Maybe, but like I said in the game thread, they need two out of the three chasing teams (Toronto, Tampa Bay, NY Islanders) to play well down the stretch to knock the Bruins out. Their schedules are definitely interesting down the stretch.
First, the Bruins' schedule:
Tonight vs. Tampa Bay
Sat. @ NY Islanders
Tues. 3/28 vs. Nashville
Thurs. 3/30 vs. Dallas
Sat. 4/1 vs. Florida
Sun. 4/2 @ Chicago
Tues. 4/4 vs. Tampa Bay
Thurs. 4/6 vs. Ottawa
Sat. 4/8 vs. Washington
Toronto:
Tonight vs. New Jersey
Sat. @Buffalo
Tues. 3/28 vs. Florida
Thurs. 3/30 @ Nashville
Sat. 4/1 @ Detroit
Mon. 4/3 @Buffalo
Tues. 4/4 vs. Washington
Thurs. 4/6 vs. Tampa Bay
Sat. 4/8 vs. Pittsburgh
Sun 4/9 vs. Columbus
NY Islanders:
Fri. @ Pittsburgh
Sat. vs. Bruins
Mon. 3/27 vs. Nashville
Thurs. 3/30 @ Philadelphia
Fri. 3/31 vs. New Jersey
Sun. 4/2 @ Buffalo
Tues. 4/4 @ Nashville
Thurs. 4/6 @ Carolina
Sat. 4/8 @ New Jersey
Sun. 4/9 vs. Ottawa
Tampa Bay:
Tonight @ Bruins
Tomorrow @ Detroit
Mon. 3/27 vs. Chicago
Thurs. 3/30 vs. Detroit
Sat. 4/1 vs. Montreal
Sun 4/2 vs. Dallas
Tues. 4/4 @ Bruins
Thurs. 4/6 @ Toronto
Fri. 4/7 @ Montreal
Sun. 4/9 vs. Buffalo
From that, I think Tampa's in trouble (5 points back, 1 game in hand, lots of tough games). On the other hand, the Islanders can probably surge if they play well on the road (six road games left, but only tomorrow's game in Pittsburgh involves a clearly better team). Toronto's the wild card in this, as they have some cupcakes coming up and end on a 4-game homestand, but that home stretch is BRUTAL (playing all three top Metro teams in a week, including Pittsburgh and Columbus on back-to-back to end the regular season). If the Metro division spots are all up for grabs still on the last weekend, Toronto could be flattened just because they'll all want the perk of facing a weak Atlantic/NY Islanders team over the other team that didn't win the division.
tl;dr: The Bruins have to step up, but they're still in a decent spot all things considered.