logo
Brad Marchand makes his return to TD Garden with Florida Panthers

Brad Marchand makes his return to TD Garden with Florida Panthers

CBS News11-03-2025

Brad Marchand was back on the ice at TD Garden on Tuesday, but he was not sporting his usual Black and Gold sweater with a Spoked-B in the middle. Instead, the former Bruins captain was in enemy colors, donning his new Florida Panthers uniform for the first time.
It's a sight that is going to take a while for Bruins fans to really accept, though they won't have to deal with it Tuesday night when the Bruins play the Panthers for the first time since last week's Marchand trade. The winger is still out with an upper-body injury and will not play in Tuesday's tilt.
Marchand will likely be in a suit as he watches the game from the ninth floor. But don't be surprised if the Bruins have a video tribute waiting for their former captain.
Panthers head coach Paul Maurice said after the team's morning skate that Marchand remains week-to-week, and his new team hopes to have him make his Florida debut near the end of the regular season. But that didn't make his participation in Tuesday's morning skate for the Panthers any less strange.
Brad Marchand on skating with the Panthers
After skating with his new teammates for the first time, Marchand told reporters the last four days have been a whirlwind. After spending his entire career with the Bruins, just about everything has been different for Marchand following last week's trade.
"It still felt weird and odd," Marchand said. "It was great to get out there with them and start that process. But coming in here, and the way they do their meetings and warmups, it's just an adjustment. You learn and follow suit, but it's different from your day-to-day routine, especially being here for 16 years."
He's had to juggle getting to know his new teammates, trying to find a place to live in Florida, and getting treatment on his injury since the Friday trade that sent him to the Panthers. He's also had his family on his mind, as his wife and two young daughters are remaining in Boston.
Then there's also the matter of digesting the trade itself. It's been a lot for Marchand to take in, and he has new appreciation for players who have been dealt at the deadline.
"I feel terrible about the lack of understand I've had for guys in the past who have come and gone. I have a new respect for guys who have had to deal with that. I wish in the past I had more empathy and understanding for what guys were going through when they were joining our team or leaving our team," he said. "That was one of the biggest takeaways I've had with this situation."
But Marchand is thrilled to be a member of the Panthers, calling them the top contender in the NHL and the toughest team he had to play against this season.
"I don't look at this job as real life," Marchand said. "We're so fortunate to play a game for a living and do something we absolutely love. You work for a couple of hours a day, doing something you grew up doing and only in your wildest dreams did you think it was something you could do for a job.
"I still get to do what I love, play in an incredible place, and play a game for a job. I'm so grateful of the opportunity I'm provided every day," he said.
Even though he's the new guy on the defending Stanley Cup champs, Marchand will not be changing his game with the Panthers.
"Do you think I need to tone it down? My wife does, but I'm just going to be me," he said.
Brad Marchand reflects on career with Bruins
Marchand is certainly excited for the next chapter of his career with the Panthers. But as a pending free agent, he was asked if he would consider a return this offseason if Boston comes calling. The Bruins and Marchand couldn't agree on an extension prior to Friday's trade, and he wasn't sure what will happen this summer.
But it does sound like he'd be open to return to Boston.
"I don't know what the future brings in terms of how it plays out in the summertime. I know it didn't come together now. Can things change down the road? Potentially. But that is to be seen. I'm sure we'll have a conversation, but I don't know where that goes," he said.
"Obviously, I would still love -- my love for this city and the will to want to be here has never changed and I don't think that will ever change," he added. "Whether we have a meeting of the minds and it comes together, it remains to be seen."
Marchand spent several minutes praising Don Sweeney, Cam Neely and the Bruins brass as one of the best front offices in the business. He thanked them for all the opportunities the franchise gave him, and said he doesn't hold any ill-will against the organization over his trade to the Panthers.
He would have loved to have won more with the Bruins and retired having only worn a Boston sweater. But he understands the business side of the game, and will always cherish the memories he has with the Boston Bruins.
"My biggest thing is when I look at the situation, we were an incredible team for a long period of time. Maybe we didn't achieve everything we wanted throughout that time, but you give up a lot in those runs. You give up a lot to get to those runs. It gets to the point where it catches up to you. But the job and will to win is there every single year. Management has done an incredible job making us a competitive team and giving us a chance to win," he said.
"We knew there was a window, and we maxed that out," Marchand continued. "We had an opportunity a few years ago and we came up short. We dropped the ball on that one. That was our year and they went all-in the years leading up to that season. When you look at an opportunity like that, it doesn't come very often. Ultimately, it was on the players and we didn't do our job in that situation."
Marchand is grateful the Bruins found a way to do what is best for the team for the future, and also do right by him in sending him to a contending team in the Panthers.
"Eventually, decisions have to be made that are tough. They had their right intentions. I won't get into the details on everything, but they tried to do what was best for the team and also give me an opportunity to stay if I wanted to," he said. "I want to win and I'm a competitor. The guys in that office are competitors and they want to win. They're not going to go down a path of building losing teams. They're doing what they feel is right to build for a bright future with a young core. You can't get upset about those things.
"Yeah, I would have loved and it would have been incredible to have that fairy tale ending. But they're doing what is right for the guys in the room. They can't choose one guy over 20 guys and the millions of people that support the team," Marchand continued.
"I don't get lost in all of that and have a tremendous amount of respect for ownership and management and everyone involved in this organization," he added. "That's why you want to come here, because they just want to win and will do what it takes. ... I don't have anything bad to say because for a very long time, they've put our team in position to contend and to win. That's all you want as a player."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Want to see Panthers play at home in the Stanley Cup Final? What Game 4 tickets will cost you
Want to see Panthers play at home in the Stanley Cup Final? What Game 4 tickets will cost you

