![]() “I think I would call it whatever way Don Sweeney is going to call it, and Bruce Cassidy, and Cam Neely,” said Sinden. Sinden would eventually take defenseman Glen Wesley with the third overall pick at the 1987 draft and Neely would go on to be arguably the NHL’s greatest power forwards ever and one of the biggest, baddest Bruins ever. Later in 1985, he committed highway robbery on the Vancouver Canucks when he acquired then 20-year-old Cam Neely and the Canucks’ first round pick at the 1987 NHL Entry Draft. Sinden helped the Bruins survive the wave of free agency and the WHL in the 1970’s keeping the likes of Terry O’Reilly, Wayne Cashman and Stan Jonathan on his roster. Just a great team attitude that’s been passed on from that 1970 team to the 2020 team, I think.” “But as long as we can keep that alive, we’re going to be challenging for (the) Stanley Cup forever. He also served as Bruins Captain in the two. He’s one of 47 players in NHL history to reach 2,000 penalty minutes in his career, holding the Bruins franchise record for most penalty minutes. He won the Seventh Player Award in 1975 and has his jersey retired by the Boston Bruins. “You know we had a couple of players who were really good players – we got in drafts or trades, they were really good goal scorers, but I just never thought of them as Bruins and I couldn’t,” Sinden told the media in a Zoom Call earlier this week. Terry is a two-time NHL All-Star in the years 19. ![]()
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