2009–10 Boston Bruins season

2009–10 Boston Bruins
Division 3rd Northeast
Conference 6th Eastern
2009–10 record 39–30–13
Home record 18–17–6
Road record 21–13–7
Goals for 206
Goals against 200
Team information
General Manager Peter Chiarelli
Coach Claude Julien
Captain Zdeno Chara
Alternate captains Patrice Bergeron
Marco Sturm (Oct.1–Nov.5, Apr.11)
Steve Begin (Nov.7–Dec.10)
Marc Savard (Dec.12–Jan.7, Mar.4)
Mark Recchi (Jan.5–Apr.11)
Derek Morris (Jan.9–Feb.9)
Mark Stuart (Mar.9)
David Krejci (Apr.11)
Milan Lucic (Apr.11)
Arena TD Garden
Fenway Park (1 game)
Average attendance 17,388 (99.0%)
Total: 695,543
Team leaders
Goals Marco Sturm (22)
Assists Zdeno Chara (37)
Points Patrice Bergeron (52)
David Krejci (52)
Penalties in minutes Shawn Thornton (141)
Plus/minus Zdeno Chara (+19)
Wins Tuukka Rask (22)
Goals against average Tuukka Rask (1.97)
<2008–09 2010–11>

The 2009–10 Boston Bruins season is the Bruins' 86th season in the National Hockey League (NHL). Their regular season began with a nationally-televised home game against the Washington Capitals on October 1, 2009, and ended with a road game against the same Capitals team on April 11, 2010. The Bruins failed to defend their regular-season division and conference titles from the 2008–09 season.

Off-season

At the 2009 NHL Entry Draft, the Bruins chose Jordan Caron with their first-round pick, 25th overall. The NHL announced on July 15, 2009, that the Bruins would face the Philadelphia Flyers in the 2010 NHL Winter Classic on New Year's Day at Fenway Park.[1]

Due to salary cap constraints and free agent movement, General Manager Peter Chiarelli made substantial changes to the Bruins' lineup in the offseason. Most notable was the trade of leading goalscorer Phil Kessel, who declined contract offers and was traded to the Toronto Maple Leafs for three draft picks on September 18. Other departures included winger P. J. Axelsson—at 11 seasons, the longest tenured Bruin—center Stephane Yelle, defensemen Shane Hnidy and Steve Montador, and goaltender Manny Fernandez. These veteran players were considered expendable due to competition from younger, lower-paid players in the Bruins organization.

Chiarelli entered the 2009 off-season with the goal of acquiring an offensive-minded defenseman, in part due to Boston's weakness in that area during the previous playoffs. On July 24, defenseman Derek Morris signed a one-year contract with the team. Gritty forward Steve Begin was also signed to provide forward depth. In goal, Fernandez was replaced with rookie Tuukka Rask, who had spent several seasons being developed in the American Hockey League (AHL).

Pre-season

Regular season

The Bruins were slow to gain traction with their retooled roster, alternating wins and losses in the early weeks of the season. Chiarelli quickly dealt popular winger Chuck Kobasew to the Minnesota Wild, while penalty-killing expert Daniel Paille was brought in from the Buffalo Sabres in exchange for draft picks, a move that was interpreted as a sign of dissatisfaction with the team's productivity.

In particular, the team struggled offensively in Kessel's absence. Having nearly finished first in scoring the previous season, the Bruins lingered near the bottom of the league in goal production. However, they were able to stay competitive due to their exceptional defense and strong goaltending tandem. While defending Vezina Trophy winner Tim Thomas was recovering from an early injury, rookie netminder Tuukka Rask emerged as a potential Calder Memorial Trophy candidate. A four-game winning streak in November set the Bruins back on course, and a 5–1–0 home record in December got them back into the divisional race by Christmas.

Perhaps the most memorable game of the season was the Winter Classic, which the Bruins hosted at Fenway Park in Boston. Despite trailing for most of the game, the team rallied in the final moments and won in overtime before a large national audience. After the game, Thomas was announced as a member of the United States men's hockey team, joining five teammates (Patrice Bergeron, Zdeno Chara, Marco Sturm, David Krejci and Miroslav Satan) who would represent various countries in Vancouver.

The Bruins went on a long losing streak lasting from mid-January to just before the Olympic break.

