Latest Update: These are the five young players that the Boston Bruins would be trading this season.

5 Young Players the Bruins Shouldn’t Trade This Season.

The Boston Bruins have a knack for flipping prospects and young, NHL-ready players to bolster their ranks in the present as they approach the playoffs.

The B’s are consistently a postseason team, so the formula makes sense: gamble the potential of your youth and draft picks for talent with an immediate impact. Trade the future for the present. It’s for the Stanley Cup, after all, and if you win it, it’s very difficult to criticize that trade, no matter the cost.

The Bruins’ gambles have sometimes paid off, other times not. With no Cups since 2011 to show for it, some of that analysis is dictated by where the prospect winds up a couple of years down the road. Some of it can be attributed to the new player’s impact, even if that’s just contributing something significant in a deep run. Whether or not you can keep the addition around the following season weighs in as well.

As rumors swirl and talks heat up as we march toward the trade deadline, here are five young players the Bruins shouldn’t gamble in a trade this season.

Matt Poitras

I think most Bruins fans would agree Matt Poitras is untouchable (unless some sort of superstar is on the table).

He’s a 19-year-old playing in the NHL (and currently the World Junior Championship), and the second-round pick in the 2022 NHL Entry Draft has impressed. In 27 games, the center has tallied five goals and eight assists on his way to earning a regular starting role in the top nine, averaging over 14 minutes of ice time per game. He’s a 200-foot player, and he seems to have some of the intangibles you’d expect in a player with a few seasons under their belt: confidence, for starters. I guess I’ll take the 44-percent success rate at the dot – get Patrice Bergeron in there as an assistant coach to teach him a thing or two.

At such a young age, his potential is wide, with plenty of uncertainty. At the peak, he’s a center the Bruins can build around in the next generation – after Brad Marchand departs and David Pastrnak and Charlie McAvoy are considered veterans. You could also get more of what you’re getting now: a good third-line centerman worthy of looks on the second line during injury spells (I argue to get him in the top-six regularly, somehow).

Keep the kid.

Trent Frederic

Trent Frederic is within reach of his first 20-goal season and has shown he’s more than just the scrappy, bottom-six reputation he’s carved out for himself: He’s teetering between being a formidable third-line forward and a decent option on an NHL team’s second line. His chemistry with Charlie Coyle is very clear.

With all of that comes a decent trade value, with more reliable results to work with than sheer potential. Frederic is under contract through next season with a $2.3 million cap hit. Trading him at some point isn’t off the table – I could see him going at next year’s deadline, especially if he plays his way into a contract that is too expensive to re-sign. But right now, he’s a huge asset to this team.

Mason Lohrei

Mason Lohrei’s rookie campaign to date has been bumpy at times but nothing short of promising. In his first few appearances as a Bruin, I thought he might need another year or two of development to be a true NHL defenseman. Rookie mistakes are expected, but at some point, you have to decide if it’s best he learns some more from the press box, the minors, or more NHL ice time.

In 19 games, Lohrei has put up three goals and three assists, and he’s been trusted with 17:24 of ice time per game on average. He’s been in and out of the lineup with a slew of injuries on Boston’s blue line and has adequately played the role of a seventh defenseman with some more flair. He will turn 23 in January.

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