2020–21 Boston Bruins season
Season of ice hockey team / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The 2020–21 Boston Bruins season was the 97th season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on November 1, 1924.[1] The Bruins entered the season as defending Presidents' Trophy and Atlantic Division champions. On December 20, 2020, the league temporarily realigned into four divisions with no conferences due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the ongoing closure of the Canada–United States border. As a result of this realignment, the Bruins played this season in the East Division, only facing opponents from within the new division in a shortened 56-game regular season, and the first two rounds of the playoffs.
2020–21 Boston Bruins | |
---|---|
Division | 3rd East |
2020–21 record | 33–16–7 |
Home record | 18–7–3 |
Road record | 15–9–4 |
Goals for | 168 |
Goals against | 136 |
Team information | |
General manager | Don Sweeney |
Coach | Bruce Cassidy |
Captain | Patrice Bergeron |
Alternate captains | David Krejci Brad Marchand |
Arena | TD Garden |
Minor league affiliate(s) | Providence Bruins (AHL) Atlanta Gladiators (ECHL) |
Team leaders | |
Goals | Brad Marchand (29) |
Assists | Brad Marchand (40) |
Points | Brad Marchand (69) |
Penalty minutes | Trent Frederic (65) |
Plus/minus | Patrice Bergeron (+27) |
Wins | Tuukka Rask (15) |
Goals against average | Jeremy Swayman (1.50) |
On March 25, spectators were allowed back into the TD Garden with a limited capacity of 2,200. This was the first time fans were in attendance at a Bruins home game since March 7th of the previous year.[2] The capacity at the Garden was increased to 25% on May 10.[3] Starting May 29, the venue was able to host fans at full capacity.[4]
On May 3, the Bruins clinched a playoff berth after a 3–0 win against the New Jersey Devils.[5] In the playoffs, they eliminated the Washington Capitals in the first round in five games.[6] The Bruins would lose to the New York Islanders in the second round in six games.[7]