In the 81st game of the season, the Bruins scored three shorthanded goals in a span of 64 seconds. This outburst during a single penalty kill not only equaled their previous shorthanded goal total for the entire season, it was a NHL record for the fastest three shorthanded goals during a game.[2] The 4-2 victory over the Hurricanes secured a playoff spot for the Bruins.

The Bruins finished the regular season having scored 196 goals (excluding 10 shootout-winning goals), the fewest in the NHL. They were the most disciplined team in the League, with a league-low 37 power-play goals against.[3][4]

Divisional standings

Northeast Division[5]
GP W L OTL GF GA Pts
1 y – Buffalo Sabres 82 45 27 10 235 207 100
2 Ottawa Senators 82 44 32 6 225 238 94
3 Boston Bruins 82 39 30 13 206 200 91
4 Montreal Canadiens 82 39 33 10 217 223 88
5 Toronto Maple Leafs 82 30 38 14 214 263 74

Conference standings

Eastern Conference[6]
R Div GP W L OTL GF GA Pts
1 p – Washington Capitals SE 82 54 15 13 318 233 121
2 y – New Jersey Devils AT 82 48 27 7 222 191 103
3 y – Buffalo Sabres NE 82 45 27 10 235 207 100
4 Pittsburgh Penguins AT 82 47 28 7 257 237 101
5 Ottawa Senators NE 82 44 32 6 225 238 94
6 Boston Bruins NE 82 39 30 13 206 200 91
7 Philadelphia Flyers AT 82 41 35 6 236 225 88
8 Montreal Canadiens NE 82 39 33 10 217 223 88
8.5
9 New York Rangers AT 82 38 33 11 222 218 87
10 Atlanta Thrashers SE 82 35 34 13 234 256 83
11 Carolina Hurricanes SE 82 35 37 10 230 256 80
12 Tampa Bay Lightning SE 82 34 36 12 217 260 80
13 New York Islanders AT 82 34 37 11 222 264 79
14 Florida Panthers SE 82 32 37 13 208 244 77
15 Toronto Maple Leafs NE 82 30 38 14 214 267 74

bold – Qualified for playoffs; y – Won division; p – Won Presidents' Trophy (and division)

AT - Atlantic Division, NE - Northeast Division, SE - Southeast Division

Game log

2009–10 game log

Legend:       Win (2 points)       Loss (0 points)       Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)

Playoffs

The Bruins clinched a playoff spot for the third consecutive season.[7]

Playoff log

2010 Stanley Cup playoffs

Player statistics

Skaters

Note: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/- = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalty minutes

Regular season[9]
Player GP G A Pts +/- PIM
Bergeron, PatricePatrice Bergeron 73 19 33 52 6 28
Krejci, DavidDavid Krejci 79 17 35 52 8 26
Chara, ZdenoZdeno Chara 80 7 37 44 19 87
Recchi, MarkMark Recchi 81 18 25 43 4 34
Wheeler, BlakeBlake Wheeler 82 18 20 38 -4 53
Sturm, MarcoMarco Sturm 76 22 15 37 14 30
Savard, MarcMarc Savard 41 10 23 33 2 14
Ryder, MichaelMichael Ryder 82 18 15 33 3 35
Wideman, DennisDennis Wideman 76 6 24 30 -14 34
Morris, DerekDerek Morris 58 3 22 25 -2 26
Lucic, MilanMilan Lucic 50 9 11 20 -7 44
Paille, DanielDaniel Paille 74 10 9 19 -4 12
Boychuk, JohnnyJohnny Boychuk 51 5 10 15 10 43
Satan, MiroslavMiroslav Satan 38 9 5 14 8 12
Begin, SteveSteve Begin 77 5 9 14 -7 53
Hunwick, MattMatt Hunwick 76 6 8 14 -16 32
Thornton, ShawnShawn Thornton 74 1 9 10 -9 141
Sobotka, VladimirVladimir Sobotka 61 4 6 10 -7 30
Bitz, ByronByron Bitz 45 4 5 9 -9 31
Seidenberg, DennisDennis Seidenberg 17 2 6 8 9 6
Ference, AndrewAndrew Ference 51 0 8 8 -7 16
Stuart, MarkMark Stuart 56 2 5 7 1 80
Rask, TuukkaTuukka Rask(G) 45 0 3 3 2
Whitfield, TrentTrent Whitfield 16 0 1 1 -2 7
McQuaid, AdamAdam McQuaid 19 1 0 1 -5 21
Marchand, BradBrad Marchand 20 0 1 1 -3 20
Hamill, ZachZach Hamill 1 0 1 1 1 0
Kobasew, ChuckChuck Kobasew 7 0 1 1 -2 2
Lefebvre, GuillaumeGuillaume Lefebvre 1 0 0 0 0 0
Larman, DrewDrew Larman 4 0 0 0 -1 0
Wozniewski, AndyAndy Wozniewski 2 0 0 0 0 0
Lehtonen, MikkoMikko Lehtonen 1 0 0 0 -1 0
Bodnarchuk, AndrewAndrew Bodnarchuk 5 0 0 0 -2 2
Penner, JeffJeff Penner 2 0 0 0 0 0
Thomas, TimTim Thomas(G) 43 0 0 0 8
Totals 196 347 543 -2[10] 929
  • Denotes player spent time with another team before joining Bruins. Stats reflect time with the Bruins only.
  • Denotes player was traded mid-season.
  • (G)Denotes goaltender.

