
Bruins fan survey: Next coach? Confidence in Cam Neely, Don Sweeney? Trade the first-rounder?
The 65-win Boston Bruins of two years ago are history. Only Jakub Lauko, Hampus Lindholm, Charlie McAvoy, David Pastrnak, Jeremy Swayman and Pavel Zacha remain from the 2022-23 behemoth.
Just the job of getting the Bruins back to the playoffs, let alone challenge for the Presidents' Trophy, is daunting. They need NHL players in a big way. They don't have any surefire prospects locked in for 2025-26. It remains to be seen who will be coaching next year's club.
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So with all this uncertainty, readers have the opportunity to reflect on what went wrong in 2024-25 and how the Bruins can straighten things out.
(Note: If you have any problems loading or filling out the survey below, you can access it directly by clicking here.)
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(Photo of Cam Neely and Don Sweeney: Bruce Bennett / Getty Images)

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New York Times
12 minutes ago
- New York Times
NHL free agency: Grading the biggest contracts signed this offseason
The Athletic has live coverage of NHL free agency. This year, we didn't have to wait for July 1 for free agent fireworks. Chris Johnston's free agency big board was picked over early and often in the days leading up to NHL free agents being eligible to sign contracts with teams. Many players re-upped with their teams and lots of money and term were thrown around. So to make sense of it all, here's a list of the free-agent contracts we've graded so far, with more to come on July 1. Right winger Mitch Marner signs an eight-year deal with a $12 million AAV. Contract grade: B+ Fit grade: A Defenseman Evan Bouchard signs a four-year deal with a $10.5 million AAV with the Edmonton Oilers. Contract grade: B- Defenseman Aaron Ekblad signs an eight-year deal with a $6.1 million AAV with the Florida Panthers. Advertisement Contract grade: A- John Tavares signs four-year deal with $4.38 million AAV with the Toronto Maple Leafs. Contract grade: A Center Sam Bennett signs an eight-year deal with an $8 million AAV with the Florida Panthers. Contract grade: B+ (Photo of Mitch Marner and John Tavares: Claus Andersen / Getty Images)


Fox News
13 minutes ago
- Fox News
Golden Knights hit jackpot as Maple Leafs send Mitch Marner to Las Vegas in stunning trade: reports
One day before NHL free agency begins, the Toronto Maple Leafs and Vegas Golden Knights struck gold on a blockbuster trade. The Maple Leafs dealt All-Star forward Mitch Marner to the Knights, ESPN reported Monday. Marner was about to test free agency for the first time, but this is expected to be a sign-and-trade. It's unknown what Marner's new deal will be. In return, the Leafs are getting center Nic Roy, who just finished his sixth year in Las Vegas and eighth overall in the NHL after spending his first two with the Carolina Hurricanes. Roy scored 15 goals and dished out 16 assists for 31 points in 71 games for the Knights during the 2024-25 season. Meanwhile, Marner finished his six-year restricted deal with the Maple Leafs, the team he grew up rooting for as a Markham, Ontario, native. Marner's deal was a salary-cap hit per season at $10.9 million. The 28-year-old tallied 741 points over his nine years with the organization, including 102 last season with 27 goals and 75 assists over 81 regular-season games. During the playoffs, Marner only scored twice, but he had 11 assists for a total 13 points in 13 games for Toronto. Marner was the fourth overall pick in the 2015 NHL Draft by the Maple Leafs, and he's been worth that first-round selection given his production output each season. But as Toronto continues to search for that Stanley Cup Final run, a prime contributor on the offensive end moves on to start a new chapter elsewhere in the league. The Knights, led by veteran head coach Bruce Cassidy, won the Cup during the 2022-23 season — just six years after its inaugural season as an expansion franchise. They actually went to the Stanley Cup Final during that 2017-18 campaign under Gerard Gallant's leadership. Vegas went 50-22 last season, but ultimately had the same fate as Toronto, losing in the second round. The Knights fell to the eventual back-to-back Western Conference-champion Edmonton Oilers, who fell to the Florida Panthers once again in the Stanley Cup Final. Marner now joins top talent like Jack Eichel, Mark Ston, Tomáš Hertl and more next season. And with the Marner question answered, the Maple Leafs can focus their priorities elsewhere with free agency beginning at noon on July 1. Follow Fox News Digital's sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.


