Bruins notebook: Jeremy Swayman puts in strong camp

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Bruce Cassidy is far more generous with his goalie information than some of his NHL coaching brethren, but the Bruins’ bench boss does operate on his own schedule. As such, he has yet to announce his starting goalie for Saturday night’s season opener against Dallas. We’ll have to wait for Thursday or Friday for that bit of info.

But based off the performances of the two netminders in their preseason games, it would be a fairly big surprise if rookie Jeremy Swayman was not between the pipes at the Garden on Saturday.

While much of the rookie goalie buzz has been gobbled up by former Boston College star Spencer Knight in Florida, Swayman is laying in the weeds as a legitimate Calder Trophy candidate. His preseason did nothing to dull the optimism he produced when he came up from Providence after just nine AHL games, posting a 7-3 record and .945 save percentage and 1.50 GAA.

Speaking on Tuesday after the team’s workout at Warrior Ice Arena, Swayman sounded ready to go.

“It was good to have a sort of normal start to the season this year,” said Swayman, who did not have the benefit of a real training camp last year. “It was great to have a ramp-up with camp, a lot of new guys, new faces and I think getting in some game action in early on was good, get the pace back, make sure I’m tracking pucks, communicating with my defense.”

The training camp experience was invaluable to him.

“I think it adds to the experience bank. It’s a huge thing,” said Swayman. “You hear all the veteran guys go through it and they’ve had so much experience with camps, just competing for jobs and seeing the process. I’m really excited about being a part of that process this year and know that it’s not guaranteed, you have to earn it every day. It’s something I know that I’ll keep as a positive and make sure that I’m running with it.”

Cassidy said that the breakdown of starts between Swayman and Linus Ullmark will be determined by competition. But he does expect that the first month will be close to a 50-50 split, though not necessarily as a strict every-other-game rotation.

“Getting work will be the biggest challenge (for both goaltenders),” said Cassidy. “We had six exhibitions games, we have 10 days off, then (we don’t play again) till Wednesday. There’s not a lot of games early on with intensity, so it’s getting them work and keeping them sharp will be the challenge. Then digging inside of that, for Ullmark, it’s getting him accustomed to handling pucks. When you’re not playing as much, you’re not hearing the communication on the ice, the little subtle details around your one, puck play, etc. It’s hard to replicate that in practice.”

While Swayman may be ahead of Ullmark at this point, there’s little doubt that Cassidy and his goalie staff will do everything they can to get Ullmark up to speed. The four-year, $20 million contract is a testament to the B’s belief in him. He’ll get every chance to succeed.

Swayman is not afraid of a little competition, and believes the tandem, however it plays out, will work.

“We are teammates, and that’s the best part about it all. We want what’s best for the team,” said Swayman. “Everyone that wears the Spoked B knows the same thing. It’s a high competitive locker room. We understand that when we compete against each other, it’s only going to make the team better. So I think that’s our mindset. Linus and I are great friends. He’s a great person. I love to compete with him every day and whatever we can do to help the team win, that’s what we’re going to do.

Wagner and Studnicka expected in Providence

Jack Studnicka and Chris Wagner are expected to report to Providence on Wednesday. They are two players in much different situations.

The 22-year-old Studnicka is believed to have top-nine, perhaps top-six skills as a centerman. In training camp, he did little to dispel that notion. With added muscle, he still moved well enough and was able to handle the in-traffic bumping better. But with Patrice Bergeron, Charlie Coyle and Erik Haula ahead of him, and Tomas Nosek a better fit as a fourth line center (at least conceptually), and the current determination that Studnicka is better at center than wing, there was no room for him in Boston.

“Right now I anticipate he’ll start down there, hopefully he’ll play well in the middle of the ice. And when it’s his turn, he comes up and never looks back,” said Cassidy.

For the 30-year-old Wagner, who cleared waivers, heading back to minors is a bit tougher. He spent the better part of three seasons in the AHL before earning a spot with Anaheim and surely Providence is not where he hoped to be in the second year of a three-year extension.

“Listen, he’s disappointed. He wants to be here, wants to help us win. He feels he can,” said Cassidy. “We just had tough decisions to make. It’s not like we just said ‘Well, he can’t play.’ We just decided on that line to go in a different direction. Then you run out of spots. So if I know Chris, he’ll go down and play hard. He’s a good character guy. There are two ways to look at it. Sometimes you go down there and you get an opportunity to build your game in a different environment, play a little more in different situations and it can help you. He wouldn’t be the first guy to have to do that and work his way back. It’s not the plan, when you’ve been in the league and already done it as a younger guy. That’s the part where I feel for him. He did pay his dues. But at the end of the day, we just did what we felt was right for our roster and we hope he’ll get his game to where it needs to be so when he comes back, he’s another guy who’ll be able to preserve a spot.

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