The GREATEST COLLAPSE In NHL History
What if the NHL is filled with moments that could have altered everything we know and love about the sport? What if Wayne Gretzky was never traded to LA? What if Mario Lemieux stayed healthy? What if Conor McDavid had won game seven and completed that insane comeback? These are moments in time that have helped define legacies and changed the course of history for many franchises. But there is one moment that stands out as the biggest what-if. One team that was defined to break the history books and staple themselves as the greatest team of all time. One moment that to this day is still impacting the league as we know it. The 2022 2023 Boston Bruins. Memorable moments can be easy to come by in hockey, but the legendary ones, those that stand the test of time, those are the runs that we as fans crave more than anything. These are the moments where legends are born and banners are hung high in the rafters. And no place has more passion or championship culture than Boston. The year was 2022. The Boston Bruins, one of the NHL’s storied franchises, crafted a regular season narrative for the ages, shattering records, claiming the President’s Trophy, and laying the groundwork for what could have been the greatest hockey team of all time. Yet, in a stunning paradox, the team lost its composure, ending their otherwise historic run in the most unexpected way. But how exactly did something like this happen? October 2022, the Boston Bruins are set to embark on a new season campaign. This time featuring not only new faces, but some familiar ones that return to the lineup. After losing to the Carolina Hurricanes during their previous playoff run, the Bruins decided to make some muchneeded changes. The first firing Bruce Cassidy, their hard-nosed old school coach, and replacing him with a newaged player friendly coach in Jim Montgomery. The second address the needs of the roster, particularly the center position. They did this by bringing back familiar faces like Patrice Bersron and David Crerachche. Third, health. Find a way to stay afloat while Brad Marshian and Charlie Makavoy recover from their injuries. The expectations were at a minimum for the Bruins. Like I mentioned, they had some veterans coming back to the lineup, but they were not spring chickens anymore, and they also were dealing with some injuries that most people thought would really impact their lineup. But through October, the Boston Bruins completely shocked everyone. In their first four games, the Bruins would score 21 goals, earning a record of three and one. They would then finish out October by only allowing six goals in five games and achieving a record of 8- one throughout the first month. This was a phenomenal start for the Boston Bruins. Their veterans were producing at a high level. Their depth was starting to contribute and their star players like David Poshock were stepping up and showing out. But what really made the Bruins special to start the year was their outstanding goalending tandem. Lenus Almark, a free agent pickup the year prior, had fully taken on the responsibility as Boston’s number one net minder following the retirement of longtime goalie to Garasque. And his backup at the time, Jeremy Swayman, was nothing short of exceptional. Carrying their stellar play into November, Boston’s net minders backs stopped the Bruins to an astonishing 193 and0 record, only losing two games by a close margin during a very busy month. Boston was not only running the Atlantic division. They were the hottest team in all of hockey. And it was at this point when they started to get back some of their players from injury, making this already perfect lineup look practically unbeatable. This is where the question of sustainability came up quite frequently in Boston. The Bruins run, while spectacular, just seemed unrealistic, and most, if not all of the hockey world, expected a regression to happen at some point. Spoiler alert, it didn’t happen. Through December, the Bruins only lost one game in regulation and had a league best record of 284-4 as they prepared for their winter classic matchup against the Pittsburgh Penguins. After putting on a defensive show in their outdoor game, Boston would have their worst month of the season, going 103 and 1. Again, this was their worst month. At this point, let me save you some time. The Bruins were now on a path to win the most regular season hockey games in league history, a record held by the Red Wings and the Lightning with 62. From February to the end of the season, the Bruins went 265 and zero, finishing with an NHL best record of 6512 and five. This allowed them to surpass the Red Wings and the Lightning and become the best regular season hockey team that the league has ever witnessed. An unexpected historic run for the Boston Bruins made them the odds favorite to win the Stanley Cup. But we can’t glance over a couple of things that happened throughout the final couple of months. For starters, they had a very aggressive trade deadline, acquiring Tyler Bertusi, Garnett Hathaway, and Dmitri Orlov to truly round out their roster into a powerhouse. But something else that happened in game 82 of the season was an injury to their captain, Patrice Bersron. Something that is quite underdised when we talk about the Bruins run that year. But at this point, I have to pause you again because there’s something else that’s kind of underdised when we talk about the stories behind the 2023 playoffs. During that time, the Eastern Conference was an arms race towards the end of the season, featuring four teams, the Pittsburgh Penguins, the Florida Panthers, the New York Islanders, and believe it or not, the Buffalo Sabres. Buffalo went on a 72-1 run, but unfortunately in the final couple of games, they fell short, finishing the season with 91 points. Meanwhile, the New York Islanders had locked down one of the top wildcard spots, leaving two teams to finish out, the Pittsburgh Penguins and the Florida Panthers. The Panthers finished the season with 91 points, but since they had the tiebreakers over the Penguins and the Sabres, they would be granted the playoff spot if all teams finished tied in the standings. But hold on, the Penguins had one final game