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    Wednesday, May 08, 2024

    Caps sign longtime Bruins captain Zdeno Chara to one-year deal

    Bruins defenseman Zdeno Chara acknowledges applause from the crowd for his 1,500th career NHL game against the Canadiens in 2019 in Montreal. Boston's 14-year captain signed a one-year deal on Wednesday to join the Washington Capitals this season. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press via AP)

    An era has ended in Boston Bruins' hockey.

    Zdeno Chara, the club's 14-year captain who helped break a 39-year-old Stanley Cup drought, is leaving the Bruins. He has signed a one-year deal with the Washington Capitals — the B's newest East Division rival — for $795,000.

    But this was never about the money. While there was not a trace bitterness in Chara's Instagram goodbye to the city, Chara made it clear it was not entirely his decision to leave.

    "My family and I have been so fortunate to call the great city of Boston our home for over 14 years," wrote Chara. "Recently, the Boston Bruins have informed that they plan to move forward with their many younger and talented layers and I respect their decision. Unfortunately, my time as the proud Captain of the Bruins has come to an end."

    The writing had been on the wall for a while now. As dedicated an athlete to perform in this city, Chara had not been among the skaters at Warrior Ice Arena in recent weeks. And when asked last week about what role the team had in mind for Chara, team president Cam Neely was tellingly noncommital.

    "We do want to take a look at some of these young left shot D's that we have in our system to see if they can step up or is it the time for them to step up and see where they're at in their development," said Neely. "We certainly respect Zdeno and everything he's done for the organization and what he's accomplished as a player and what he's done both on and off the ice here in Boston, so you know it's really just a matter of what his desire is and how the coaching staff and we feel what our lineup should look like or could look like depending on the development of some of these young guys."

    Chara had three choices. He could have accepted a reduced role with the Bruins. He could have retired. Or he could have moved on to a different team that will ask more of him. Chara picked Door Three.

    While it was not the ending in Boston that Chara wanted, the divorce was as amicable as you could have hoped.

    "Don Sweeney gets high marks from us. He was extremely communicative and respectful as he could be throughout this process. It's been tough," said Chara's long-timer agent Matt Keator.

    Patrice Bergeron relayed his feelings about Chara to the Herald in a text.

    "For the past 14 years, Zee has been a teammate, friend, mentor and brother," wrote Bergeron, the leading candidate to replace Chara as captain. "We have experienced so much together and it has been an absolute honor to compete alongside him all those years. I will miss him as a teammate, but we are bound together forever. Wish him, Tatiana and the kids all the best in their new adventure."

    Chara's signing with the Bruins back in the summer of 2006 was the catalyst for the club returning to prominence. On the same day, the B's inked Marc Savard and suddenly Boston, eschewed by the top tier free agents for years. After a big misstep in Chara's first year under one-year head coach Dave Lewis, Chara and the B's hit their stride when Claude Julien was hired on 2007. He won the Norris Trophy in 2008-09 and, on a late spring night in June, 2011, the heavily bearded Chara let out a mountain man's yelp as he lifted the Cup over his head in Vancouver, the first time a Bruin had done that since 1972.

    The B's would go to the Finals twice more with Chara, most recently in 2019. Chara produced one of the most spine-tingling moments in the new Garden's history when he suited up for Game 5 against St. Louis with a shattered jaw. The B's fell one game short of a second Cup.

    The game comes to an end for everyone, and Chara's age did show up in the B's second round loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning in the playoff bubble last summer. But it is impossible to say that the B's are a better team today than they were at the end of the season.

    Not only did they lose Torey Krug to free agency, the hole on the left side of the blue line has now become gargantuan with the loss of Chara. While he was no longer a power-play participant, and he found himself on the bench when his team needed a score, Chara was still a force on the penalty kill and when it came to protecting leads.

    If the B's were in a different spot, then moving on from their 43-year-old captain to let some high end draft picks a chance to play would have been a no-brainer. But the B's still have designs on a Stanley Cup, or so we thought. Now they have a left side that could feature Matt Grzelcyk, Jakub Zboril (2015 first rounder) and Jeremy Lauzon (2015 second rounder), with Urho Vaakanainen (2017 first rounder) in the mix. The pedigree is there. The track record is not.

    Now Chara plays for another Cup hopeful, and one the B's will have to play eight times in this 56-game schedule.

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