Bruins

Bruins Eliminated 2026: Pastrnak Says It’s Getting Harder

The Bruins were eliminated from the 2026 playoffs — gone. Out in six. At home. Three times. To a Buffalo Sabres team that hadn’t made the playoffs since 2011 and hadn’t won a playoff series since 2007. A franchise that went 14 years without postseason hockey just walked into TD Garden and ended Boston’s season. That’s what happened. That’s the sentence you have to live with.

Going 0-3 at Home Isn’t a Fluke — It’s a Ceiling

Boston lost Games 1, 2, and 6 at TD Garden. They stole Games 3 and 5 in Buffalo — on the road, in enemy territory — and still couldn’t close it. The crowd at home wasn’t a factor. The building that’s supposed to be an advantage was a liability. You can write off one bad home loss. Two is concerning. Three is a character flaw.

The 2022-23 Bruins went 65-12-5 — the best regular season in NHL history — and got bounced in the first round by Florida. Different roster, different coach, same result. This isn’t one bad year. This is a pattern the franchise keeps running into: loaded regular seasons, soft postseason exits. And now a first-year head coach in Marco Sturm, who told reporters he was proud of the team and reminded them what they accomplished — 100 points, a return to the playoffs after missing entirely in 2024-25 — but also said “we got a little taste, so that means we got to go.” That’s not a celebration. That’s a warning wrapped in diplomacy.

The wild card narrative was real. Nobody expected Boston to be in the mix after last year, and 45 wins and 100 points is a legitimate bounce-back. But bouncing back into the playoffs only to go 0-3 at home against a team ending a 14-year drought isn’t a story about resilience. It’s a story about a ceiling.

Pastrnak Is Running Out of Time, and the Bruins Know It

David Pastrnak had a hell of a regular season — 100 points, 29 goals, 71 assists. He scored the overtime winner in Game 5 to force a Game 6. He put up 7 points in 6 games. He didn’t disappear. The guy showed up. And he’s still watching another first-round exit while the clock on his career ticks louder every spring.

Pastrnak turns 30 in a few weeks. His only Cup Finals appearance was 2019 — the series they lost to St. Louis in seven. Seven years ago. One shot at the thing, came up short, and the franchise has been circling the drain in round one ever since. After the Game 6 elimination, he didn’t soften it. He said what everyone in Boston was thinking: “Of course it’s disappointing. I’m turning 30 in a couple of weeks. Had one sniff at the Cup so far. It gets harder every single year. You don’t want to waste any opportunity.”

That’s not a quote from a guy who thinks the window is still wide open. That’s a guy who’s done the math. He also said “the season is a blink of an eye” and that when he was young, each season felt like forever. Now they don’t. That shift — from seasons feeling long to feeling gone — is the sound of a prime starting to hum at a higher pitch.

Jeremy Swayman was Boston’s best player in this series. Their Vezina Trophy finalist kept them alive long enough for Pastrnak to win one in overtime. The goaltending isn’t the problem. Charlie McAvoy gave himself a two-hander on Zach Benson in a Game 6 blowout and is now staring down an in-person NHL DPS hearing with a long suspension expected. That’s the kind of thing that happens when games get away from you, when frustration replaces execution.

The Bruins aren’t a bad team. That’s almost the worst part. They’re good enough to make it, not good enough to do anything with it. Pastrnak knows it. Sturm is figuring it out. And somewhere in Buffalo, a city that waited 14 years to feel this, is still celebrating. Rough look for the home team.





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