The bad news continues to roll in for the Boston Bruins. Depth defenseman Jordan Harris is set to miss “a bit” with a lower-body injury, after stepping up to fill in for the injured Hampus Lindholm. Now, it appears Harris’ path to recovery could involve surgery, Bruins head coach Marco Sturm told Scott McLaughlin of WEEI. Boston placed Harris on injured reserve on October 22.
After placing Harris on IR and considering surgery, very little has emerged about the exact nature of the 25-year-old’s injury. He played in 15 minutes of ice time in Boston’s October 21 loss to the Florida Panthers and didn’t appear to sustain a noticeable injury. Nevertheless, Harris has sat out of Boston’s last two games, and could be due to miss quite a few more thanks to this injury.
A long-term absence would stain Harris’ first year in the Bruins organization. He signed a one-year, one-way, $825K contract with Boston on July 1st, and has two points in five games to start Boston’s season.
The move continued Harris’ journey around the Eastern Conference. He was originally drafted by the Montreal Canadiens in the third-round of the 2018 NHL Draft. Harris made his NHL debut four seasons later, after a hardy career at Northeastern University. He scored just one goal in his first 10 NHL games, but proved reliable enough to earn a daily presence at the bottom of Montreal’s lineup. He played 131 games with Montreal between 2021 and 2024 – totaling 32 points, 56 penalty minutes, and a minus-five.
The moot production made Harris expendable when Montreal was faced with the chance to acquire Patrik Laine from the Columbus Blue Jackets. A deal was struck in August 2024, sending Laine and a 2026 second-round pick to Montreal for Harris. His tenure with Columbus was lined by a long string of healthy scratches, with Harris ultimately scoring just five points in 33 games with the club. That was scant enough to leave him unqualified at the start of the 2025 summer, opening the door for a deal in Boston.
After a few healthy scratches in Boston, Harris seemed to have a hardy grip on a bottom-pair role. Instead, he’ll have to once again face an extended period outside of the lineup. Harris has 39 points in 169 games in his NHL career, and has never played in the AHL. He will be a capable depth defender once he’s back to full health, though he may face a tough time getting into the lineup once Lindholm is back from injury.