Bruins Notebook: Whatever the secret formula is for a close-knit locker room, the Bruins appear to have found it taken at BSJ Headquarters (Bruins)

(Photo by Fred Kfoury III/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

On paper, Bruce Cassidy had an inkling of what to expect going into the 2018-19 season.

With regulars like Patrice Bergeron, Brad Marchand and David Pastrnak all in tow, the Bruins were set to roll out one of the top lines in all of hockey, while David Krejci and Jake DeBrusk had the firepower to give Boston a potent top-six corps.

Add in a promising defense with young skaters like Charlie McAvoy, Brandon Carlo and Matt Grzelcyk all expected to make major strides — and a tantalizing duo in net in Tuukka Rask and Jaroslav Halak — and the Bruins had the pieces in place to orchestrate another Cup run.

But off the ice, Cassidy realistically didn’t know what to expect.

Even with stalwarts such as Bergeron and Zdeno Chara anchoring opposite sides of the locker room, every team varies when it comes to finding chemistry, even when only a few new faces are added to the mix.

The additions in the offseason — Halak, Chris Wagner, John Moore and Steven Kampfer — coupled with deadline pickups of Charlie Coyle and Marcus Johansson, have certainly changed the complexion of the B’s room, while rolling out a roster that opened the year with 10 players under the age of 26 also creates a unique dynamic on a franchise anchored by an established veteran group.

It was a unique concoction of players placed in the same locker room — but one that, for whatever reason, has just seemed to gel for this Bruins team.

This marks the 23rd year of coaching pro hockey for Cassidy, and the B’s bench boss would be the first to acknowledge that there’s really no rhyme or reason when it comes to determining how players are going to mesh away from the ice.  

“If you're in (hockey) long enough, guys are like, you just can't wait for the season to end or somebody to pull the plug, because guys just don't hit it off,” Cassidy said. “It happens, unfortunately. Sometimes, it happens with talented teams, too. That's where the head scratching comes in. What's going on? Why is this team not winning? I'm sure there's a team or two in the National Hockey League this year that's going through it. Fortunately, we're not."

Sure enough — on a Bruins team featuring a top D pairing with a casual 20-year difference in age — the club has managed to compile a crew that has somehow clicked this season.

“Success, for one,” Cassidy said of what leads to a close-knit room. “You need success to appreciate other guys. I think the individual character. I think if they come from winning programs, that helps. They're used to supporting one another. That's what generally happens. You put those three things in there. Bonding of the team, how does that happen? It's a mystery, honestly. I think any team, if you could get all together and all the guys like each other, it's one of the best fortunes, but it doesn't happen all the time.




“The play Grizz made last night (against Florida), he was getting bearhugged by the whole D corps on the bench last night. I don't know if they put the camera on it — it would have been a great shot. As a coach, you just love it. The guys were so excited for the play he made. ... That stuff, it's just organic. That's just the players."







_____________________


Stempniak sent down, Frederic up


After a two-game audition, it looks as though the
Lee Stempniak
experiment has come to an end. Credit to the veteran forward for hanging around the Bruins all season and earning himself a contract, but the 36-year-old winger didn’t show much over a pair of stints up at the NHL — landing zero shots on goal while averaging just 7:49 of ice time, despite starting both contests on Krejci’s line.


Trent Frederic 
David Backes 
Joakim Nordstrom 
Charlie Coyle 
Peter Cehlarik


In other roster news, while Cassidy noted postgame on Sunday that the team might have “dodged a bullet” when it comes to
, the B’s will be without the shifty defenseman for Tuesday’s game against the Blue Jackets.


Boston announced Monday evening that Grzelcyk was sent home to undergo further testing on his arm/elbow after it was buckled into the boards following a check by Pens forward
Patric Hornqvist.
In the meantime,
Steven Kampfer
will make his first start since Dec. 23 in place of Grzelcyk, while options such as Providence’s
Urho Vaakanainen
and
Connor Clifton 
 if Grzelcyk is sidelined for the foreseeable future.

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