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Boston Bruins eye physical winger to replace Trent Frederic
Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

After trading Trent Frederic to the Oilers, the Bruins may be eyeing a tougher, more productive winger, and Marchment fits the mold.

When the Boston Bruins moved Trent Frederic to the Edmonton Oilers in a three-team deadline deal that included the New Jersey Devils, it signaled a clear direction: reset, retool, and make space for future moves.

Frederic was on an expiring deal, the Bruins were slipping from playoff contention, and both sides seemed headed for a separation.

Still, that trade left a noticeable hole in Boston’s forward group—one they’ll need to fill before opening night this fall.

Dallas exploring trade options for Marchment as Bruins weigh replacements

One name gaining traction? Mason Marchment of the Dallas Stars.

As reported by The Fourth Period’s David Pagnotta, the Stars are actively shopping the big winger as they look to free up salary cap room. It’s part of a broader effort to re-sign their core free agents, and Marchment, despite his value, appears to be the odd man out.

For Boston, this could be the perfect opening. They’re short on forward depth and light on physicality after Frederic’s departure. Marchment doesn’t just replace those qualities, he may improve on them.

Productive, gritty, and affordable—Marchment checks every box

Marchment isn’t just another bottom-six body. At 6-foot-5, he plays with an edge and has the scoring touch to go with it.

In 62 games this past season, he scored 22 goals, added 47 points, delivered 79 hits, and posted a plus-15 rating. That followed a 53-point campaign the year prior.

He’s proven capable of holding down a top-six role and contributing to the power play, two areas the Bruins will need to shore up this summer.

Even better? He comes at a manageable cost. Marchment is signed for one more season at a $4.5 million cap hit, a fair price for a player who brings this level of balance and consistency.

Why this move makes sense for Don Sweeney and Boston

With Don Sweeney steering the ship, Boston’s front office has typically sought players who blend bite with skill. Marchment fits that blueprint exactly.

He’s experienced, playoff-tested, and can swing momentum in a game with either a big hit or a timely goal.

Frederic had flashes of that impact, especially during the 2023-24 season, but Marchment brings it with more regularity.

His presence could stabilize Boston’s middle six and bring much-needed physicality back into the lineup.

Smart spending, smarter hockey

In today’s NHL, it’s not just about adding talent, it’s about maximizing value.

Marchment’s combination of production, toughness, and cap-friendly contract makes him a standout trade target. If Dallas is indeed open to moving him, the Bruins should be among the first teams to pick up the phone.

The Bruins need help. They need edge. They need scoring. Marchment gives them all three.

This article first appeared on Bruins after dark and was syndicated with permission.

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