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Want to see Panthers play at home in the Stanley Cup Final? What Game 4 tickets will cost you

Fans celebrate following the Panther's second goal during the first period of Game 3 in the NHL Stanley Cup Final series at Amerant Bank Arena on Monday, June 9, 2025, in Sunrise, Fla. The Florida Panthers' first home game of the Stanley Cup Final was a memorable one. They blew out the Edmonton Oilers 6-1, playing a dominant all-around game in front of a sold-out Amerant Bank Arena crowd of 19,863 to take a 2-1 lead in the best-of-7 series. If you want to be at the arena to see them continue their path toward a championship repeat, time is running out — and you'll probably need to empty your wallet a little bit. Advertisement Game 4 on Thursday, an 8 p.m. start, is the only guaranteed home game left on the schedule with Florida two wins from winning the Stanley Cup. Game 5 is in Edmonton. Should the Oilers win either of the next two games, the Panthers would host Game 6 on June 17. The cheapest ticket available on the resale market for Game 4 as of Tuesday afternoon is $429 on SeatGeek. That will get you a seat in Section 329, in a corner of the arena on the side of the ice where the Panthers will shoot during the first and third periods. If you want to get closer to the action, most resale tickets in the lower bowl are going for over $1,000 each but there are a few available in the $750-$900 range. Through eight home playoff games, the Panthers have had an average announced attendance of 19,783 per game, which is at 102.8% capacity. The listed capacity crowd at Amerant Bank Arena for hockey games is 19,250.