to play, and it was against a bottom three team, the Chicago Blackhawks. The Penguins were the team that should have made the playoffs that year. They had a prime opportunity to get Sydney Crosby into the postseason and were competing against one of the bottom teams in the NHL. But unfortunately, hockey doesn’t really work that way and sometimes the most unpredictable outcome is the one that ends up being in reality. The Penguins would ultimately lose to the Chicago Blackhawks and the Florida Panthers would get their shot at the playoffs going up against the powerhouse Boston Bruins in a matchup that looked like it was over before it started. Game one, Panthers at Bruins. Lenus Almark would start for Boston while Alex Lion would get to stand between the pipes for the Florida Panthers. Boston controlled the game offensively in this one with Brad Marshand opening up the scoring for his 50th playoff goal. Posternok and De Brusk added goals and Lena’s Almark made 31 saves for Boston. Meanwhile, the Florida Panthers got one goal from Matthew Kachchuck and 26 stops from Alex Lion. The first victory would go to the Boston Bruins as we headed into game two remaining at TD Garden. Game two was an entirely different story. Boston, who was known for tandeming their goalies, decided to stick with Lenus Almark, who reportedly was playing through a hip injury to start the series. But because he played so well in game one, the Bruins didn’t think that this was going to be a factor. The game would stay locked up through the first two periods. But Florida exploded in period 3 to beat Boston 6 to3 on the road and tie the series 1-1. Game three and Taylor Hall would be the hero for the Bruins having a goal and an assist on the night. Lenus Almark would put up a bounceback performance and Boston would reclaim home ice against the Panthers. Game four, also a similar story. Taylor Hall put on a show, two goals and two assists to help the Bruins take a commanding 3-1 series lead heading back to Boston with a chance to close this one out in a gentleman’s sweep. The series was going exactly as everyone predicted. Boston was the more dominant team, but something people didn’t account for was the resiliency of the Florida Panthers. Game five, Panthers look to starve off elimination on the road and get this series back to Florida. Sergey Babroski was outstanding, making 44 saves, including a miraculous stop on Brad Marshian with just the second to spare in regulation. A moment that many Boston fans look back on as the biggest what-if moment of the series. A Bruins turnover in overtime by Lenus Allar behind the net led to Matthew Kachchuck’s backhander at 605, sealing the win for Florida and keeping their improbable comeback alive. This was the game that changed everything for Boston. Game six, the biggest storyline, who is starting in net for Boston. The Bruins continued to stay firm with Lenus Allark as their starter, going against their philosophy from the season, which was tandeming their net minders. Florida surged to a 3-2 lead thanks to goals from Montour, Kachchuck, and Bararkov before Boston countered and even took a 4-3 edge courtesy of David Poshock’s power play goal. But then chaos erupted in a frenetic third period. Zack Delph tied it. Jake De Brush struck short-handed and Kachchuck scored his second to knock the game at 55, barely 27 seconds apart. Moments later, E2 Lucin would rip home the game winner. Sergey Babrosky’s 30 saves and Sam Reinhardt’s empty net would close this one out, forcing a highly improbable game seven against the President’s Trophy winner. Game seven, both teams playing with guys between the pipes that were not in net to start the series. Boston with Swayman, Florida with Babski. At the Garden, you could cut through the air with a knife. The fans were nervous after coming off a very heartbreaking loss back in 2019 to the St. Louis Blues. And this was the first time they felt like they had a competitive team that could go back to that position. The Panthers and Bruins would go back and forth goal for goal, but eventually the Bruins had gotten a 3-2 lead early in the third. But Florida, they kept fighting. With under a minute to go in regulation, Brandon Montour would score his second of the night. A clutch hammer from the left circle to tie the game 3-3. We had a game seven going to overtime. Both teams would exchange chances. But then just 8:35 into overtime, the Florida Panthers would maintain possession and Carter Higgy would unleash a wrist shot that would beat Jeremy Swayman and seal a memorable series comeback for the Panthers while delivering what was a crushing blow to a historic Boston Bruins team. Boston was stunned, their fan base in shock after witnessing their historic hockey team collapse in the first round of the playoffs. Never have I seen a moment where players seem so baffled by the outcome of a series. But then again, reality can be challenging to face. The Bruins stepped off the ice that night in the most emotional way possible, and there were many questions surrounding their roster for years to come. The organization was up against the cap. Their core players, while not officially announced at the time, were speculating the thought of retirement, and the Bruins, after this historic run, were no more. In hindsight, this series changed everything about the league. For Florida, they may have lost the cup that year, but they came back and have now cemented themselves as a potential dynasty and powerhouse team, winning back-to-back championships. For Boston, the fall-off wasn’t immediate, but eventually inner turmoil and roster complications destroyed the team from the inside out. That team that had shattered records, captivated fans, and woke the city had officially evaporated. and along with it a longtime culture, legendary players, and memories that could have been created. But this is one of the biggest what-if moments in NHL history. Let me know your thoughts on this story. Do you remember the 2022 23 Boston Bruins? And do you think that this series changed the entire league as we know it? Thank you guys so much for watching this video. If you enjoyed, be sure to give it a thumbs up and subscribe. I will see you guys in the next episode.
