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'This comes down to morals': Patrice Bergeron, Brad Marchand, and Nick Foligno are not happy.
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TORONTO ā About a week ago, Bruins general manager Don Sweeney approached Patrice Bergeron. Sweeney asked Bergeronās opinion on signing Mitchell Miller, the free-agent USHL defenseman prospect who scored 39 goals and 83 points in 60 games for the Tri-City Storm last season. Miller has been considered toxic by most NHL teams because of his racist comments toward and repeated mistreatment of Isaiah Meyer-Crothers when he was 14.
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The captain told Sweeney the truth.
āI had my concerns,ā Bergeron said. āI shared my opinion. In a way, I was not necessarily agreeing with it. To be honest with you, the culture that weāve built here goes against that type of behavior. Weāre a team thatās built something about character, character people and individuals. What he did, obviously, is unacceptable. We donāt stand by that.
āFor me, I know for myself anyways, in this locker room, weāre all about inclusion, diversity, respect. Those are key words and core values we have. We expect guys to wear this jersey to be high-character people with integrity and respect. Thatās how they should be acting.
āMy understanding is heās going to put in the work in development programs and community programs to better himself. Itās up to him to do that. Thatās it. From my standpoint, itās a hockey operations decision. For myself, we can control what we can control. Truthfully, hopefully thereās some growth and change. If itās the same 14-year-old that would be walking into this locker room, he wouldnāt be accepted and wanted and welcomed in this locker room, to be honest with you. Thatās my stand on it.ā
It didnāt dissuade Sweeney from signing Miller, as the team announced Friday.
On Saturday, Bergeron, alternate captain Brad Marchand and ex-Columbus captain Nick Foligno addressed the situation prior to the Bruinsā game against the Maple Leafs. All three were dissatisfied.
Meanwhile, at the Global Series in Finland, commissioner Gary Bettman told The Athleticās Aaron Portzline that the Bruins did not notify the league of the signing. Miller would not be eligible to play without NHL clearance. Bettman said he would have to see āa whole bunch of thingsā before making Miller eligible.
Hereās what else the Bruinsā leaders had to say about the signing and its impact.
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Bergeron on whether the signing could harm the team culture:
āOur cultureās not going to change. Our culture is what it is. Itās something Iām proud of. Itās something weāve worked hard for. We donāt need to change that. The changes are from the individual himself.ā
Marchand on the signing:
āWe understand the dynamics around it. We have a culture in this organization, in this room. We obviously donāt condone what happened. That will never be part of our team and our organization. If heās with our group, it will be because heās shown that heās learned and matured and heās come a long way. Itās going to be a very long process for him. Thatās on him. At the end of the day, we can only control what we can, and thatās whatās in our room. If that time ever comes, it will be dealt with when it needs to. As of right now, itās a long process for him.ā
Marchand on having to speak on the situation in the midst of a 10-1-0 start:
āWeāre a group. Anything that happens at any point of the year, we all go through it together. Thatās always been how this works. The organizationās had to go through things with me that Iām sure they havenāt wanted to deal with. Itās not all good and itās not all bad. You go with the ebbs and flows. You deal with it as a group. This is another situation.ā
Marchand on why now:
āWith a situation like that, Iām not sure thereās ever good timing. Itās just one of those things where if they feel like itās the time, then itās the time. Itās a long process for this kid to make amends or show heās learned and come a long way. That process has to start at some point. I guess itās now.ā
Marchand on whether it makes it harder on the players:
āIf the kidās going to be part of this room, we have a standard that we hold our teammates to, to be in this room. If we donāt feel like heās there, then he will not be here. Thatās like with anybody. If thereās a guy that comes in and heās not fitting in, heās gone. Weāve shown that year after year. I understand where it all comes from. But again, if he ever makes it here, itāll be because heās shown that he has learned and come the distance heās needed to.
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āThereās a lot that comes with this, a lot of backlash and media attention the teamās going through right now. Heās got a lot of work to do. Itās a second chance heās been gifted. Heās going to have to show that he earns it. Heās got a long, long road ahead of him.ā
Foligno on the signing:
āItās tough. Itās a really hard topic. First and foremost, the organization is not going to do something that would jeopardize that. But in saying that, itās not something anyone in this room stands for. The culture weāve built and these guys have built before I got here is one of inclusion. I think it goes against that. I understand he was 14 when he made this mistake. But itās hard for us to swallow. Because we take a lot of pride in here in the way we act, the way we carry ourselves, what it is to be a Bruin. So that was a tough thing to hear for our group.
āIām not going to lie to you. I donāt think any guy was too happy because of how proud we are to say this is a group that cares a lot about ourselves, how we carry ourselves and how we treat people. So that was, for a lot of guys, especially the ones that have been here, a tough pill to swallow. In the same light, I donāt think the organizationās ever not looking out for the best interests of us. But I think we have a lot of concerns. This kid will have to answer for those and will have to prove to everybody and himself, especially if he wants to get in this room, that heās a changed man. We hope he works toward that.
āBut I think right now, our room is more worried about the group in here and what weāre doing. Itās a special thing weāve got going on here. Weāre not going to let something like that ever come into our room.ā
Foligno on whether the signing puts a burden on Bergeron as captain:
āYes and no. Being a leader never comes without some adversity. Bergyās a guy that can handle it. But I think heās always going to stay true to himself. Whether he likes what they did or not, heās not going to be the company man. This comes down to morals. Bergyās a guy thatās always stood by his morals. I donāt think heās happy, obviously. None of us are, really, with the situation. At the same token, itās the reality that weāre faced with, whether we wanted it or not. Whatās going to happen in here, weāre going to band together. Because thatās what Bergy does. He brings everybody together and makes us understand thatās not going to infect this room. Because this roomās built on the principles that this kid obviously went against.
āItās a tough spot to Bergy in. All of us in this situation. Thatās not to pit us against the organization. I know (president) Cam (Neely) and Sweens are always trying to do whatās best for the organization and wouldnāt, without vetting, probably do this. But still, itās a hard one for us to swallow because thereās still a thing there that this kid obviously did very wrong and hurt somebody. I donāt think any guy in here stands for that.ā