Rangers Analysis: New and Improved Brian Boyle
Through eight games played this season, Brian Boyle has arguably been one of the best forwards for the New York Rangers. At 6-foot-7, 244 pounds, Brian is not expected to hold a major role on this
The first and most important factor that has been much better in Boyle's game this season is his physicality. In years past, despite having such a big frame, the Massachusetts native never used his body to his advantage, whether it be protecting the puck on offense or making a hit on defense. That was coach John Tortorella's biggest qualm with Boyle, and it is why he sat him on multiple occasions in 2009-10. But not this season.
Boyle has been hitting everything in site when he does not have the puck, and that has quickly earned the respect of the coaching staff and the fan base. This new physical addition to Brian's game began in the preseason and has grown rapidly from there. It is now at the point where you can expect at least one crushing blow from him every game. That is exactly what you want from a guy of his size.
Do not forget about Boyle's offensive contributions, either. After working on his skating over the summer, he has developed a small set of skill when controlling the puck. He uses his strength to protect the puck from opponents and also when going to the net. Although he may not be the fastest player out there, it is not an easy task to knock a 6-foot-7 tree off the puck when he is coming right at you.
Boyle's two goals during the Rangers' home opener a few weeks back were hopefully the beginning of what is to come. If he can score some goals here and there as a fourth line player, you will be surprised how much it will help the
Lastly, Boyle's effort on the penalty kill cannot be overlooked. Besides Chris Drury and Ryan Callahan, he is one of the better penalty killers the Blueshirts have.
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I’m glad Boyle realized his spot on the team was likely in question going into training camp. He definitely put the work in this summer and has made solid contributions thus far—given his role on the team. Nice write up
by jigblahdah on Oct 29, 2010 7:40 AM EDT via mobile reply actions
I agree 100%
I love the new Brian Boyle. Every game he stands out in some way.
He’s basically what Aaron Voros was supposed to be when we first got him.
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by Bettman's Nightmare on Oct 29, 2010 9:44 AM EDT reply actions
I didn’t think he was even going to have a spot on the team with the additions of Kennedy, Zuccarello, White, etc. But after seeing him skate and bang people around in pre-season, I was impressed. It was clear he knew the deal: either improve all aspects of your game, or play in Hartford. And he must have worked his ass off all summer, because he’s been fantastic in his role. Great to see guys step up like that and really want it.
"Prucha has tons of heart, plays hard every shift, and is a fan favorite. Betts is one of the best penalty killers & shot blockers in the league, and he costs close to nothing. Orr destroys people and has greatly improved his skating ability. Let's get rid of all three. Brashear looks good." - Glen Sather
by MartyEqualsPansy on Oct 29, 2010 10:21 AM EDT reply actions
boyle needs to understand that he’s not going to be the same goal scorer at the nhl level that he was with BC. hes starting to understand his role at this level and he clearly worked very hard over the summer on his skating. hes slowly becoming worth the 3rd round pick sather shipped to LA.
hes slowly becoming worth the 3rd round pick sather shipped to LA.
I certainly hope so…that pick was used on Jordan Weal, who is destroying the WHL again (22 points in 14 games, T-4th in the league).
I honestly don’t see why Boyle can’t develop into a 10-12 goal guy, the more offensive version of Blair Betts, that I at least personally thought he could be when we traded for him.
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by George E. Ays on Oct 29, 2010 11:19 AM EDT up reply actions
No, I'm not a computer.
I do use one very well however.
I only remember the Weal thing because he was one of the guys I thought we should be targeting after the 1st round…weird coincidence that he happened to get drafted in the exact slot we vacated.
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by George E. Ays on Oct 29, 2010 11:45 AM EDT up reply actions
Quick test!
What does 1101010010010100101010010101001000010100101111 mean?
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by Joe Fortunato on Oct 29, 2010 12:23 PM EDT up reply actions
If I’m reading it right, it means you’re drunk and fell asleep on the number pad.
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by George E. Ays on Oct 29, 2010 12:26 PM EDT up reply actions
its a clutch song...
yeah pretty good one too.
by Master Ov Brutality on Oct 29, 2010 4:27 PM EDT up reply actions
the 2003 draft
i wish sather would just leave it the hell alone; hugh jessiman was the worst drafting decision in franchise history, zherdev was a bust, and then he went and traded for boyle.
by John Merrigan on Oct 29, 2010 11:36 AM EDT up reply actions
Jessiman was a bad pick
but at the time of the draft it wasn’t horrific, Jessiman was a MONSTER in the NCAA and an injury put an end to his dominance. The injury happened after he was drafted however. I think that Jessiman is just a victim of circumstances in that draft.
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by Joe Fortunato on Oct 29, 2010 12:25 PM EDT up reply actions
Specimen
was ok in the ECAC. He was by no means a monster or even good in his limited time in Ivy hockey. He was a good prospect, but didn’t perform amazingly in college.
He did have the honor of
making the All ECAC second team once and was rookie of the year once on some middling D’mouth teams
I’ve always wondered how the Rangers justified that pick. Yes, retrospect and all that, but wow… turned out to be such a bad pick in such a good draft.
by Peter Raaymakers on Oct 29, 2010 1:21 PM EDT up reply actions
2001-2004 draft arguably sent this team back a decade.
by John Merrigan on Oct 29, 2010 5:17 PM EDT up reply actions
Boyle
Was definitely the first player I noticed in the first pre-season game against the Devils. He was hitting everything in sight and had a sweet move to deke Marty out of his jock (note to self, buy mental brillo pad for imagery) on a goal. I remember him on the Kings scoring a very nice in close goal vs the Rangers a few seasons ago and then didn’t think much when they traded for him before last year. He’s worked hard to improve his skating and balance which was what I think was holding him back from using his frame and size.
by MyFavBaseballSquadron on Oct 29, 2010 12:09 PM EDT reply actions
Samesies, except in the game against the Senators
Boyle was huge. Literally. But also in terms of his ability to control the game. The thing about that game was that the Rangers had dressed none of their big stars, so Boyle was given the opening to lead the team offensively—and he did. The guy’s got all the pieces to become a top to second-tier power forward in the game. He’s just got to put those pieces together.
by Peter Raaymakers on Oct 29, 2010 1:22 PM EDT up reply actions
Brian Boyle always had the hands to protect the puck and score a great goal when he was with the Kings, his skating however was atrocious. But now that’s fixed, I think Boyle can score 10-15 goals if he gets a little more ice time.
Good pick-up by Sather and now he is doing better.
by NYR #35 Richter on Oct 29, 2010 3:03 PM EDT reply actions

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