BOSTON — Both could be into their second week of the offseason by now. Instead, Charlie Coyle and Marcus Johansson are eagerly awaiting their next shift, in their next game.
Coyle, the Weymouth (Mass.) High School and Thayer Academy product, and Johansson started this season with teams that ultimately failed to qualify for the NHL playoffs. Each was traded to the Bruins, and it looks like they’ll be linemates when the B’s open their best-of-7 first-round series [...]
BOSTON — Both could be into their second week of the offseason by now. Instead, Charlie Coyle and Marcus Johansson are eagerly awaiting their next shift, in their next game.
Coyle, the Weymouth (Mass.) High School and Thayer Academy product, and Johansson started this season with teams that ultimately failed to qualify for the NHL playoffs. Each was traded to the Bruins, and it looks like they’ll be linemates when the B’s open their best-of-7 first-round series against the Maple Leafs on Thursday night at TD Garden.
Coyle, who was nearing the end of his seventh season with the Wild, just faced his former team, which had been mathematically eliminated from playoff contention before the Bruins arrived for last Thursday’s game. The B’s, meanwhile, had nailed down second place in the Atlantic Division and first-round home ice against the Leafs two nights earlier.
“It was weird, talking to (former teammates),” said Coyle, who was traded to the Bruins on Feb. 20 for Scituate, Mass., native Ryan Donato. “It was a weird thing just to leave a team halfway through the year. In a way, you wish you could finish off what you started with them, but that’s the business.
“Now my focus is on here, and obviously, I’m happy to be in the playoffs. That’s what you want, why you play, what you work for all season.”
The trade to the Bruins assured Coyle of reaching the postseason for the seventh time in as many seasons. Johansson, meanwhile, avoided missing out when the Devils, one of the first teams to fall from playoff contention this season, traded him to the Bruins for draft picks in 2019 (second round) and 2020 (fourth) on Feb. 25. The eight-year NHL veteran has made it to the postseason for the seventh time, missing only in 2014, with the Capitals.
“It wasn’t going the way we wanted in New Jersey, and that’s the way it goes sometimes,” said Johansson, who helped the Devils make an unexpected appearance in the 2018 playoffs. “I’m really happy to be here, to have this opportunity.”
It took Coyle and Johansson time to find their games, and each other.
Coyle, acquired primarily to fill a season-long hole at No. 3 center, spent many of his 21 games as a Bruin playing right wing because goal-scoring leader David Pastrnak (thumb), and Johansson (lung contusion), were injured.
Johansson, hurt in just his fourth game as No. 2 center David Krejci’s right wing, missed 10 games — long enough for first-year pro Karson Kuhlman to convince the coaching staff that he can play with Krejci and left wing Jake DeBrusk, at least to start the first round.
With Pastrnak back, the third line became Johansson at left wing, Coyle at center, and a succession of right wings. Danton Heinen appears to have the job for the start of Round 1.
While Coyle’s production (two goals, six points) over 21 games has been modest, he picked up four points in his last eight games, and gives the B’s someone they won’t hesitate to use against any of the Leafs’ top three centers — John Tavares, Auston Matthews or Nazem Kadri.
“Charlie … has really kind of solidified that (No. 3) spot,” head coach Bruce Cassidy said. “He gives us another penalty-killer, another faceoff guy. We’re comfortable starting him in our own end. We’re not going to lose if … they throw out Tavares or Matthews or whoever. We’re comfortable with Charlie being able to defend that.”
Coyle and Johansson, both with 20-goal seasons on their resumés, don’t rule out contributing offensively, too.
“Charlie’s such a good hockey player — a two-way centerman, really strong on the puck, and he makes plays,” said Johansson, who picked up two points (goal, assist) over his last three games. “It feels like we get better and better, every game.”
“I feel like I’m more familiar with Marcus than anyone else now,” Coyle said. “I think we’ve gotten some continuity, have been learning each other’s tendencies. It’s nice to figure that stuff out, and just play.”