Today let’s delve into arguably the biggest collapse in NHL History. The 2022/23 Boston Bruins shocked the hockey world, becoming the greatest regular season team of all time… key word regular season. The Bruins dominated their competition and were the favorites to win the Stanley Cup, however their first round opponent, the Florida Panthers altered the destiny of what could have been the greatest team in league history. Today let’s breakdown and analyze the Boston Bruins historic run and discuss how this one playoff run changed the league as we know it. Subscribe to Jimmy Hockey for more NHL News and Breakdowns.
TikTok:
@jimmyhockeyy
Instagram:
https://www.instagram.com/jimmyhockeyy/
#nhl #hockey #stanleycupplayoffs #icehockey #hockeyhighlights #montrealcanadiens #hockeyvideos #goldenknights #edmontonoilers #nhlplayoffs #nhlhockey #connorbedard #chicagoblackhawks #vancouvercanucks #nhltradedeadline #mikkorantanen #bradmarchand #bostonbruins #edmontonoilers #connormcdavid #bostonbruins
43 Comments
Content is great bro, keep it up!
First to say first
Brother what the hell is that thumbnail holy shit
This collapse should make Bruin fans feel more sympathetic to Leaf fans, who have seen their fair share of monumental playoff collapses ! But then again, as a Blackhawk fan, I think the 2013 Game 7 “ 17 SECONDS “ incident probably comes as close to 2022-23 as you can get.
God im sick of boston stuff
the biggest current what if has to be “what if Pittsburgh beat Chicago in game 82”
A President's Trophy team losing is no big surprise. I was more surprised by the fact that Florida was for real. Zito had built a sleeper team under the radar (aside from the 'big trade') and no one in the league really seemed to be paying serious attention to them. They have everyone's attention now. For me, that softens Boston's loss. This video also adds to the irony of Marchand's 'defection' to the sunshine state.
Bro did pasta dirty in the thumbnail
Why did you upload this video a few days ago and remove it within almost 10-15 minutes of uploading it?
bro that thumbnail should be a crime
Why does Pastarnak look like a 78 year old homeless man in the thumbnail
What if Toronto didn’t lose to a Zamboni driver who worked for them?
Florida’s victory here is what made them, in their minds and the minds of everyone, they were going to be the superstar team we have today versus the absolute trash they’d been since their last big run in 96.
What if Toronto didn’t lose to a Zamboni driver who worked for them?
Florida’s victory here is what made them, in their minds and the minds of everyone, the superstar team we have today versus the absolute trash they’d been since their last big run in 96.
I really hoped they won that year (since I don’t much care for Vegas and have liked Florida since 96, but they got their 2 cup wins… so far lol)
And the FLA Panthers dynasty is born! Thank you CHI Blackhawks! GO CATS!!
Greatest? Not sure. Because in hindsight it's clear that Panthers team wasn't as bad as their 8th seed indicated. Remember they had been presidents trophy winners themselves just a year prior.
Reading the title and not seeing the leafs in the thumbnail broke my brain.
People forget that the Panthers won the Pres trophy in 22. Zito is inevitable, and no one took the Panthers seriously. Thought it was a cute story and fluke. Panthers were the team of destiny but only their fans believed it. Noone is laughing now. It's criminal Z still hasnt won GM of the year yet.
Ok we need to clear up the whole " Florida only got in because Pittsburgh lost" narrative once and for all. People only look at the final points standings. IF Pittsburgh had won that game, Florida still had another game and so did Pittsburgh against Columbus. Yes the loss to Chicago eliminated the Pens but even if they had won, they still would have needed to beat Columbus and Florida would have needed to lose to Canes for Pittsburgh to get in. Florida did lose to the Canes but by then the game didn't matter. People look at the points standings and say Florida only got in because Pittsburgh lost but that is not the case, Pittsburgh wining that game would not have eliminated Florida. Love the content, I know it's not your narrative.
The Bruins were so stunned by this that they went from the best team in league history to a lottery team in 2 seasons. That series decimated the franchise.
Can’t wait to have pasta go to Vegas
I'd be curious to ask a Boston sports fan.