New York Times
43 minutes ago
- New York Times
Should Leafs fans view Mitch Marner as a hero or villain? A debate with myself
The Athletic has live coverage of NHL free agency. It's official. The Mitch Marner era is over in Toronto, with the Leafs executing a sign-and-trade deal that sends him to Vegas Golden Knights hours before Monday's midnight deadline. Leafs fans, how are we feeling about all of this? More specifically, how are we feeling about Marner himself? Advertisement Let's put the question even more simply: When he makes his first trip back to Toronto, are you booing him? Does he get an ovation? Something in between? No reaction at all? I think I can guess where the majority might be leaning today. I'm also pretty sure that it's far from unanimous. So today, let's debate the subject with arguments from two different types of fans, both of whom are me. In one corner, my sports fan brain – logical, rational and not especially susceptible to easy narratives. In the other, my sports fan heart, which is not quite as rational, but is also the main reason I'm here. It's worth pointing out that the last time we broke out this gimmick for a Leafs debate, it was 2022 and we were still doing the 'run it back' dance with this team. Back then, my head said to stay the course, while my heart said to blow it all up. If you look back at that post today, well, I think it's fair to say that the heart won, or at least it should have. We'll see if that holds true today. Mitch Marner is an ex-Leaf. Are we mad at him? Should we be? I'm not sure, so let's drop the gloves and square off. OK gentlemen, you know the drill. Let's start with the opening arguments… Head: Mitch Marner played nine seasons in Toronto. In that time, he scored more points than all but four players in the 100+ year history of the franchise. He's their all-time leading scorer among wingers. He was a first-team All-Star twice, making him the first Leafs to achieve that honor multiple times since the 1960s. He's easily one of the greatest Maple Leafs of all time, and quite possibly the single best winger they've ever had. Now he's choosing to sign a rich deal and continue his career elsewhere, something he has every right to do. This isn't complicated — he was a great Leaf who did just about everything you could have asked of him, for nearly a decade. Now he wants to move on. As a fan, you say thank you and turn the page. Heart: First of all, nice job slipping in that 'just about' qualifier. We'll get to the playoff performances in a minute. But first, let's look at the bigger picture. Marner was a homegrown kid who grew up as a Leaf fan, even wearing number 93 for Doug Gilmour. He should have owned this town, the way Gilmour did decades ago. Instead, he's leaving as a villain, and it's all because he chose to prioritize his contract and his comfort over the team, then never lived up to that contract once the games mattered. Advertisement To top it all off, there's a whiff of petulance hanging over his departure, with murmurs that he somehow feels disrespected by a team that constantly bent over backwards to keep him happy. So now he's taking his ball and going … well, not home, actually, but as far away as possible. Head: Which he has every right to do. His contract is up. He doesn't owe the team anything. Heart: Oh, give me a break. He owes them plenty. For six years, he was overpaid. Every spring, he'd disappear, and some increasingly large portion of the fan base would call for a trade. But the organization never even tried to move him, instead racing to reassure him with public and private vows to stay the course. They gave him no-trade protection as soon as he was eligible for it. Even when the team had the ability to move him, the team president would personally call to assure him they wouldn't think about it. If he was ever even mildly criticized or disciplined by a coach, you could count on them immediately walking it back to protect his feelings. He was protected by this team for nine years. And at the end of all of it, not only did he not re-sign, he reportedly wasn't even interested in serious negotiations. He had both eyes on the door the whole time. And how he's going to play the victim on the way out? Head: Good lord, you're dramatic. Heart: Maybe. But show me where I'm wrong. Head: Gladly. First of all, all this talk about Marner sulking or playing the victim is just made up. He hasn't said a bad word about the Leafs publicly. You and all the other fans saying stuff like this are just projecting. You need him to be the bad guy, so you're imagining scenarios to paint him that way. He hasn't done any of that. Heart: Yeah, I guess some of those leaks to friendly media over the years just fell out of the sky. Advertisement Head: Please. Sorry that the biggest media machine in the hockey world occasionally got a morsel to chew on. But let's talk about a bigger issue, one that's been hanging over this whole situation for years now: that six-year contract he signed back in 2019. Heart: By all means, let's do that. Head: He lived up to it. The Leafs gave him a $10.9 million cap hit, and his production matched that. Yes, absolutely, the playoff results weren't there. But when you look at his regular-season numbers, he was absolutely a $10.9 million player on balance. Most years, probably better. How do you watch a guy live up to his contract and still cry about him being overpaid? Heart: Because he was! You can run the numbers however you want, but that 2019 deal was his second contract. Just about every other young star signs a second deal that's team-friendly — that's how the system is supposed to work. But no, not Mitch Marner. He had to try to reset the market for young RFAs, so he let the talks drag on all summer long, let rumors of offer sheets hang out there, and watched his agent talk trash about being lowballed. He worked every bit of leverage he had, signed a record-breaking deal, and then watched comparable young players like Mikko Rantanen and Brayden Point and Matthew Tkachuk sign for significantly less. Hey, quick question, did any of