Prior to leaving for junior hockey 10 years ago, his eyes fixed on making it to the top of the hockey hill, Kastelic often trained on 'water tower hill' near his former Desert Vista High School in Ahwatukee, Ariz. The big tower sits atop a sharp slope, he said, of some 200-250 meters. He would challenge himself with flat-out sprints to the top, or mark off different lengths for shorter bursts. Advertisement 'Something I've been doing for 15 years now,' he said. 'Every summer I go there to run, do sprints, and some longer runs. It's kind of a bonding thing, too, my mom and dad will come and it's kind of a family affair. We'll all work out together.' His mother, Susan , and father, ex-NHLer Ed Kastelic , the 61–year-old former Whaler, don't sign on the full sprint to the top. 'Uh, yeah,' said their ready-to-run-through-a-wall son. 'I mean, everyone has their own levels, but . . . ' In about 10 weeks, Kastelic will fly back to Boston for Year 2 as a Bruin, his first under a new deal to pay a total $4.7 million across the next three seasons. As for his role, and how a new coach envisions what he can do, perhaps there is another level here for Kastelic. Clean slate. Fresh start. For everyone. Kastelic celebrates a goal in October. John Tlumacki/Globe Staff TOP SHELF Mostly hits, some misses During Marco Sturm , Don Sweeney noted his urgency to upgrade the roster ahead of next season. It's a remote chance that the No.7 pick in the upcoming draft, the primo pick in the GM's possession, would provide immediate thump. Sweeney hinted he'd consider dealing it on or before June 27 as a means of bringing in a plug-and-play NHLer. Related : Worth noting, while there's no guarantee that top-10 picks mature into regular NHL contributors, your faithful puck chronicler reviewed 10 drafts (2009-18) and it showed all but 10 of the 100 top-10 picks across those draft classes did carve out NHL careers — and a large percentage will return for duty in 2025-26. Advertisement Some of those have reached their mid-30s and have played in 1,000-plus games, including five of the top six picks in 2009: John Tavares , Victor Hedman , Matt Duchene , Brayden Schenn , and Oliver Ekman-Larsson . Related : The No. 7 pick in 2009, Nazem Kadri , is on target to crest the 1,000-game mark in November, his fourth season with the Flames. It took the talented Kadri three seasons of back-and-forth tuneups in the AHL/NHL before he finally cracked the Maple Leafs' varsity full time at age 22. It takes most kids a couple of years or more before they are ready for the daily NHL grind. The top-10 picks who proved to be busts in those 10 aforementioned drafts: 2009 — Dallas (No. 8), Scott Glennie , C. Total NHL games: 1. 2010 — Atlanta (No. 8), Alexander Burmistrov , C Total games: 348. NY Rangers (No. 10), Dylan McIlrath , D; Total games: 92. 2012 — NY Islanders (No. 4), Griffin Reinhart , D; Total games: 37. Pittsburgh (No. 8), Derrick Pouliot , D; Total games: 226. Tampa Bay (No. 10), Slater Koekkoek , D; Total games: 186. 2014 — NY Islanders (No. 5), Michael Dal Colle , LW; Total games: 112. 2016 — Vancouver (No. 5), Olli Juolevi , D; Total games: 41. 2017 — NY Rangers (No. 7), Lias Andersson , C; Total games: 110. 2018 — NY Rangers (No. 9), Vitali Kravstov , RW; Total games: 64. Some rough rides there for the respective amateur scouting departments, particularly for the Blueshirts with their three swings and misses in 2010, 2017 and 18. Here in the Hub of Hockey, where the Bruins last muffed a top-10 pick in 2007 (No. 8, Zach Hamill , C, 20 games), there is an enduring penchant to play the what-if-they-drafted-this-guy-instead? game. Well, the Rangers in 2010 chose McIlrath ahead of Cam Fowler (12), Brock Nelson (30), and Justin Faulk (37). In 2017, they opted for Andersson instead of Martin Necas (12), Nick Suzuki (13) or Robert Thomas (20). And the following year, Kravstov was their guy over Evan Bouchard (10) or Noah Dobson (12). Advertisement Plug in any three of those alternatives in 2010, '17, and '18, and maybe the Rangers aren't about to embark on yet another major retool, directed by a new coaching staff topped by Mike Sullivan . Former top-10 pick John Tavares (left) has played in more than 1,000 games in his NHL career. Adrian Wyld/Associated Press ETC. Trade scenarios worth considering? To move up from the No. 7 spot in the draft, the Bruins likely would have to add an asset or two, be it by sacrificing someone on the varsity, or yield a prospect (roster talent already too thin), or a pick from, say, the second round (No. 51 or 61). None of those scenarios is likely unless the Islanders cared to part with No. 1 — about the same chance Alexei Zhamnov returns to Causeway in a role other than backup Zamboni driver. The more logical move would be for GM Don Sweeney to drop in the order, find a partner to swap first-round picks as a means to acquire a player, likely a winger, who can provide immediate offensive impact. The Sidney Crosby . Kreider, 34, is coming off his least-productive season (22-8–30) as a pro. He scored only six of those 22 goals on the man-advantage. He ain't what he was, but he was hurt