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As Round 2 of the Stanley Cup playoffs began across the NHL on Tuesday, players on the league’s best team during the regular season cleaned out their lockers and headed home.

The Boston Bruins had their breakup day at TD Garden, meeting the media for the final time after exit interviews.

As was the case Sunday night, after the Bruins lost to the Florida Panthers in Game 7 of their first-round series, the focus of the room Tuesday was on captain Patrice Bergeron, 37, and his future with the club after 19 seasons.

“The emotions are still hard. The scars will be there for a while,” Bergeron said. “It’s too early right now to even make a sound decision [about next year]. I really want to make sure I make the right call. I don’t know how long it’s going to take.”

Without going into specific details, the veteran addressed his meeting with Boston coach Jim Montgomery.

“After the fact, there’s always a lot of questions,” Bergeron said. “And a lot of questions are unanswered for now. Trying to put your head around everything. But it was a great conversation.”

Bergeron, 37, missed the first four games of the series vs. the Panthers. Initially, the Bruins said he was suffering from an illness that had swept through their locker room. But eventually, his absence was clarified as being due to injury. After Game 7, Bergeron revealed he has been playing with a herniated disk in his back and said he was unsure about offseason treatment for it.

“Overall, I was healthy throughout the year,” Bergeron said. “It was manageable all year. But unfortunately, the back flared up at the wrong time.”

Later Tuesday, Bergeron was named a finalist for the Selke Trophy, given annually to the league’s top defensive forward. It’s the 12th consecutive season Bergeron made the final list, having won it in 2012, 2014, 2015, 2017 and 2022.

As the Bruins raced to the Presidents’ Trophy this season, Bergeron posted 27 goals and 58 points. Anchoring Boston’s top line, he also finished with a plus-35 rating.

But Boston ran into a high-flying Panthers team in Round 1, a talented group that won the Presidents’ Trophy last season. Florida overcame a 3-1 deficit to win the series.

“Every year you don’t win, you’re the loser, but this one was different,” Boston defenseman Charlie McAvoy said. “We had a team that was really special.”

Forward Brad Marchand concurred.

“It’s tough. You sit and dwell at the opportunity lost and how things played out,” he said. “It doesn’t get any easier, and I’m sure it won’t for a while.”

Decisions from Bergeron and second-line center David Krejci, 37, who could both retire, could alter Boston’s entire offseason outlook. The Bruins signed center Pavel Zacha, 26, to a contract extension this season after acquiring him last summer from the New Jersey Devils, but it won’t be easy for him to replace either of those veterans.

Zacha had 21 goals in the regular season but was held without a tally vs. the Panthers.

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NHL Bubble Watch: Pre-trade deadline check on playoff projections

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NHL Bubble Watch: Pre-trade deadline check on playoff projections

After taking a pause for the 4 Nations Face-Off — and continuing Canadian domination in best-on-best tournaments — the NHL regular season is now rocketing toward the Stanley Cup playoffs.

The stakes are high. Time is short. Who’s in and who’s out?

The NHL Bubble Watch is our monthly check-in on the Stanley Cup playoff races using postseason probabilities and points projections from Stathletes for all 32 teams. We also reveal which teams shouldn’t worry about any of this because they’re lottery-bound already.

As a bonus this month, we’re also including which player from the playoff contenders needs to step up the most in the stretch run.

But first, a look at the projected playoff bracket:

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Brewers sign veteran Canha to minor league deal

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Brewers sign veteran Canha to minor league deal

PHOENIX — Veteran outfielder Mark Canha signed a minor league deal with the Milwaukee Brewers that includes an invitation to major league camp.

The move announced Monday continues attempts by the two-time defending NL Central champions to boost their depth after outfielder Blake Perkins fractured his right shin during batting practice, an injury that probably will sideline him for the first month of the season. Milwaukee already had signed Manuel Margot to a minor league deal with an invitation to big league camp.

Canha, 36, previously joined the Brewers at the 2023 trade deadline. He batted .287 with a .373 on-base percentage, five homers, 33 RBIs and four steals in 50 games with Milwaukee that season.

He spent 2024 with the Detroit Tigers and San Francisco Giants. Canha batted .242 with a .344 on-base percentage, seven homers, 42 RBIs and seven steals in 125 games.

Canha is a career .249 batter with a .349 on-base percentage, 120 homers and 459 RBIs in 1,049 games with Oakland (2015-21), the New York Mets (2022-23), Milwaukee, Detroit and San Francisco.

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Giants’ Verlander pitches 2 innings in spring debut

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Giants' Verlander pitches 2 innings in spring debut

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Justin Verlander struck out one and allowed a solo home run while pitching two innings in his spring training debut for the San Francisco Giants on Monday.

Verlander’s first start of the spring came four days after the three-time Cy Young Award winner’s 42nd birthday.

After allowing the two-out homer to Colorado’s Michael Toglia in the first inning, Verlander walked the next batter before retiring the last four he faced. All three Rockies hitters in the second were retired on fly balls.

Verlander’s 262 career wins are the most among active pitchers. The right-hander is preparing for his 20th big league season and his first with San Francisco after an injury-plagued 2024 in Houston. He signed a $15 million, one-year contract with the Giants.

Shoulder inflammation and neck discomfort limited Verlander to 17 starts last season, when he went 5-6 with a 5.48 ERA — a single-season worst that was more than two runs higher than his 3.30 career ERA.

The Associated Press contributed to this story.

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