Playoffs[11]
Player GP G A Pts +/- PIM
Wideman, DennisDennis Wideman 13 1 11 12 3 4
Bergeron, PatricePatrice Bergeron 13 4 7 11 4 2
Recchi, MarkMark Recchi 13 6 4 10 0 6
Satan, MiroslavMiroslav Satan 13 5 5 10 4 16
Lucic, MilanMilan Lucic 13 5 4 9 1 19
Krejci, DavidDavid Krejci 9 4 4 8 3 2
Chara, ZdenoZdeno Chara 13 2 5 7 1 29
Boychuk, JohnnyJohnny Boychuk 13 2 4 6 0 6
Wheeler, BlakeBlake Wheeler 13 1 5 6 -6 6
Hunwick, MattMatt Hunwick 13 0 6 6 -1 2
Ryder, MichaelMichael Ryder 13 4 1 5 -4 2
Savard, MarcMarc Savard 7 1 2 3 2 12
Paille, DanielDaniel Paille 13 0 2 2 -2 2
Sobotka, VladimirVladimir Sobotka 13 0 2 2 -10 15
Begin, SteveSteve Begin 13 1 0 1 -7 10
Ference, AndrewAndrew Ference 13 0 1 1 -9 18
Rask, TuukkaTuukka Rask(G) 13 0 1 1 0
Sturm, MarcoMarco Sturm 7 0 0 0 0 4
Thornton, ShawnShawn Thornton 12 0 0 0 -4 4
McQuaid, AdamAdam McQuaid 9 0 0 0 -4 6
Whitfield, TrentTrent Whitfield 4 0 0 0 -1 0
Stuart, MarkMark Stuart 4 0 0 0 -4 6
Totals 36 63 99 -7[12] 167

Goaltenders

Note: GPI = Games Played In; MIN = Minutes played; GAA = Goals Against Average; W = Wins; L = Losses; OT = Overtime/Shootout Losses; SO = Shutouts; SA = Shots Against; GA = Goals Against; SV% = Save Percentage

Regular season[9]
Player GPI MIN GAA W L OT SO SA GA SV%
Rask, TuukkaTuukka Rask 45 2562 1.97 22 12 5 5 1221 84 .931
Thomas, TimTim Thomas 43 2442 2.56 17 18 8 5 1221 104 .915
Combined 5004 2.25 39 30 13 10 2442 188 .923
Playoffs[11]
Player GPI MIN GAA W L OT SO SA GA SV%
Rask, TuukkaTuukka Rask 13 829 2.61 7 6 0 409 36 .912

Awards and records

Awards

Regular season
Player Award Date
Tuukka Rask[13] NHL Third Star of the Week April 5, 2010
Mark Recchi[14] Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy nominee Nominated by the Writers' Association for league-wide recognition.

On April 8, prior to the game against the Buffalo Sabres, the team announced its award winners for the season.

