Bruins Star Delivers Blunt Message Amid Team’s Challenging Losing Streak.

In fact, it’s not anyone’s, because for the first time since 1997, the Bruins are in last place in their division, having lost 10 of their last 11 games.

This unfamiliar era of Bruins hockey is limping to the finish of the 2024-25 season as Boston dropped a 6-3 loss to the Buffalo Sabres on Sunday, a club that hasn’t made the playoffs since 2011.

“We just didn’t sustain any offensive zone time in the second period, probably under one minute and they had close to three,” Bruins coach Joe Sacco said to NHL.com. “… I give them credit because they were on top of us, but we still have to find ways to handle the pressure in better situations. … We’ve talked about this for a while now, and it’s about playing behind the forecheck and establishing your own forecheck, creating some more zone time for yourself.”

The season has been a downward spiral since head coach Jim Montgomery was fired in November.

The St. Louis Blues hired Montgomery immediately after. They are 34-16-6 ever since and are amid a 12-game win streak.

Then Bruins management decided to blow up the roster at the trade deadline last month; they have gone 3-10-1. General manager Don Sweeney shipped off core pieces such as captain Brad Marchand, Trent Frederic, Charlie Coyle and Brandon Carlo.

Remaining tenured Bruins players, such as Elias Lindholm, have been left to pick up the pieces.

“This is our job. We’re getting paid a lot of money to do this,” Lindholm said after a 4-1 loss to the Canadiens on Thursday. “There’s people out there who are struggling and we get paid millions to play hockey, it shouldn’t be hard to find some sort of motivation.”

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