
Bruins name former winger Marco Sturm head coach
The Bruins picked the 46-year-old German to replace interim coach Joe Sacco, who took over from Jim Montgomery in November and led the team to a 25-30-7 record — much of it after a trade deadline roster purge.
Sturm, who spent the past three seasons as head coach of the AHL's Ontario Reign and coached Germany to a silver medal at the 2018 Pyeongchang Olympics, is a former Boston player — just like Bruins president Cam Neely and general manager Don Sweeney.
'Boston has always held a special place in my heart, and I know how much this team means to the city and to our fans,' said Sturm, who was a Bruins left wing from 2005-10. 'I've felt that passion as a player, and I can't wait to be behind the bench and feel it again. I'm excited to get to work and do everything I can to help this team succeed.'
A three-time Olympian and first-round NHL draft pick who played most of his 14 seasons for the San Jose Sharks and Bruins, Sturm scored 242 goals with 245 assists in 938 career games and is No. 2 on the league's all-time scoring list for players born in Germany. As a coach, he worked as a Los Angeles Kings assistant guiding the Reign, the Kings' AHL affiliate, to a 119-80-11-6 record and three playoff appearances.
'His path — playing for multiple NHL teams, coaching internationally, and leading at both the AHL and NHL levels — has shaped a well-rounded coach who's earned this opportunity,' Sweeney said. 'As a former Bruin, he understands what this team means to the city and our fans. We're embracing a new direction with Marco behind the bench and are confident his energy, standards, and commitment to a competitive, hard-nosed brand of hockey reflect exactly what Bruins hockey should be.'
Sacco, a Bruins assistant and former Colorado Avalanche head coach, replaced Montgomery 20 games into this season, but with the team unable to challenge for a playoff berth Sweeney traded away captain Brad Marchand and other veterans, and the Bruins stumbled to a 33-39-10 record overall, tied for the worst record in the Eastern Conference.
Only three teams in the league were worse, and CEO Charlie Jacobs said after the season that the results were 'absolutely unacceptable' and apologized to the fans for the performance.
'We owe you a better team, and we aim to deliver a better team,' he said after the season. 'I share your disappointment and, frankly, embarrassment on how poorly things played out over the course of this season.'
Sacco was a candidate for the permanent job. Others who reportedly received consideration were Washington Capitals assistant Mitch Love, former Chicago Blackhawks coach Luke Richardson and Bruins assistant Jay Leach.
Montgomery, 55, was 120-41-23 in two-plus seasons in Boston. The Bruins finished with more than 100 points in each of his first two years — including a record-setting debut, when their 65 wins and 135 points were both the most in NHL history.
But the team lost in the first round of the playoffs that season and advanced to only the second round last year. The struggles carried over into an 8-9-3 start this season before Montgomery was fired. He was hired five days later by the St. Louis Blues and was given a five-year contract; the Blues reached the playoffs and lost in the first round in seven games to the Winnipeg Jets.
Boston never improved under Sacco.
Heading into the trade deadline with a three-game losing streak that left them at 28-28, the Bruins traded Marchand — the only remaining member of their 2011 Stanley Cup championship team — along with forwards Justin Brazeau, Marc McLaughlin, Trent Frederic and Charlie Coyle and defenseman Brandon Carlo.
And they left Sacco on the bench to ride it out.
The depleted roster lost 10 straight games — the team lost only 12 in its record-setting 2022-23 season under Montgomery — and fell from possible playoff contender to the NHL draft lottery.
Despite the disappointment, the Bruins signed Sweeney to a two-year contract extension, with Neely saying it would help to have stability in the front office during the coaching search.
