Last season, the Boston Bruins missed the playoffs for the first time since 2015-2016. They also traded away long-time star Brad Marchand to Florida and watched him win a Stanley Cup title with the Panthers.
That was rough.
This season, however, the Bruins (43-24-8, 94 points) are currently the top wild-card team in the Eastern Conference, and they are closing in on a return to the playoffs.
On Thursday night, the Bruins will visit — ironically — the Panthers in Sunrise, Fla. and it’s amazing how the proverbial tables have turned.
The Panthers, the two-time reigning Stanley Cup champions, are 36-35-3 (75 points), which puts them in next-to-last place in the East. In fact, they are on the verge of being officially eliminated from playoff contention, possibly this week.
Marchand, meanwhile, hasn’t played since March 6 due to a lower-body injury, and his Panthers have lost six of their past nine games.
Even so, the Panthers won’t go down without a fight, and they proved that on Tuesday with a 6-3 home win over Ottawa. The Panthers led that game 5-0 after the first period.
“We got a couple of goals, and, all of a sudden, we had juice and energy,” Panthers coach Paul Maurice said. “We haven’t had a lot of fun nights in the past month so this ignited our bench. We’re playing for that good feeling.”
But the problem for the Panthers all season has been injuries, and that issue came up again on Tuesday as defensemen Aaron Ekblad and Dmitry Kulikov went down. Ekblad took a puck to the hand, and Kulikov was hit by a puck in the face.
Counting those two, there are now a dozen players on Florida’s injured list as compared to just one for Boston.
Maurice, with gallows humor, joked that there was “a line at the X-ray machine” in order to check for broken bones.
Ironically, Ekblad on Thursday would’ve broken Aleksander Barkov’s record for most games played in a Panthers uniform with 805. But Maurice admitted on Tuesday when asked about Ekblad’s injury, “I don’t think it looks great.”
As for the Bruins, they won their fourth straight game on Tuesday, defeating visiting Dallas 6-3.
Boston’s Viktor Arvidsson recorded his fifth NHL hat trick and his first since March 4, 2022.
“It was three easy ones,” Arvidsson said. “One was two inches from the goal, and the other two were empty-netters.”
David Pastrnak leads Boston in assists (66) and points (95). His previous career high for assists was 63, and he is closing in on what would be his fourth straight 100-point season.
Morgan Geekie leads Boston with 34 goals and ranks second in points (63). And Pavel Zacha ranks third on the Bruins with a career-high 60 points.
“We put a lot of emphasis on being hard on each other and pushing each other,” said Arvidsson, who is fifth on the Bruins with 50 points. “We’re happy where we are, but we have a job to finish to get ready for the playoffs.”
One issue for Boston is its 15-14-7 road record. The Panthers are 20-15-3 at home.
The trip to Sunrise marks the start of a four-game Bruins road trip.
“We have to get the job done,” Arvidsson said. “We have to improve our game on the road.”


