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The 2010–11 Boston Bruins season was the 87th season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on November 1, 1924. [1] The Bruins were the winners of the 2011 Stanley Cup , winning their first championship in 39 years.
This is a list of franchise records for the Boston Bruins of the National Hockey League. Team records ... 2010–2011 2: Linus Ullmark.938: 2022–2023 3: Tim Thomas.933:
April 29, – May 15, 2011: 2011 IIHF World Championship in Slovakia, with games being played in Bratislava and Košice. Finland Sweden Czech Republic June 15: The Boston Bruins defeat the Vancouver Canucks 4–0 in game seven to win the 2011 Stanley Cup Finals .
November 2 – The Chicago Cubs fire manager Mike Quade after just one full season at the helm in which he leads the team to a 71–91 record in 2011. His overall record is 95–104. November 6 – The Baltimore Orioles sign Dan Duquette to a three-year deal to become the general manager. Duquette, 53, is out of baseball since being dismissed ...
The 2011 Stanley Cup champion Bruins meet then-U.S. President Barack Obama.. The Boston Bruins are a professional ice hockey team based in Boston.They are members of the Atlantic Division in the Eastern Conference of the National Hockey League (NHL) [1] and are one of the "Original Six" teams of the league. [2]
The 2011 Stanley Cup Finals was the championship series of the National Hockey League's (NHL) 2010–11 season, and the culmination of the 2011 Stanley Cup playoffs.The Eastern Conference champion Boston Bruins defeated the Western Conference champion Vancouver Canucks in seven games to win the Stanley Cup for the first time since 1972.
The 2011–12 Boston Bruins season was the 88th season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on November 1, 1924. [1] The Bruins entered the 2011–12 season as the defending Stanley Cup champions.
The story repeated itself in 1978—with a balanced attack that saw Boston have 11 players with 20+ goal seasons, still the NHL record—as the Bruins made the Cup Finals once more, but lost in six games to Montreal. After that series, John Bucyk retired, holding virtually every Bruins' career longevity and scoring mark to that time.