Devils at Bruins Prediction, April 14: Can New Jersey Crash Boston’s Playoff Party?
The New Jersey Devils march into TD Garden on April 14 for a regular season finale with genuine stakes on only one side of the ice. The Boston Bruins, sitting at 44-27-10 with 98 points, need a win to lock in favorable Wild Card seeding ahead of the playoffs. The Devils, at 42-36-3 and officially eliminated from postseason contention, are playing out the string — but do not mistake that for going quietly. With individual milestones on the line and key Boston players listed day-to-day, New Jersey arrives with every reason to play the spoiler role in a game the Bruins desperately need.
The Lines Tell the Story — And So Does the Money
Boston opens as a -130 moneyline favorite at home, with New Jersey available at +110. The puck line sits at Boston -1.5, and the over/under is set at 6.5. Perhaps most telling: 77 percent of the betting money has come in on the Bruins, which makes sense given the stakes. Boston is 28-11-1 at home this season, making TD Garden one of the most difficult buildings to win in across the Eastern Conference. The market respects that advantage, but the Devils have more than enough motivation to make this interesting.
Seeding Pressure vs. Spoiler Pride
Boston cannot afford to coast here. The Bruins sit just one point ahead of Ottawa in the Wild Card standings, and a win tonight locks in their seeding position before the postseason begins. They are scoring at a 3.26 goals-per-game rate this season — one of the best marks in the East — but their 2.91 goals-against average has been tested in recent weeks. The team has gone just 2-3 in their last five straight-up, which is a trend that should concern anyone betting on momentum heading into the playoffs. The injury report makes things more complicated: defenseman Hampus Lindholm, winger Viktor Arvidsson, 30-goal scorer Pavel Zacha, and All-Star blueliner Charlie McAvoy are all listed as day-to-day. If even two of those names sit out, Boston’s depth gets seriously tested.
The Devils, meanwhile, are playing for individual pride and the dignity of a strong finish. Nico Hischier is chasing his 30th goal of the season — he recently delivered a 2-goal, 3-point overtime winner against Ottawa that proved he still has another gear when motivated. Timo Meier needs one more to crack 25 goals for the year, and Cody Glass is within reach of his first career 20-goal campaign. None of this is trivial. Players remember how they finish seasons, and these Devils have every reason to push hard for 60 minutes.
The injury situation for New Jersey complicates matters significantly, though. Goaltender Jacob Markstrom is out with an undisclosed ailment, which is a real blow — whoever starts in net for the Devils will be backstopping a squad missing three NHL-caliber defensemen. Luke Hughes is done for the season, Brett Pesce is out with a lower-body issue, and right wingers Stefan Noesen, Arseni Gritsyuk, and Zack MacEwen are all unavailable. The Devils are shorthanded in the truest sense, and Boston has the offensive firepower to punish backup goaltending on home ice.
On the stat sheet, both teams defend at a similar rate: Boston allows 2.91 goals per game, New Jersey 2.89. The bigger gap is on the offensive end — the Bruins score 3.26 per game compared to the Devils’ 2.79. The teams split their season series this year, so there is no decisive head-to-head advantage to lean on, but the home-ice edge and the roster discrepancy tonight tilt things noticeably in Boston’s favor.
Prediction and Best Bet
The Bruins have a powerful incentive to win and the home record to back it up. Even with several key players listed day-to-day, Boston has enough depth to handle a Devils squad missing their starting goalie and three defensemen. New Jersey will compete — Hischier and Meier are legitimate NHL stars who do not mail in regular season games — but the structural disadvantages are simply too large to overcome on the road in a building as hostile as TD Garden in a playoff-pressure situation. Expect Boston to close out their home schedule with a win.
- Prediction: Boston Bruins 4, New Jersey Devils 2
- Best Bet: Boston Bruins moneyline (-130)
The Bruins moneyline at -130 is clean value for this spot. The home record is elite, Boston is fighting for favorable playoff seeding, and New Jersey is missing their starting goalie along with three key defenders. When a team has this much to play for and this much structural advantage, backing them at home is straightforward.
Aaron White
Sports Betting Contributor
Aaron White graduated from Northwestern University with a B.A. in Economics. His industry experience includes projects for the Chicago Cubs, The Sporting News, and QL Gaming Group. At Hello Rookie, he covers the NFL and NBA from a betting and DFS perspective.