Bruins annual awards
Player Award Notes
Tuukka Rask[15] NESN Seventh Player Award Awarded to the player who exceeded the expectations of Bruins fans during the season.
Mark Recchi Eddie Shore Award Awarded to the player who exhibits exceptional hustle and determination.
Patrice Bergeron Elizabeth C. Dufresne Trophy Awarded by the Boston Chapter of the PHWA, for outstanding performance during home games.
Shawn Thornton John P. Bucyk Award Awarded to the Bruin with the greatest off-ice charitable contributions.
Patrice Bergeron
David Krejci
Tuukka Rask
Three Star Awards Awarded to the top performers at home over the course of the season.

Milestones

Regular season
Player Milestone Reached
Brad Marchand 1st career NHL game
1st career NHL assist
1st career NHL point
October 21, 2009
Mark Recchi 1,500th career NHL game October 24, 2009
Mark Recchi 900th career NHL assist November 10, 2009
Shawn Thornton 400th career NHL PIM November 16, 2009
Tuukka Rask 1st career NHL assist
1st career NHL point
November 20, 2009
Marc Savard 200th career NHL goal December 2, 2009
Johnny Boychuk 1st career NHL goal
1st career NHL point
December 5, 2009
Johnny Boychuk 1st career NHL assist December 10, 2009
Adam McQuaid 1st career NHL game December 19, 2009
Vladimir Sobotka 100th career NHL game December 23, 2009
Matt Hunwick 100th career NHL game December 27, 2009
Adam McQuaid 1st career NHL goal
1st career NHL point
February 7, 2010
Jeffrey Penner 1st career NHL game March 9, 2010
David Krejci 100th career NHL assist March 25, 2010
Steve Begin 100th career NHL point April 10, 2010
Zach Hamill 1st career NHL game
1st career NHL assist
1st career NHL point
April 11, 2010

On December 23, Claude Julien coached his 200th game for Boston, a 6–4 win over Atlanta.

Transactions

The Bruins have been involved in the following transactions during the 2009–10 season.

Trades
July 24, 2009 To Carolina Hurricanes:
Aaron Ward
To Boston:
Patrick Eaves
4th-round pick in 2010
September 18, 2009 To Toronto Maple Leafs:
Phil Kessel
To Boston:
1st-round pick in 2010
1st-round pick in 2011
2nd-round pick in 2010
October 18, 2009 To Minnesota Wild:
Chuck Kobasew
To Boston:
Alexander Fallstrom
Craig Weller
2nd-round pick in 2011
October 20, 2009 To Buffalo Sabres:
3rd-round pick in 2010
conditional 4th-round pick in 2010
To Boston:
Daniel Paille
March 2, 2010[16] To Anaheim Ducks:
Conditional 4th-round draft pick
To Boston:
Steven Kampfer
March 2, 2010[17] To Edmonton Oilers:
Matt Marquardt
To Boston:
Cody Wild
March 3, 2010[18] To Phoenix Coyotes:
Derek Morris
To Boston:
conditional draft pick in 2011
March 3, 2010[19] To Florida Panthers:
Byron Bitz
Craig Weller
2nd-round draft pick in 2010
To Boston:
Dennis Seidenberg
Matt Bartkowski

Free agents acquired
Player Former team Contract terms
Steve Begin[20] Dallas Stars 1 year, $850,000
Drew Fata[21] Binghamton Senators 1 year
Dany Sabourin[21] Edmonton Oilers 1 year
Rob Kwiet[22] Windsor Spitfires 1 year
Drew Larman[22] Rochester Americans 1 year
Zach McKelvie[22] Army Black Knights 1 year
Trent Whitfield[22] St. Louis Blues 2 years, 2-way contract
Derek Morris[23] New York Rangers 1 year, $3.3 million
Andy Wozniewski[24] Wilkes-Barre Penguins 1 year
Guillaume Lefebvre[25] Springfield Falcons 1 year
Miroslav Satan[26] Pittsburgh Penguins 1 year, $700,000
Free agents lost
Player New team Contract terms
Steve Montador[27] Buffalo Sabres 2 years, $3.1 million
Shane Hnidy[28] Minnesota Wild 1 year, $750,000
Martin St. Pierre[29] Ottawa Senators 1 year, 2-way contract
P. J. Axelsson[30] Frolunda HC 4 years
Patrick Eaves[31] Detroit Red Wings 1 year, $500,000
Stephane Yelle[32] Carolina Hurricanes 1 year, $550,000