The Times' baseball player of the year: Seth Hernandez of Corona
The Times' baseball player of the year: Seth Hernandez of Corona

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

The Times' baseball player of the year: Seth Hernandez of Corona

Years from now, when Seth Hernandez is pitching in the major leagues and pro baseball commentators are debating just how good he might become, those who saw him throw during his two years of high school baseball at Corona High will gladly offer their fondest memories. The statistics are impressive enough: In 53 1/3 innings this season, he struck out 105, gave up 19 hits and three earned runs for an ERA of 0.39. The most impressive statistic was walking only seven batters while using a 99-mph fastball. It showed his pinpoint control and how much he had improved over his junior season, when he walked 15 in 56 innings. 'That was his goal,' coach Andy Wise said. 'What are we going to do to get better?" Advertisement His pitching mechanics became more consistent, generating the kind of power and accuracy to cause people to repeatedly use the word 'special' in describing him on the mound. There also was the time he hit two three-run homers in the Panthers' Southern Section Division 1 playoff victory over Los Osos. He wasn't perfect, though, losing 2-0 to St. John Bosco in the Division 1 semifinals, finishing his high school career with an 18-1 pitching record for two seasons. He didn't mope. He didn't make excuses afterward. He knew there would be more challenges ahead. "I'm still a kid," he said. For a season of excellence, Hernandez has been named The Times' baseball player of the year for the second consecutive season. He's expected to be a high pick in next month's amateur draft. He also was named the Gatorade national player of the year. Advertisement One of his strengths for years has been his ability to perform while being watched by scouts, fans and opponents. He's comfortable in his environment, used to the attention and is particularly ready to begin his pro career and keep on a path toward pitching in the big leagues. Read more: The Times' 2025 All-Star baseball and softball coverage With Southern California having produced first-round draft picks such as Paul Skenes (El Toro), Gerrit Cole (Orange Lutheran), Trevor Bauer (Hart), Max Fried (Harvard-Westlake) and Jack Flaherty (Harvard-Westlake) in recent years, it's pretty clear that Hernandez's resume fits in well and offers confidence in his abilities. He's also glad he decided to play high school baseball after being home-schooled. Advertisement 'At the end of the day, I have brothers for life and I'll never forget the memories I spent with them,' he said of his high school days. Sign up for the L.A. Times SoCal high school sports newsletter to get scores, stories and a behind-the-scenes look at what makes prep sports so popular. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Oilers are unfazed in the face of defeat: ‘This was always going to be a long series'
Oilers are unfazed in the face of defeat: ‘This was always going to be a long series'

New York Times

time3 hours ago

  • New York Times

Oilers are unfazed in the face of defeat: ‘This was always going to be a long series'

