Hockey is back and it feels so good. For the Boston Bruins, it’s been a good start overall. After a poor showing in the season opener, they have enjoyed home cooking.
Despite dropping the season opener to the Florida Panthers in disappointing fashion, the Boston Bruins now hold a 2-1-0 record heading into a rematch with the defending Stanley Cup Champions at home Tuesday.
The Boston Bruins head into the 2024-25 season with several key storylines shaping their roster. From the emergence of Jeremy Swayman as the full-time starting goalie to rookies competing for top-six roles, there will be no shortage of talking points heading into and for the duration of the season.
Training camp is just 22 days away, and after a lot of shuffling around on the wing and the defence corps, multiple lineup spots are up for grabs. In this series, we’ll be highlighting some of these training camp battles and provide all the facts so you can make your best educated guess at who you think should earn the spot next season.
When Elias Lindholm pulls on the Spoked-B this season, he’ll join some elite company. For the tenth time in franchise history, the Boston Bruins will have two players with the same last name etched on the back of their sweater.
Hockey fans all over the world are patiently awaiting the start of the 2024-25 NHL season, the 108th in its illustrious history. Preseason festivities commence on Sept.
This story appeared on hockeysverige.se this week and has been translated from Swedish to English. When Patrik Allvin took over as general nanager of the
On July 1, the Boston Bruins signed free agent Elias Lindholm, a top center from Boden, Sweden. According to team records at NHL.com, he’ll become the 26th Sweden-born player in team history when he steps on the ice on opening night.
Welcome to the 2024 edition of FlamesNation’s annual prospect rankings! Earlier this month, 10 members of our staff crafted lists ranking the Calgary Flames’ top 20 prospects.
Only a few weeks ago, the Bruins secured centre Elias Lindholm with a substantial seven-year, $54.25 million deal, aiming for the 29-year-old forward to become the cornerstone of Boston’s top line for years to come.
The best forward line in recent Calgary Flames history was undoubtedly the trio of Johnny Gaudreau, Elias Lindholm and Matthew Tkachuk from 2021-22. That line rocked.
On Jan. 31 of this year, the Vancouver Canucks kicked off trade deadline season with a huge splash that saw Calgary Flames center Elias Lindholm go to the Canucks as Vancouver prepared for a big playoff run.
Signing postseason standouts from a slight overachiever like Vancouver to expensive, long-term deals reeks of desperation. Is the winningest team of the 21st-century shopping with its heart instead of its head?
It was a chaotic start to the year for Elias Lindholm and the Calgary Flames. With one year remaining on Lindholm’s six-year, $29.1M contract, the team and player had a decision to make: would they sign an extension, or would both parties move on?
The Vancouver Canucks are heading into the 2024 offseason with plenty of pending free agents. Decisions need to be made on many a piece on the roster, and some big names are on that list, such as one Elias Lindholm.
The Vancouver Canucks are reportedly ready to offer pending unrestricted free agent center Elias Lindholm a seven-year contract extension worth $7 million annually, according to Elliotte Friedman on “32 Thoughts.” This is a notable decrease from Lindholm’s previous contract expectations, which were around $9 million annually last fall.
After scoring just 15 goals and 44 points in 75 games during his contract year with the Vancouver Canucks and Calgary Flames, Elias Lindholm may have cost himself upwards of $30 million on his next deal.
In a perfect world, the Vancouver Canucks would start the 2024-25 schedule with the three centres they finished this past season with. But it’s not a perfect world and for that reason — and others — it’s unlikely the Canucks will be able to retain the services of pending unrestricted free agent Elias Lindholm.
The Boston Bruins want to add a top center to the mix as they try to work toward actual postseason success.
When free agency begins on July 1st, expect the Boston Bruins to be aggressive when it comes to making improvements to their roster. The Bruins finished the 2023-24 season with a record of 47-20-15, finishing second in the Atlantic Division with 109 points.
One of the toughest aspects of the free agent market to project has always been: How much money are these players earning or costing themselves with their play over the course of a season?
As we head into a Friday set of games in the NHL playoffs, we forget about goals and turn to our expectation of shots, both on goal, and having them blocked.
Elias Lindholm has been out of the Vancouver Canucks lineup with an apparent wrist injury since March 25th. It was hard for Canucks fans to gauge the severity of the injury as it was first declared a maintenance day, which he played the next game against his former team Calgary Flames.
One month ago, the Canucks acquired forward Elias Lindholm from the Flames in a trade to bolster the organization’s top-six.
Elias Lindholm made his Vancouver Canucks debut following the blockbuster deal that sent Andrei Kuzmenko and assets to the Calgary Flames in exchange for the Swedish center.
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