
Jackson Edward (41) played 31 AHL games last season. (Photo courtesy of Providence Bruins)
BUFFALO – With their second and last game of the Prospects Challenge scheduled for Sunday at noon against the New Jersey Devils, the Boston Bruins rookies got a morning practice in on Saturday.
Here are three notes from the day.
EDWARD STAYING POSITIVE
There were times last season when it looked like Jackson Edward was carrying the weight of the world on his shoulders.
In fact, he was.
As Jackson embarked on his rookie year with the Providence Bruins, his mother, Jennifer, was recovering from a brain aneurysm and subsequent stroke suffered in March 2024.
Jackson took responsibility for Jennifer, a single mother of three, and the management of her affairs as well as helping his younger sister and brother.
It was a lot for anyone to cope with, and a massive burden for a young man trying to make his way in pro hockey.
Thankfully, Jennifer’s situation has improved and, as a result, Jackson is in a noticeably better frame of mind heading into his second season.
“She’s doing good. She’s at home now. She’s got the care she needs. Everything is going well, managing it and pushing forward as best I can,” he said after the team practiced on Saturday morning.
“You can imagine (last season) was pretty hard, for sure. But stuff happens and you’ve just got to push through it the best you can. Stay positive and keep moving along.”
Jamie Langenbrunner, assistant general manager for player personnel, said the team did what it could to help Edward through last season.
“Once we learned everything that was going on we were able to properly be there for him and give him that space to deal with those things,” he said.
“On-ice performance is important and it’s what we evaluate, but we also have to take into account sometimes what else is going on in (a player’s) life.”
Edward was drafted in the seventh round from London of the OHL in 2022. After playing 31 games with Providence and seven with Maine in 2024-25, Edward will look to step up his game this season.
“Playing simple, simple touches, stick work, technical little stuff. Soon as I get that down, then it’s about building my game, stacking on top of that and putting in reps,” he said.
Finding consistency will be key, says Langenbrunner.
“Can he be a reliable guy in your lineup every night – competitive, good defender, move pucks efficiently. He’s going to be in a fight for playing time in camp.”
Playing defense is a challenge for young pros, Providence coach Ryan Mougenel says.
“You got away with some things in junior. You can’t get away with them in pro. The things Jackson needs to work on is valuing different parts of it. He’s a physical D and we say it all the time: Things change in that there are limited opportunities to put licks on guys. You don’t want to take that out of guys’ games, but to have success at the American League and NHL level, it’s about recognizing those opportunities when and where you can be physical.
“That’s what Jackson is figuring out. He’s put on some size, he’s put on some weight, he looks good. We’re expecting big things from him this year. Year One as a pro is always a huge learning curve and Year Two is where you put the rubber to the road.”
SIMPSON ‘WANTS TO BE A DAWG’
Cooper Simpson knows his way around the offensive zone. That much was clear in Friday’s Prospects Challenge opener against the Penguins.
After playing high school hockey in Minnesota last season, the 18-year-old third-round pick didn’t look the least bit out of place with the puck on his stick.
“It’s a cool experience, first off. I’m a young player, everyone is bigger, faster, stronger. You’ve just got to think the game fast. You get the puck, you don’t have space. You’ve just got to be involved in the game and figure it out,” Simpson said.
“I feel like the first period I settled in, tried to figure out what works and doesn’t work. Every guy is big so you’ve got to play physical, as well.”
Minnesota native Langenbrunner, who watched Simpson in high school, likes his vision and playmaking ability. “It’s good to see him looking pretty comfortable out there,” he said.
“I think there’s more layers to his game than maybe you would have thought. He plays with a little more grit than you would probably notice in high school, which makes sense when you play probably 35 minutes a night.”
Simpson will play for Youngstown in the USHL this year before enrolling at North Dakota.
Youngstown coach Ryan Ward is happy to have him.
“I expect Cooper to be one of the top players in the league,” he said. “Special mind, special talent. Wants to be a dawg.”
BIG D ON THE WAY
At 6-foot-3 and 214 pounds, sixth-round pick Loke Johansson plays a physical game.
The 19-year-old defenseman is expected to graduate from Moncton of the QMJHL to Providence this season.
“He’s going to be in a little bit of a similar situation to what Jackson (Edward) was last year, coming in into a lineup where he’s going to have to fight for games, especially early on, depending on health and all those things, but I think that’s also a good thing for those guys,” said Langenbrunner.
“They can get tons of practice time, they can get their work in. They don’t have to play every night to build in that consistency to their game. For him, adjusting to what’s it’s like to play three in three or three in five at the pace you’re going to have to be playing at in the American League, compared to junior, where you can take off shifts and you’re OK.
“In the American League, it usually ends up in your net when you’re taking off shifts as a young guy. That’s the way life works. He’s just got to learn that. First-year pro, good opportunity for him.”
Mougenel said the Bruins know what they have.
“He’s a player that we drafted and we know exactly what he is. Usually when you draft a player, you’re like, he could be this, he could be that. I think we know exactly what he’s going to be. He’s a big physical guy, has a real thirst to be physical.”
QUOTE OF THE DAY
Ryan Mougenel on defensemen
“We really want our D making plays and being more than a one option D. We talk a lot about the different types of defensemen. There’s guys that are one option D that play a long time in the NHL, say, like a Derek Forbort. There’s two option Ds and three option Ds. We want to keep developing. We don’t want to put our D in a box. We want guys to keep growing their game.”