EDMONTON — It wasn't quite the famous Mark Messier guarantee, but Jake Walman's words after a dreadful loss in Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Final had the same sentiment. 'This was always going to be a long series,' the Edmonton Oilers defenseman told The Athletic after a 5-2 home-ice defeat to the Florida Panthers left his team on the brink of dropping a second straight Final. Advertisement 'We're going to come back here after a game there, and that's it. There's no doubt.' Walman, Edmonton's key trade-deadline acquisition, had perhaps his worst performance as an Oiler. His team was caved in when he was on the ice, and he was schooled by Brad Marchand before a goal that stood as the game winner. His subpar play mirrored that of most of his teammates. The entire group was as flat as a pancake for most of the game, only finding some life when Connor McDavid scored his first goal of the series 7:24 into the third to put the Oilers within two. Sam Reinhart then replied 46 seconds later, quashing whatever faint hopes existed of a victory. Watching the Oilers bumble around the ice on Saturday night leaves little optimism that a championship is even close to a possibility. Then again, the way the Oilers have responded magnificently throughout the playoffs when they've looked dead and buried is reason enough to change that viewpoint and subscribe to Walman's. 'Knowing that we're in a difficult situation, win our last two games, is something that we're confident that we can do,' said coach Kris Knoblauch. 'We've been through difficult situations before, and it's just another one that we'll overcome.' That the Oilers are bold and brazen makes sense. After all, these are the same Oilers who trailed the Los Angeles Kings 2-0 in their opening-round series and heading into the third periods of the next two games at home. They charged back to knock off the Kings with relative ease. These are the same Oilers who gave the Vegas Golden Knights life with a last-second own-goal in Game 3 of the second round, a result that could have shell-shocked them. They proceeded to drop the hammer, shutting out the Golden Knights in back-to-back games to close them out. These are the same Oilers who collapsed in the third period of the Western Conference final opener against the Dallas Stars by allowing five unanswered goals. They then mopped the floor with the Stars, handling them while claiming the next four games. Advertisement And these are the same Oilers who, after a terrible 6-1 loss in Game 3 to the Panthers, overcame a three-goal deficit in Game 4 to even the series. That was their eighth comeback win of the playoffs. Count these Oilers out at your peril. 'We know that we can get it done,' said Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, the longest-serving Oiler. 'It's just a matter of going out there and finding a way to do it. It's going to be our hardest challenge yet.' That's the case because of the way they played for most of Saturday's contest. Save for little spurts that were few and far between, the Oilers were awful. Walman and Mattias Ekholm struggled mightily in what was their second attempt at a partnership after a mere 1:31 together at five-on-five during the regular season, per Natural Stat Trick. The Oilers were outshot 4-1 and out-attempted 10-2 in the 5:09 Ekholm and Walman shared the ice at five-on-five in the opening frame. Ekholm had his worst performance since returning from a lower-body injury for the West final climax. He was on the ice for both of Florida's first-period goals against and was a team-worst minus-3. Walman was on with Ekholm for the second of those tallies. The Oilers have now allowed 11 goals against in the first period in this series, at least two in every game. 'It's frustrating when you come into the (dressing) room and you're down,' Walman said. 'We're struggling to get to our game right away. It takes us a little bit. I don't know what the reasoning is. 'We have it in us to play the way that we want.' Ekholm was back with his regular partner, Evan Bouchard, for the second. Walman's night, meanwhile, was bookended by being walked by Marchand. 'That's a good player,' Walman said. 'S—-y feeling as a defenseman. I want to have that one back. I've just got to play everybody hard. It doesn't matter who they are.' Advertisement The Oilers had little offensive pop and went the final 11:10 of the first period without a shot on goal. Knoblauch leaned into his nuclear option of McDavid and Leon Draisaitl in the second but had to rotate in wingers Evander Kane and Viktor Arvidsson to spell off elder statesman Corey Perry. Zach Hyman's absence was never felt more. The superstars didn't have their ace complementary winger, and the lineup seemed thinner than ever. McDavid was tasked with playing 25:49, for instance. To the surprise of no one, Calvin Pickard got the start after making 22-of-23 saves in relief of Stuart Skinner from the second period onward of a 5-4 overtime win in Game 4. Pickard's magic ran out as he suffered his first loss in eight decisions in these playoffs after allowing four goals on 18 shots. That calls into question whether he or Skinner should get the call for the pivotal Game 6, the first time all postseason the Oilers are facing elimination. 'From what I saw, Picks didn't have much chance on all those goals,' Knoblauch said. 'There was nothing saying that it was a poor performance.' Given all that happened with the Oilers on Saturday night, it could feel like the Oilers' season might as well be over. Just eight teams have overcome a 3-2 series deficit to win the Stanley Cup, none since the Boston Bruins in 2011, back in Marchand's first full NHL season. The Oilers have a herculean task ahead of them: being the first to beat the defending champs in their own barn and, if they manage that, to then beat them at home. The Panthers just earned their 10th road win, tying an NHL record. 'At this time, it's more about looking forward. I'm not too big on looking in the rearview mirror,' Ekholm said. 'We've just got to go down to Florida and win a game.' The Oilers must be considerably better than they were in Game 5 if they want to get revenge in this matchup and win the first Stanley Cup by a Canadian club in 32 years and end a 35-year franchise drought. Advertisement But if there's a team that can do this, it just might be this one. This Oilers club has leapt over just about every hurdle they've faced over the last two months. What's one more? 'We have confidence in ourselves that we can get the job done,' Nugent-Hopkins said. 'What's left is easier said than done. You've got go do it, so we'll look forward to that.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store