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Barry Pederson on D&C: ‘As Bruins fans, you’ve got to be ecstatic’ about proposed realignment 02.27.13 at 9:39 am ET
By Annie Maroon

Barry Pederson of NESN joined Dennis & Callahan on Wednesday morning to talk about the Bruins’ strengths so far, Brad Marchand and Tyler Seguin‘s styles of play, and the newly proposed NHL realignment plan.

“I think it makes total sense,” Pederson said of the realignment plan, which would reconfigure the league into four divisions. “As Bruins fans, you’ve got to be ecstatic. You’ve got Detroit coming into this, what’s going to be called the Central Division, you’ve got four Original Six teams, some rivals, Buffalo still in there, and [Andy Brickley] will be happy because you still have Tampa Bay and Florida and he can go down and play some golf now and then. As Bruins fans, it’s a pretty good setup.”

Pederson said he thinks Marchand’s attitude, even more so than his speed or his hands, is his greatest strength, although his speed combined with Seguin’s creates space for their line to work.

“I don’t think he gets enough respect around the league for his offense because of the way he plays,” Pederson said of Marchand. “Marchand is sneaky offensively. Last night, he gets that puck on his backhand, he knows that [Evgeni] Nabokov‘s going to come diving out at him — he just waits and waits and then is able to get the goal. He’s got a great release. His speed really backs the defense off, and he and Seguin, when they’re going, they’re hard to play against.”

Despite speculation that Tim Thomas will never end up playing for the Islanders after being traded there, Pederson said he thinks Thomas is too competitive to walk away from hockey completely if he’s still capable of playing.

“I have no insight, for sure, to what’s going through his mind, but … to me there was a guy that never quit on anything,” Pederson said. “He went after shots that most guys would just say, ‘Oh, it’s an empty net, I’m not going to dive over there.’ So I just have a really hard time thinking he’s going to walk away from the game the way it’s going. I just have to think he’s coming back at some point.”

Following are more highlights from the conversation. To hear the interview, go to the Dennis & Callahan audio on demand page. For more Bruins news, visit the team page at weei.com/bruins.

On the benefits of the Bruins scoring first: “The thing we’ve been talking about is how relaxed these guys look and how confident they look with a 2-1 lead on the road or a 3-1 lead on the road. They have so much confidence. But what that allows them to do is play their game, and the other team to try to play catchup. That means the Bruins can counterattack, exploit the other team’s weaknesses and take advantage of the other team’s breakdowns. The other team has to open up a little bit, and when they do, that allows the Bruins to counterattack.”

On the PK becoming more aggressive: “These last three games were a really good example of that. You’re going into the third period on the road in each of these last few games, and you’ve got a one- or a two-goal lead, but you’re starting the third period shorthanded. So what do the Bruins do? They go out and they kill it off, and they not only gain momentum and confidence … we’ve talked about it before, that one of the things they wanted to do this year on the penalty kill was get much more aggressive, and boy, you can see that. Not only in their zone, but when they have the puck and they’ve got a chance to go, they can isolate somebody and take advantage of it. They’re going. That puts the opposing power play back on its heels a little bit.”

On Tuukka Rask: “I think he’s about the level where I expected. I expect a lot from him, like he does from himself. To me, he’s one of the top goaltenders in the National Hockey League. Whether he can get to that elite level, that’s going to be the next year or two here along his progression. He’s certainly shown signs of being able to control a game. When he’s playing his game he’s like all goaltenders, under control, you’re playing with confidence, you’re out attacking the shooters. When he gets in trouble, like the one goal last night from [Casey] Cizikas, he got himself down where his belly hits the ice and he’s playing small. There’s things he wants to continue to work on, but boy, has he done a great job of keeping his team in the games so far early on.”

On who should win the Seventh Player Award: “I think it has to be Dougie Hamilton so far. Close shot here with [Nathan] Horton with what he’s had to overcome and done but the difficult part for this team … they’re so balanced. One night it’s one individual, the next it’s another line. They play so well defensively so they don’t beat themselves, they’re in every game. The other thing that was very interesting on this road trip was when you read the recaps of the games and you see the other team’s comments, they’re just raving about this team and how tough it is to play against them. They’re in your face, they don’t give you anything, they play physical, they’re intense. And they just like the way the organization is being run, which is a credit to management.”

On improvements the Bruins can make: “Their problem before this trip was the offense wasn’t clicking as well as it is now. They were playing on the periphery. They weren’t going into those dirty areas. One of their weaknesses that’s been a little bit exploited is they just don’t draw enough penalties right now, they’re not getting enough power-play opportunities. That means they’re not making the other team do more, they’re not making them hook and hold and grab and hold them down. They have done a great job with their puck possession, which means the other team is chasing around a little bit more, but I think as they continue to take their game to the next level you’re going to see the things in that dirty area improve.”

Read More: Barry Pederson, Brad Marchand, Tim Thomas, Tuukka Rask Print  |  Email   | Bark It Up!  |  Digg It
  • Titletown1

    Wait, did Pederson say the B’s will be in a “Central Division?” And four of the original six in that division? Seems to me that would be an East or Northeast Division…

  • innovator1

    At some point,Phoenix will move to Seattle,and Columbus will move to Quebec City…Then you will need to Swap Quebec City and Pittsburgh for the two Florida Teams..

  • Pat E Cakes

    no you’re wrong.

  • Glenn Ordway

    Ya that’s weird, but Peterson was right. They are calling it the Central Division for some reason.

  • glenn88

    The improvements the Bruins can make is on that third line.   They are getting no offense at all out of that line.   Not going to keep dwelling on the Chris Bourque experiment (or thank you Ray accomodation), but isn’t it becoming obvious why at 27 no other team thought he could play in the NHL?  Peverly and Kelly didn’t all of a sudden forget how to play.   Hopefully they trade for the 3rd line LW to fix the problem.

    To tell you how bad the Bourque situation is, not even Pederson will mention the 3rd line as an area for improvement, because the topic of Ray’s kid is so sensitive in and around the organization.  

  • Titletown1

    Couldn’t agree more about the Bourque situation. If he has a different last name, he’s selling hockey equipment in Manitoba or running a landscaping business in the greater Montreal area. There are so many more talented kids in the minors right now that it gets to a point that they’re actually embarrassing Ray’s kid.

  • ILoveHockey

    Chris Bourque is pretty powerful if he can single handedly stop an entire line from scoring! i can give you that he could stop them from recreating some of the great numbers that they have had in the past- but neither of them have done much of anything offensively, that is not all to blame on Bourque, just a down offensive start/ year for them- they are still playing good D though

  • glenn88

    I think kelly deserves some criticism for his face off losses as well, because he is having a bad year in this area.  But there are only 3 guys on a line, so if one can’t hold up to the NHL game then, YES the entire line can be ineffective based on 1 player.   Look, this was a good group for 1.5 years with guys like Benoit P. and Ryder at wing.   Isn’t it obvious there is a major problem with your LW on the line?      

  • ILoveHockey

    I think it is one of many contributing factors. Along with the lockout, new linemate with no training camp, all around down year, the fact that they have played better in that 1.5 years here than they have the rest of their careers (maybe the bubble burst).

    I’m just saying I don’t think Chris takes the whole load- and don’t forget they have a d pair out there at all times- lots of lines throughout the NHL score with one lame duck. That is not the lone reason for their complete lack of production

  • innovator

    How am I wrong? Give details(accurate ones) instead of blurting out childish remarks as you hide behind your computer and refuse to use proper punctuation…

  • Anonymous

    Why cant the NHL just move Winnepeg to the NW.  Move Minnesota to the central and Columbus to the southeast?

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