a bunch last season and a return to the far east end of Comm. Ave. might have been a refreshing reboot. Would it have been enough, say, for the Bruins to flip their No. 7 to New York for the Rangers' No. 12 and also take Kreider (and his $6.5 million cap hit for two more seasons) off the Blueshirts' books? Possibly, judging by the modest accompanying assets that were exchanged in the Rangers-Ducks swap. The Ducks indeed absorbed the full retail price remaining on Kreider's deal. Conjuring potential trade scenarios around the flip of first-round picks amounts to throwing darts, but the process is worth examining, and it's particularly relevant for a Bruins team that watered down the roster's whiskey at the trade deadline. With Kreider gone, how about No. 7 to the Canucks for No. 15 and Scituate homeboy Conor Garland , on target to be an unrestricted free agent July 1, 2026? While not prolific, Garland (to be 30 in March) has proven to be an effective top-six winger (either wall). He also scored a career-best seven PPGs this past season while submitting an overall 19-31–50. Granted, not nearly as jazzy as acquiring Kreider, but also less risk. Garland is sort of a downsized version of Morgan Geekie . The only payroll commitment is Garland's his one year at $4.95 million. Finally, keep in mind that two clubs are holding two first-round picks, the Sharks (Nos. 2, 30) and Canadiens (Nos. 16, 17). With that kind of juice, they can shop, potentially work their way into three-way exchanges. The Sharks have a load of young talent, especially at forward. The Canadiens don't look like a good fit for a swap with the Bruins, and Boston-Montreal trades have been few over the years. Times, though, are different. It's the Original 32 now (at last count) and need can knock tradition right out of the rink. The Rangers moved Chris Kreider to the Ducks on Thursday, taking one potential trade target off the board for the Bruins. Phelan M. Ebenhack/Associated Press Being patient with Letourneau Dean Letourneau , the Bruins' first-round pick last June, was challenged to produce offense this past season as a Boston College freshman. The towering (6-7) pivot, who turned 19 in February, finished with a meager 0-3–3 line in 36 games with the Eagles. Ryan Nadeau , the Bruins' director of amateur scouting, said the club 'knew it was a huge jump' for Letourneau to go directly from high school hockey to Division 1 college competition, forcing him to face some players four or five years older and with far more NCAA experience. 'It's a little bit different path,' noted Nadeau. 'Even a lot of the kids his age who do go [to Division 1] have played at the National Team Development Program or in the USHL. So it was a big jump. We went in, anticipating there would be a lot adversity for Dean this year.' Letourneau, chosen No. 25, was the club's first Round 1 draft pick since 2021 ( Fabian Lysell ). The Kings chose 6-3 winger Liam Greentree (Windsor) at No. 26. He finished third in OHL scoring this past season with 119 points. 'We have a lot of patience with where these players are going and what their path looks like,' said Nadeau. 'It's a long process, and I know people do tend to lose patience, and it's easy to look around and look at certain other draft picks that are piling up numbers. But each draft pick has a different path and a different way to get to the end goal. I think Dean is in a good spot and is doing a lot of work to continue to evolve and grow his game.' Loose pucks Lias Andersson , after flaming out with the Rangers, spent three seasons (2020-23) in the Kings' organization and enjoyed by far his best pro season under Marco Sturm's tutelage at AHL Ontario in 2022-23. Andersson was the Reign's No. 2 scorer (31-28–59) that season, then chose to sign as a free agent with the Canadiens that summer. Now 26, he played this past season with Biel HC in Switzerland. No doubt a stretch, but it could be worth Sturm finding out if Andersson, a 6-1, left-shot pivot, is interested in another kick at the NHL can . . . Only 32 NHLers these last three seasons topped Garland's 244 games played. Two were Bruins: Charlie Coyle (247) and David Pastrnak (246) . . . Ex-Bruins captain Brad Marchand remains on target to hit the UFA market July 1 and is rumored to be seeking $8 million a year for 2-3 seasons. He has had a phenomenal postseason with the Panthers. But $16 million-$24 million for a guy who turned 37 last month? It might not be all that preposterous, largely because the cap, about to move to $95.5 million next season, projects to $113 million by 2027-28. A team could figure he's worth $24 million, while also calculating his game will be worn thin by age 40, yet keep his AAV tamped down by writing him to a seven-year deal. Based on $24 million, the cap hit over seven years would be some $3.4 million a year. Because Marchand is age 35-plus, the CBA does not allow him to be bought out. But if he can provide a team with the kind of jump for three years that he's provided the Panthers with these last three months, Years 4, 5, 6, and 7 will be little more than a sales tax. Kevin Paul Dupont can be reached at