Boston
Bruins management and scouts continued their mind-boggling trend of passing on
best players available and ventured far out into left field once again in the 2016
NHL draft, much to the frustration of diehard fans.
Their
latest head-scratching pick occurred when they bypassed on right-shooting,
gritty 1st round-ranked dynamic scorers 5'7" C/RW Alex DeBrincat and 6'1" C/RW Pascal Laberge with their 29th pick to go
way off the board and instead select big defensive center Trent Frederic, who was projected to go
in the mid to late second round (he was ranked from 47th to 58th on major draft
boards). This was especially head-turning since Bruins President Cam Neely had
stressed at the team's season-ending presser in April that one of the team's
top needs was to get heavier on the right side. Laberge, a 6'1" right wing and gritty two-way scorer, would have seemingly addressed that need while also
providing flexibility at center as well as responsibility and high battle at both ends of the ice.
While
Frederic projects to be only a third or fourth line center down the road at the
NHL level, DeBrincat (pure sniper with three straight 50-goal, 100-point seasons) and
Laberge (tough two-way player who can both score and make plays and
finished with 23 goals and 68 points in 56 games last season) are legit first
rounders who have the potential to be top-six forwards and would have been
excellent value picks at number 29. Frederic or a comparable player could have simply been taken much later in the draft. When the B's turn came around at 29, many
NHL observers expected Laberge would have been an easy choice at that
point but one wonders if he was even on the B's radar. GM Don Sweeney, scouting
chief Keith Gretzky and Neely converged for several moments before making the
choice of Frederic.
The
Bruins did take solid value players with both their 14th overall pick and 2nd
rounder (49th overall) in defensemen Charlie McAvoy (ranked from 6th to 23rd) and Ryan Lindgren (ranked 41st-49th), but seem to continue to
take one step forward and two steps back in a league that is quickly getting
faster and more skilled and just don't seem to be on top of things when it comes
to scouting or managing assets. Giving up all of the picks they did in last
season's deadline trades (four selections in total, including their 2016 3rd and 4th
rounders) instead of moving veteran assets for more picks also hurt them in the
draft, where they ultimately ended up with only six selections.
Laberge was ultimately selected by Philadelphia and DeBrincat by Chicago early in the second round, and were long gone by the time Boston picked again at number 49. What is more concerning is that Bruins management doesn't seem to get that fans also like to see skill on the ice, and not just physical and defensive play. Speed, skill and puck possession are also what the league is trending to. Who can forget the shifty Russian dynamo 5'8" Sergei Samsonov, who thrilled Boston fans in the late '90s and 2000s with his array of moves and deftness around the net.
Laberge was ultimately selected by Philadelphia and DeBrincat by Chicago early in the second round, and were long gone by the time Boston picked again at number 49. What is more concerning is that Bruins management doesn't seem to get that fans also like to see skill on the ice, and not just physical and defensive play. Speed, skill and puck possession are also what the league is trending to. Who can forget the shifty Russian dynamo 5'8" Sergei Samsonov, who thrilled Boston fans in the late '90s and 2000s with his array of moves and deftness around the net.
After
going well off the board in the first round of the 2015 draft, as well, and
passing on elite prospects such as Kyle Connor, who has gone on to become one of
the top NHL prospects in the country, the Bruins' front office leadership continues to be a
cause for concern to the team's fanbase as the B's seemingly continue to miss
out on exciting players while the rest of the league scoops them up and seems
to be quickly passing Boston by.