'I am confident in the plan he has followed these past few months — and excited for what's to come for our team,' the former Bruins forward said of the former Bruins defenseman. 'The expectations in Boston have always been clear. It's about winning championships.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


National Post
an hour ago
- National Post
Rory McIlroy backs 'clean slate' season finale format change
MIAMI — Rory McIlroy is backing the format change that will see all 30 players tee off as equals as they battle for the FedEx Cup in the PGA Tour's Tour Championship starting on Thursday. Article content A $10-million winner's cheque will be on offer at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta for the climax of the season-ending playoff series, with world number one Scottie Scheffler starting as the man to beat. Article content Article content Article content But unlike previous seasons, Scheffler will be starting on even par with the rest of the field following the decision to scrap the controversial 'starting strokes' format. Article content Last year, Scheffler started the Tour Championship with a two-shot advantage at 10 under to reflect his season-long dominance of the FedEx standings. Article content That system was eliminated for the 2025 tournament however following feedback from fans, with tour officials stating in May that a conventional 72-hole strokeplay tournament offered the 'most straightforward and engaging format'. Article content Masters champion McIlroy said Tuesday he backs the move to switch formats. Article content 'It has a different feel,' McIlroy said. 'Any one of the 30 has a chance to win the FedExCup this year, which is obviously a lot different than it's been in previous years. Article content 'It's a clean slate for everyone, and it's a great opportunity for one of the guys that maybe wasn't a huge part of the season to put their hand up and have a chance to win the big prize at the end of the year. Article content Article content 'It's also a great opportunity for some of the guys that have had great years to sort of rubber stamp the season a little bit and end on a really, really positive note. I think there's still a lot to play for this week.' Article content McIlroy said he had been in a minority who 'didn't hate' the starting strokes format. Article content 'I thought that the player that played the best during the course of the season should have had an advantage coming in here,' he said. Article content 'But the majority of people just didn't like the starting strokes.' Article content McIlroy, who served on the PGA Tour's Player Advisory Council (PAC) which had helped implement the format changes, said switching to a match play format had been considered but discarded. Article content 'Match play was on the table, and that got canned for this year,' McIlroy said. Article content 'I think it's just hard for the players to reconcile that we play stroke play for every week of the year but then the season-ending tournament is going to be decided by match play.' Article content McIlroy's Ryder Cup team-mate, England's Tommy Fleetwood, also approves of the format switch. Article content


Edmonton Journal
5 hours ago
- Edmonton Journal
Cowan: Former Canadien David Savard plays large role in The Rebuild
Season 2 of The Rebuild: Inside the Montreal Canadiens will be a very special one for David Savard. Article content The six-part series, which will launch Thursday on Crave with the first two episodes, provides a behind-the-scenes look at the 2024-25 season, which turned out to be the last of Savard's 14-year NHL career. The 34-year-old defenceman decided midway through the season that it would be his last, but didn't make it public until the Canadiens had clinched a playoff spot for the first time in four years. Article content Article content 'I think if I put myself in four or five years when my youngest one is a little older, it's going to be cool to be able to watch back the last few moments I played in the NHL,' Savard, a father of three young children, said during a news conference Monday about the Crave series. 'I think they did such a good job in the first season of just our life. They see the meetings, the ups and downs we go through during a season and stuff like this. Sometimes you don't see it from the outside. I think it's cool for the fans to get to see this — and even our family. They live it through us, but they're not in meetings, they're not in all those hard practices and everything. They don't see all the stuff we do at the rink.' Article content Article content Episode 1 begins with captain Nick Suzuki addressing fans at the Bell Centre at the end of the 2023-24 season, when the Canadiens finished 28th in the overall NHL standings. Article content Article content 'I think you can all see that we got a special group here and all the seasons in the future are going to be a lot better,' Suzuki says. 'Thank you so much. Merci beaucoup! See you next year.' The Patrik Laine trade — and the forward's pre-season knee injury that would sideline him for the first 24 games — are a big part of Episode 1. General manager Kent Hughes says he spoke with Suzuki before pulling the trigger on the deal that brought Laine and a second-round pick at the 2026 NHL Draft to Montreal from the Columbus Blue Jackets in exchange for defenceman Jordan Harris. Article content 'You talk with your captain and make sure that this is something that is the right move,' Hughes says. 'We know hockey-wise what (Laine's) capable of doing. But just making sure our room was good with it.' Article content Article content The Crave cameras also go behind the scenes for a team meeting led by assistant coach Trevor Letowski during training camp in which he introduces a new system for rush coverage and stresses how important it is for team defence and how it was a weakness the previous season.

