Mark Stuart's summer vacation brought him to the Greater Causeway Street area late last month, but the trip from Minnesota didn't lead him to the Garden. Instead, the promising young defenseman landed in the Bruins' home away from home: Massachusetts General Hospital.
Bert Zarins, the club's longtime orthopedist, removed a piece of cartilage from Stuart's right knee after the 22-year-old back liner experienced pain and swelling during offseason workouts. The procedure was straightforward, and Stuart plans to return to the Hub of Hockey just before Labor Day. But the Bruins anticipate that he'll be slow to join training camp workouts and likely won't be ready for the start of the season in October.
According to new general manager Peter Chiarelli, the setback is part of the reason the Bruins signed free agent blue liner Nathan Dempsey, ex- of the Maple Leafs, Blackhawks, and Kings. Stuart played in only 17 games with Boston last season but projects as a regular in 2006-07, and now it looks as though the 32-year-old Dempsey will have to fill the roster spot while Stuart rehabs.
``The knee was fine during the season," said Stuart, reached at his family's home in Rochester, Minn. ``But when I started to train, toward the end of June, I began to get fluid building up in the knee. I talked to my dad about it, to see what he thought, and we got the MRI and all that. I guess it's just a wear-and-tear thing that needed to be fixed."
Mike Stuart, the defenseman's father, is also an orthopedic surgeon, which led to the quick diagnosis and the proactive plan to get the knee repaired. According to Mark, Zarins also ``did some extra work in there to get some scar tissue to form around where the cartilage was removed."
The extra bit of repair, explained Stuart, most likely extended his recovery period.
``It's going to take a while for all that scar tissue to grow, I guess," he said. ``I have to be careful. Dr. Zarins said he didn't want me putting any pressure on it for a while, and that's even kept me off the golf course. Sure, I could swing a club, but I'm afraid I'd be out there, forget about everything, and bend the knee -- and that could lead to some problems.
``We really don't know how long this will take, but Dr. Zarins thought it would be two or three months. So right now, it's take care of it the best I can and wish for the best."
Stuart, the 21st pick in the 2003 draft, should log ample minutes on a second or third defensive pairing when he's healthy. Once past Zdeno Chara, Paul Mara, and Brad Stuart, he factors in with a handful of other candidates, including Milan Jurcina, Andrew Alberts, Jason York, and Dempsey.
``Chara's obviously a big-time player," said Stuart, who was back home when the Bruins made their biggest splash of the summer, signing Chara to a five-year, $37.5 million pact -- the richest deal in club history. ``I know, just from reading everything, you can feel the excitement that he's brought to the town already.
``For me, it's going to be a big challenge to walk back in and earn a spot, but overall, it's great for the organization to plop a guy like him back there."
For now, all Stuart can do is continue his off-ice workouts, which include pedaling a stationary bike with one leg, lifting weights, and swimming. As the holiday weekend approaches, he'll jump in a car with his sister, Cristin -- a Boston College blue liner who is about to begin her junior year -- and make the drive to Boston.
``That gives me a couple of more weeks to do what I can here at home," he said. ``Get in some more workouts, build up my strength more, and find out what the trainers tell me when I get there."
Bruins throw back jersey
The Pooh bear is dead.
The Bruins' third sweater, honey gold with the smiley Pooh head centered on the chest, is officially being mothballed.
Beginning Oct. 26, when the Canadiens come to Causeway Street, the Bruins will sport vintage renditions of their spoked-B sweaters, styled after the ones Bobby Orr and his fellow Black-and-Gold swashbucklers wore in the late 1960s. Think: split neckline with string lace. (Bring back a bench-clearing donnybrook and the picture is a Picasso!)
According to Charlie Jacobs, the club's executive vice president, the Bruins intend to wear the black version of the vintage sweaters in all home games against Original Six opponents (Montreal, Toronto, Chicago, Detroit, and the Rangers).
``No more third jerseys -- we're going vintage," said Jacobs.
Provided the league approves, the Bruins would like to wear the vintage sweaters in road games at Chicago and Detroit. The club also plans to wear the black vintage sweaters for the final regular-season home game vs. Ottawa April 7, as part of the annual Shirts Off Our Backs promotion.
Putting a premium on front-row seats
Hold on to your hats and wallets, front-row patrons, the cost of putting your nose against the glass at the Garden for a Bruins game is about to skyrocket.
The Bruins, getting in lockstep with much of the sports industry, will attach a high premium to the 190 front-row seats. Last year, season ticket-holders paid $90 -- the uniform price throughout the loge -- for Row 1. This year? Bruins vice president Charlie Jacobs said the final price was yet to be determined, but he confirmed that it would be a ``big boost."
``Every club I talked to, when I said we get $90, they just laughed," said Jacobs. ``It's a $350 seat [Canadian funds] in Toronto, and it's $450 [California funds] in LA.
``Now, we're not going near that, but we are going to raise them. I know that's not fun for our fans to hear, and I'll be candid, especially given the team we've had in recent years, we have to be cognizant of what we're doing with our prices."
Elsewhere in the building, ticket pricing in general will go up $2 per seat, with no increase at the low ($19) end. In the loge, seats along the ``straightaway" will be increased by $5, while the corner loges will jump by $2.
The front-row loge, where prices could crack $200, also will carry a different level of service, according to Jacobs. The attached benefits, he said, were still being sorted out.
Etc.
Kevin Paul Dupont's e-mail address is dupont@globe.com; material from personal interviews, wire services, other beat writers, and league and team sources was used in this report. ![]()