Bruins Quiet Offseason Suggests Team Could Be Targeting $80M Center

   

The Boston Bruins’ eerily quiet offseason has fans noticeably worried about the club’s apparent lack of willingness to compete this upcoming season.

TST Images: Golden Knights score five unanswered to defeat Bruins, 5-1, at  home on Thursday

But beyond the possibility of tanking for Gavin McKenna, the Bruins want to keep plenty of dry powder to pursue the big names in the 2026 NHL free agent class. Most notably, Jack Eichel.

Eichel is entering the final year of his current contract eight-year, $80 million with the Vegas Golden Knights. Thus far, Eichel has not signaled he’s staying or leaving. He’ll simply play out the final year of his current contract and see what happens.

Meanwhile, the Boston Bruins aren’t going all-in this summer. The club will bide its time to pursue Eichel, among other big-name free agents, next summer.

NHL insider Elliotte Friedman, in his latest edition of the 32 Thoughts Podcast, made it clear that the Bruins are looking to avoid committing to any free agents this summer as next summer’s crop looks much more bountiful.

 

In addition to Eichel, Kirill Kaprizov and Artemi Panarin will hit the 2026 free agent market. Either one of Eichel, Kaprizov, and Panarin could transform the Bruins moving forward.

However, it’s Eichel that makes the most sense for the Bruins. The team already has an elite winger in David Pastrnak. Both Panarin and Kaprizov are elite wingers. While stellar additions, they don’t solve the Bruins’ biggest need at the moment: A number-one center.

Yes, Connor McDavid is on track to hit free agency next summer. And he would be just what the doctor ordered. But no one realistically expects McDavid to hit the market.

So, Eichel would be the best-available free-agent center next summer, making him the Bruins’ prime target.