Boston Junior Bruins

Boston Junior Bruins
City Marlborough, Massachusetts
League EJHL Jr A,
EmJHL Jr. B
Division North
Founded 1999 (1999)
Home arena New England Sports Center
Colors

Black, gold and white


              
General manager Peter Masters
Head coach Peter Masters (EJHL),
Chris Masters (EmJHL)

The Boston Junior Bruins are an American junior ice hockey organization playing in Marlborough, MA. They field two Junior and a number of Youth teams. The Junior A team plays in the Eastern Junior Hockey League. The Junior B team of the same name competes in the Empire Junior B Hockey League.

Contents

Mission

Junior Hockey is the pinnacle of the skill development program of USA Hockey. The program is available to high school students and graduates seeking a greater challenge than that available through their prep school, high school, or club team. The principal purpose of the Junor Bruins development program is to prepare the athlete for career advancement; either a collegiate program or professional opportunity.[1]

History

The Boston Junior Bruins was founded in 1991 as an independent junior team. The Junior Bruins played prep schools and local junior teams, and competed in major tournaments throughout North America before joining the Eastern Junior Hockey League (EJHL) in 1999.

During their first three EJHL seasons, Head Coach Peter Masters and his staff led the team to fourth, third, and second place finishes overall in the twelve-team league. In 2000-01 the team finished the regular season with a 45-15-1 overall record as the EJHL Northern Division Champions.

Team Members and Regular Season

The Junior Bruins hold tryouts in April and final camp in late July. The Junior Bruins team is typically composed of 12 to 13 forwards, 6 to 7 defensemen, and 2 goalies on the active roster. All players are between the ages of 16 and 20. The season starts the day after Labor Day and playoffs finish during the third week of March each year. The team typically practices 3 to 4 times per week.

The schedule includes 45 EJHL regular season schedule games plus three rounds of playoffs. From year to year the Junior Bruins normally play one or both of the US National teams (USA Hockey's National Team Development Program)[2] in an exhibition game along with some scrimmages versus local prep schools and participate in 4-6 major recruiting showcase/tournaments.

Coach

Head coach Peter Masters functions as both head coach for the EJHL team and manager for all Junior Bruins activities. His responsibilities include program and organization development, direction of skill sessions and summer camps for youth hockey players and the Annual Junior Bruins Shootout Tournament in the fall and Beantown Classic Tournament in August.

Peter Masters, 2001 EJHL Coach of the Year, graduated from Boston College in 1997. While at Boston College, Masters played defense for the BC Eagles under coaches Steve Cedorchuk and Jerry York, and was recognized in 1997 as one of eight defensemen nation-wide picked as Hobey Baker Award pre-season 'players to watch'.[3]

Alumni

Since 1992 the Junior Bruins have placed over 100 players in college hockey and since 2001 more than 35 have been recruited to Division I college teams.[4]

Notable former Boston Junior Bruins players include
Blake Sloan (NHL)[5]
Brendan Buckley (AHL)[6]
Sean Haggerty (NHL)[7][8]
Tim Lovell (AHL)[9] Bobby Butler (NHL)

Charitable involvement

The Bay State Hockey Foundation (BSHF) is the non-profit arm of the Junior Bruins Organization. Founded in 2005, the mission of the BSHF is to provide " ... children and young adults with lower extremity paralysis and other disabilities the opportunity to participate in the sport of sled ice hockey ... " Equipment and participation are free for qualified individuals.[10]

Season-by-season results

Season GP W L T OTL GF GA P Results Playoffs
1999-00 40 22 18 0 - 175 157 44 5th EJHL
2000-01 38 30 7 0 1 - - 61 1st EJHL
2001-02 38 26 11 0 1 173 103 53 3rd EJHL
2002-03 38 28 6 4 0 180 90 60 1st EJHL North
2003-04 38 32 3 2 0 180 73 66 1st EJHL North
2004-05 51 36 8 6 1 200 102 79 1st EJHL North
2005-06 45 34 8 1 2 177 111 71 2nd EJHL North
2006-07 45 30 11 3 1 170 116 64 2nd EJHL North
2007-08 45 29 10 5 1 162 102 64 3rd EJHL North
2008-09 45 32 9 3 1 183 101 68 2nd EJHL North

Notes and references

External links