those guys win anything on those deals? I feel like they might have. Head: So he should have intentionally signed for less than he knew he was worth, because that's what everyone else was doing. Heart: Well, yeah. It's called market value. Head: OK, so he got more than market value, then lived up to the contract anyway. That feels like something you should be mad at Kyle Dubas and the Leafs front office for, not the player for accepting the offer. By the way, didn't Auston Matthews sign for even more, months before Marner's deal got done? Advertisement Heart: Oh don't worry, we're not letting Dubas off the hook. And yes, Matthews took pretty much the same 'squeeze every penny' approach that Marner did. But he won an MVP and three Rocket Richards on that contract. And more importantly, he's still here. For now. If we're doing this same debate three years from now for Matthews, we'll cross that bridge then. For now, the point is that Marner's extension changed everything. It's the moment when he went from hometown hero that everyone was rooting for to something else. It's ratcheted up the pressure, and the expectations, and rightly so. It absolutely set him up to be the villain some day. And he knew that, or should have, and he pushed for it anyway. And the fans eventually ended up resenting him for it, which was a 100 percent foreseeable outcome. Hope those extra few bucks were worth it. Head: Just to be clear, those 'few extra bucks' were millions of dollars that he could use to build a future for his family. But sure, feel free to sit on your couch and lecture him about how he should have taken less if he wanted everyone to like him more. Heart: Hey, if you're going to be the sort of player who cares deeply about being liked, then make your decisions accordingly. Or he could have come through in the playoffs. That also would have done it too. Let's not skip over that part. Head: We won't, and it's fair criticism. The Core Four never came through in the postseason, which is why the era ultimately failed. It's completely rational for fans to be mad about that. But why does Marner get all the blame? Why was he always the scapegoat for this era? Heart: He wasn't. That's revisionist history. Are we really going to pretend that William Nylander wasn't the whipping boy for years in Toronto, getting dropped into ridiculous trade rumors for second-pairing defensive defensemen every few months? Or that fans weren't trying to figure out how to send John Tavares to Robidas Island just a few years ago? The market has been all over Matthews at various points, especially in the playoffs. This idea that Marner was the only one who took criticism is a flat-out myth. Head: Is it? It didn't feel that way this spring. Advertisement Heart: Sure, because this was the year we knew he was on the way out. Head: Maybe he wouldn't have been if the fans and media and everyone else had just appreciated him more. Heart: Appreciation is a two-way street. Like we said, Marner was all set up to be a hero in this city. And he absolutely was treated that way, for most of his time here. He even said so himself — we all remember his infamous quote about being viewed as 'kind of gods.' Head: Which is a quote that gets all twisted out of context to this day. He wasn't bragging. He was making a reasonable point and the words came out wrong. That happened to him a few times over the years, but it's no reason to turn on a guy. Unless, of course, you've already made up your mind and you're just looking for an excuse. Heart: The gods quote was fine and I said that at the time. But you can't say that the fans view you as a god one year and then complain that you didn't get enough respect the next. How much is enough? Did everyone need to throw rose petals at his feet on every shift? At what point does any of the responsibility shift to the player to actively earn the respect he wants so much? Head: But again, he did. He was a fantastic player for a long time. And then he wasn't, way too often, once the playoffs started. Granted. But even then, it's not like he wasn't trying. It's not like he didn't want to win in Toronto. If you think his drop-off in playoff production means he's not worth a massive extension, then you should be happy that he's getting it elsewhere. But it's no reason to carry a grudge. Heart: Holding a grudge is what fans do. Or at least, it's what we do when a guy who's been coddled can't seem to wait to leave. He wanted out so badly that he may even have been talking to Vegas early, setting up the Leafs to force the Knights into a deal out of fear of tampering charges. Advertisement Head: OK, but you're a Leafs fan. Shouldn't you be glad they got something out of that situation? Now you don't have to hear about letting a guy go for nothing. Heart: Oh sure, a player may have broken the rules to get out of town, but it means we got some bottom-six forward depth out of it. Cool. Thanks a million. And by the way, on the subject of the Golden Knights: You're telling me that Marner didn't get enough respect in Toronto, so he's going bail out and head to the single most cutthroat franchise in the league? This makes sense to everyone? Good luck with all that respect you were craving when you're being shoved out the door in three years to make room for Jack Hughes or Cale Makar or whichever ever shiny new toy is available. Head: Again, the respect thing is just fans making stuff up to be mad about. Mitch Marner signed a fair contract with a good team in a cool city where his family will be happy. And he did it after nine years of being one of the most productive Leafs of all time. That's all that should matter. When he comes back to town with the Knights during the season, welcome him home with a big ovation. He earned it. Heart: No thanks. I'll be booing him like it's Game 7 of another playoff series he no-showed for. Head: Fine. Go ahead and do that. It's your right as a fan, and all that. Just know that you're not being reasonable, and you're ultimately not helping the team attract star players in the future. Heart: Even if we treat them like gods?