Is this or the Patriots attempt at an undefeated season more disappointing?
Sens fan here. We love Ully here in net in Ottawa.
No game in any sport over my 20+ years of watching sports left me sitting on my couch in complete silence for legit 30 minutes. That OT winner stunned me into silence, I didn’t know how to react.
2010 was frustrating
2013 blew my mind
2019 broke my heart
2023 I truly couldn’t believe
The Panthers have destroyed many teams. Boston, Toronto, Tampa, Carolina, NY Rangers, and the Oilers. All now have to restructure.
Somebody should do a compilation of shady ref calls for gambling.
Jimmy can you please do a Walter jr from breaking bad impression
holy shit you look like walt jr lol
2019 was worse as a Bruins fan. We had seen Bruins' President Trophy teams choke before….many times. The 2019 literally fought back in Game 6 in St. Louis to force a Game 7 back in Boston. Then they proceeded to piss it all away on home ice, in the first period.
There is a lot of subtext missing to this story, like how Montogmery refused to play Swayman even though Ullmark was hurt, and the fallout of this series being the total and utter collapse of the Bruins as an organization
Absolutely the best team ever to get eliminated in the first round was a viscous gut punch!!! Ever since Neely & Sweeney have screwed up this team so bad , I’m surprised they still have jobs here
I wasn't paying attention until the Eastern Conference finals that year, thought you were gonna mention the year the B's went up 3-0 and lost 4 in a row (Flyers ? Or was that the other way)….but then they came back to win it all the next year i think.
Someone told me it doesn't matter which team leads the NHL in wins/points and wins the President's Trophy. I've learned from watching the Vancouver Canucks win it all in 2011. That is, win everything but the Stanley Cup. The team burned itself out, moved away from their game plan that made they successful against The Boston Bruins in Games 1 and 2 in the Finals and were the walking wounded in the 7th game which was won by The Bruins. It was like there's some curse on the Vancouver hockey team to win that damn Cup. Over 50 years and counting. The Vancouver squad choked in the Finals.
As for the Bruins, someone in the NHL jinxed their playoffs after an incredible hockey season with over 60 wins.
Looking back on it, it was still the Florida Panthers that won the presidents trophy with 122 points the year prior, but finished so much lower in the standings due to injury. So while most people looked at it as David vs Goliath, it was actually a first round Stanley Cup Final.
what if the leafs scored that game 3 ot winner
I always held the belief that that 2023 Panthers team was a 110 point team masquerading as a 92 point team that season. They were without Bennett, Barkov and Duclair for a significant portion of the season and struggled massively missing their 1 and 2Cs as well as half their top 6. When they got healthy after the all star break, they went on an absolute tear. They were playing at like a 115 point pace following the ASG. They came into that series scorching hot and it showed once they got past Boston and went on a run.
The only thing holding that team back was scoring depth and blue line depth, which they rectified in 2024. 2025 was essentially a fusion of the 2022 Panthers that broke all of the scoring records and the 2024 panthers that blanked teams defensively. And now that same team is pretty much locked down until 2030.
I hope someday we’ll get a 30 for 30 on the 22-23 season.
As a Bruins fan 2019 choke was worse than 2023. Game 7 bruins had no fight after down 2 0 after Marchand inadvertently made a line change. The TD Garden which the Jacobs family owns has been a jinx to the Bruins in game 7s (Scott Walker in 09, the reverse sweep, Joel Ward in 2012, Habs winning the series in 14 after the Leafs comeback, 2019 and 2023) 13 hawks scoring 2 goals in 15 seconds was a game 6
Another great vid by the man himself!
When Boston loses, everybody wins
Great video! Subscribed!
I've been a diehard Bruins fan since 1994 when I was just 8 years old. That game 7 loss was the most devastating existential moment in my adult life aside from the loss of my mother and other personal things of course. We knew Bergeron and Krejci were never coming back, and it was the saddest thing ever. I remember the hateful comments all over the place of people laughing at us Bruins fans, and we were all honestly numb to it. People thought they were going to get under our skin by saying rude hurtful shit, but we literally just didn't care what people were saying. Nobody could possibly hurt us more than our own team had just hurt us. I'll never experience anything like this again in sports. Watching the Bergeron era while growing up in my prime years of life was something that will never happen again as I grow older and watch a new generation of Bruins players. If we win the cup again, it will simply be bittersweet, and it will only serve to remind me of this epic season and the equally epic collapse.
I clicked on this video just because of the horrible thumbnail
What if the Bruins actually stuck up for their Conn Smythe & Vezina trophy winning goalie Tim Thomas in 2011? The media viciously went after him just for not going to the White House to see Obama? What if the Bruins never hired Don Sweeney as GM to finish destroying this fantastic franchise?