Montreal Gazette
6 hours ago
- Montreal Gazette
Cowan: Former Canadien David Savard plays large role in The Rebuild
Montreal Canadiens Season 2 of The Rebuild: Inside the Montreal Canadiens will be a very special one for David Savard. The six-part series, which will launch Thursday on Crave with the first two episodes, provides a behind-the-scenes look at the 2024-25 season, which turned out to be the last of Savard's 14-year NHL career. The 34-year-old defenceman decided midway through the season that it would be his last, but didn't make it public until the Canadiens had clinched a playoff spot for the first time in four years. 'I think if I put myself in four or five years when my youngest one is a little older, it's going to be cool to be able to watch back the last few moments I played in the NHL,' Savard, a father of three young children, said during a news conference Monday about the Crave series. 'I think they did such a good job in the first season of just our life. They see the meetings, the ups and downs we go through during a season and stuff like this. Sometimes you don't see it from the outside. I think it's cool for the fans to get to see this — and even our family. They live it through us, but they're not in meetings, they're not in all those hard practices and everything. They don't see all the stuff we do at the rink.' Episode 1 begins with captain Nick Suzuki addressing fans at the Bell Centre at the end of the 2023-24 season, when the Canadiens finished 28th in the overall NHL standings. 'I think you can all see that we got a special group here and all the seasons in the future are going to be a lot better,' Suzuki says. 'Thank you so much. Merci beaucoup! See you next year.' The Patrik Laine trade — and the forward's pre-season knee injury that would sideline him for the first 24 games — are a big part of Episode 1. General manager Kent Hughes says he spoke with Suzuki before pulling the trigger on the deal that brought Laine and a second-round pick at the 2026 NHL Draft to Montreal from the Columbus Blue Jackets in exchange for defenceman Jordan Harris. 'You talk with your captain and make sure that this is something that is the right move,' Hughes says. 'We know hockey-wise what (Laine's) capable of doing. But just making sure our room was good with it.' The Crave cameras also go behind the scenes for a team meeting led by assistant coach Trevor Letowski during training camp in which he introduces a new system for rush coverage and stresses how important it is for team defence and how it was a weakness the previous season. The Canadiens opened last season with a 1-0 win over the Toronto Maple Leafs despite being outshot 48-27, with goalie Samuel Montembeault standing on his head. 'The locker room after … it was epic,' head coach Martin St. Louis tells Jeff Gorton, the executive vice-president of hockey operations, during a post-game meeting. 'Crave caught it. I'm sure it will go in.' It did go in Episode 1, in which Gorton also expresses his concerns following the victory. 'As a player, emotionally after the game you're really excited and you're not really focused on anything but you just won a game,' Gorton says. 'You're excited and you're moving on to the next one. As a manager or somebody in charge of a hockey team, you're like: 'Huh, we better be better than that.'' Gorton had reason for concern and Episode 2 focuses on that with the Canadiens sitting in last place after 15 games with a 4-9-2 record after six straight losses. After a 6-3 loss to the Capitals in Washington — the second loss of the slump — St. Louis bag-skated his players at practice. 'We all knew it was coming,' Brendan Gallager says. 'It was the right thing to do. And for our group, it didn't necessarily maybe give us the best chance to win the next night. But over the long course of a season, we're better off for it. Our group fully understood that. Guys showed up, put the work in, and then you remember a day like that.' Savard said after watching an advance screening of the first two episodes he had forgotten a bit how tough the start to last season was. His playing days are over, but Savard is hoping to stay with the team in some kind of coaching or player-development role and said he has had some conversations with management about that. He said the goal this season will be for the Canadiens to start the way they finished last season and understand right from the start how important it is to play tight defensively. St. Louis has talked in the past about how a rebuilding team needs veterans who are 'willing to plant trees knowing they'll never sit in the shade.' Savard was one of those players. 'I'm really proud of where the guys came from,' Savard said. 'Three years ago, not many people thought we were going to build something really solid and I think right now it's starting to show.'