Player signings
Player Contract terms
Jamie Arniel[33] undisclosed
David Krejci[34] 3 years, $11.25 million
Byron Bitz[35] 1 year, $675,000
Johnny Boychuk[36] 1 year
Mark Recchi[37] 1 year, $1 million
Matt Hunwick[38] 2 years, $2.9 million
Milan Lucic[39] 3 years, $12.25 million
Tuukka Rask[40] 2 years, $2.5 million
Marc Savard[41] 7 years, $28 million
Andrew Ference[42] 3 years, $6.75 million contract extension
Jordan Caron[43] entry-level contract
Joe Colborne[43] entry-level contract
Michael Hutchinson[43] entry-level contract
Steven Kampfer[43] entry-level contract
Matt Bartkowski[44] entry-level contract

Personnel

Final roster

Updated May 2, 2010.[45]

--> --> -->
# Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace
27 Canada Begin, SteveSteve Begin LW L 36 2009 Trois-Rivières, Quebec
37 Canada Bergeron, PatricePatrice Bergeron (A) C R 30 2003 L'Ancienne-Lorette, Quebec
65 Canada Bodnarchuk, AndrewAndrew Bodnarchuk D L 26 2006 Drumheller, Alberta
55 Canada Boychuk, JohnnyJohnny Boychuk D R 31 2008 Edmonton, Alberta
33 Slovakia Chara, ZdenoZdeno Chara (C) D L 38 2006 Trenčín, Czechoslovakia
21 Canada Ference, AndrewAndrew Ference D L 36 2007 Edmonton, Alberta
52 Canada Hamill, ZachZach Hamill C R 26 2007 Vancouver, British Columbia
48 United States Hunwick, MattMatt Hunwick D L 29 2004 Warren, Michigan
46 Czech Republic Krejci, DavidDavid Krejci  C R 28 2004 Šternberk, Czechoslovakia
43 United States Larman, DrewDrew Larman C R 29 2009 Canton, Michigan
68 Finland Lehtonen, MikkoMikko Lehtonen RW R 28 2005 Espoo, Finland
17 Canada Lucic, MilanMilan Lucic LW L 26 2006 Vancouver, British Columbia
63 Canada Marchand, BradBrad Marchand C L 26 2006 Halifax, Nova Scotia
54 Canada McQuaid, AdamAdam McQuaid D R 28 2007 Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island
20 Canada Paille, DanielDaniel Paille LW L 31 2009 Welland, Ontario
62 Canada Penner, JeffreyJeffrey Penner D R 28 2008 Steinbach, Manitoba
40 Finland Rask, TuukkaTuukka Rask G L 28 2006 Savonlinna, Finland
28 Canada Recchi, MarkMark Recchi (A) RW L 47 2009 Kamloops, British Columbia
73 Canada Ryder, MichaelMichael Ryder RW R 35 2008 Bonavista, Newfoundland
32 Canada Sabourin, DanyDany Sabourin G L 34 2009 Val-d'Or, Quebec
81 Slovakia Satan, MiroslavMiroslav Satan RW L 40 2010 Jacovce, Czechoslovakia
74 Canada Sauve, MaximeMaxime Sauve C L 25 2008 Tours, France
91 Canada Savard, MarcMarc Savard C L 37 2006 Ottawa, Ontario
44 Germany Seidenberg, DennisDennis Seidenberg  D L 33 2010 Villingen-Schwenningen, West Germany
60 Czech Republic Sobotka, VladimirVladimir Sobotka C L 27 2005 Třebíč, Czechoslovakia
45 United States Stuart, MarkMark Stuart D L 30 2003 Rochester, Minnesota
16 Germany Sturm, MarcoMarco Sturm  LW L 36 2005 Dingolfing, West Germany
30 United States Thomas, TimTim Thomas G L 41 2002 Flint, Michigan
22 Canada Thornton, ShawnShawn Thornton RW R 37 2007 Oshawa, Ontario
26 United States Wheeler, BlakeBlake Wheeler RW R 28 2008 Plymouth, Minnesota
42 Canada Whitfield, TrentTrent Whitfield C L 37 2009 Estevan, Saskatchewan
6 Canada Wideman, DennisDennis Wideman D R 32 2007 Kitchener, Ontario
44 United States Wozniewski, AndyAndy Wozniewski D L 34 2009 Buffalo Grove, Illinois

Staff

Boston Bruins staff

Hockey operations

  • General Manager - Peter Chiarelli
  • Assistant General Manager - Jim Benning
  • Director of player development - Don Sweeney
  • Director of player personnel - Scott Bradley
  • Director of amateur scouting - Wayne Smith
  • Director of collegiate scouting - John Weisbrod

Coaching staff

Management

  • Senior advisor to the owner - Harry Sinden
  • Vice President, Alternate Governor - Cam Neely
  • Vice President, business operations - Daniel J. Zimmer
  • Senior Vice President, sales and marketing - Amy Latimer
  • Vice President, finance - Jim Bednarek

Draft picks

Boston's picks at the 2009 NHL Entry Draft in Montreal, Quebec.

Round # Player Position Nationality College/junior/club team (league)
1 25 Jordan Caron Right Wing  Canada Rimouski Oceanic (QMJHL)
3 86 Ryan Button Defense  Canada Prince Albert Raiders (WHL)
4 112 (from Philadelphia) Lane MacDermid Forward  United States Windsor Spitfires (OHL)
6 176 Tyler Randell RW  Canada Kitchener Rangers (OHL)
7 206 Ben Sexton Center  Canada Nepean Raiders (CJAHL)

Farm teams

American Hockey LeagueProvidence Bruins (standings)

See also

References

  1. NHL To Make History at Fenway Park
  2. http://sports.espn.go.com/nhl/recap?gameId=300410001
  3. http://www.hockey-reference.com/leagues/NHL_2010.html
  4. http://www.hockey-reference.com/teams/BOS/2010_games.html
  5. "2009–2010 Standings by Division". National Hockey League.
  6. "2009–2010 Standings by Conference". National Hockey League.
  7. Bruins clinch playoff spot, set SH record
  8. Blowing 3-0 Series Lead
  9. 9.0 9.1 "2009-2010 Regular Season". Archived from the original on 23 April 2010. Retrieved 16 April 2010.
  10. "Team Stats 2009-2010 Regular Season". Retrieved 11 December 2009.
  11. 11.0 11.1 "2009-2010 Playoffs". Archived from the original on 25 April 2010. Retrieved 16 April 2010.
  12. "Team Stats 2009-2010 Playoffs". Retrieved 16 April 2010.
  13. Halak, Saku Koivu, Rask named 'Three Stars'
  14. Recchi Nominated for Masterton
  15. Rask Named 7th Player
  16. Bruins Acquire Rights to Kampfer
  17. B's Acquire Wild from Edmonton
  18. B's Acquire Draft Pick for Morris
  19. B's Acquire Seidenberg, Trade Bitz
  20. Bruins Sign Steve Bégin
  21. 21.0 21.1 B's Sign Fata and Sabourin
  22. 22.0 22.1 22.2 22.3 Bruins Sign Four Players
  23. Bruins Sign Derek Morris
  24. Boston Bruins Sign Defenseman Andy Wozniewski to a One-Year Contract
  25. B's Announce Roster Moves
  26. BRUINS SIGN MIROSLAV SATAN FOR THE REMAINDER OF THE SEASON
  27. MONTADOR AGREES TO TERMS
  28. Wild signs defenseman Shane Hnidy
  29. Bulletin: Senators sign centre Martin St. Pierre
  30. AXELSSON SIGNS 4-YEAR DEAL WITH SWEDEN'S FROLUNDA
  31. Wings sign Eaves to one-year deal
  32. Canes Agree to Terms with Stephane Yelle
  33. Bruins Sign Center Jamie Arniel
  34. Krejci Signed to a Multi-Year Extension
  35. Bruins Re-sign Byron Bitz
  36. Bruins Ink Johnny Boychuk
  37. Mark Recchi Re-signs with Boston
  38. B's Re-sign Defenseman Matt Hunwick
  39. Bruins Re-sign Milan Lucic
  40. Rask Signed to Contract Extension
  41. Savard Signs Contract Extension
  42. Bruins Sign Andrew Ference to Three-Year Extension
  43. 43.0 43.1 43.2 43.3 Boston Bruins Sign Four to Contracts
  44. Bruins Sign Bartkowski
  45. "Boston Bruins - Team - Roster". Boston Bruins. Retrieved 2010-05-01.

External links