Times Colonist

Bruins power past Canucks

BOSTON 6 VANCOUVER 3

- DOUG ALDEN

Welcome back Bergie. Patrice Bergeron made his season debut for Boston and showed no lingering effects from off-season surgery, finishing with a goal and three assists in the Bruins’ 6-3 victory over the Vancouver Canucks on Thursday night.

“I was ready to go,” said Bergeron, who missed the first five games of the season while recovering from surgery on a sports hernia. “You don’t know what to expect, obviously. You’re trying to hope for the best, but, you know, I don’t want to say I was surprised because you want to be at your best every time you step on the ice.”

Anders Bjork scored twice, Brad Marchand had a goal and two assists, and David Krejci and David Pastrnak each had a goal and an assist.

After starting the season 2-3, the Bruins were ready to welcome back their top-line centre.

“It’s incredible, the way he came back and dominated the game after being out for that long,” said Marchand, who helped set up Bergeron’s goal at 11:53 in the third. “He’s able to calm things down in the room, on the bench, and he leads by example. You know, he just does everything that a top guy does.”

The Bruins scored five straight goals after falling behind 1-0 early in the first period, three of them on a five-minute major and finished 4-for-8 on the power play.

Anton Khudobin made 26 saves for Boston while starting in place of Tuukka Rask, who is out indefinite­ly with a concussion he suffered in practice Wednesday.

Derek Dorsett, Bo Horvat and Thomas Vanek scored for the Canucks, and Michael Del Zotto had two assists. After falling behind 5-1, Vancouver had cut the deficit to 5-3 by the end of the second period before Bergeron scored on a one-timer off a feed from Pastrnak for a power-play goal at 11:53 in the third.

“Our penalty kill wasn’t great tonight,” Vancouver coach Travis Green said. “Any time you give up four goals on the power play on the road you’re not going to win too many hockey games.”

The Bruins scored three power-play goals in the first after Erik Gudbranson was called for a boarding major for a hit from behind on Frank Vatrano 6:13 into the game. Gudbranson also received a game misconduct and a fighting major when Tim Schaller stepped in for his fallen teammate.

“Schallsy did an awesome job stepping up there,” Marchand said. “The power play did a great job of kind of taking over that game and giving us a big enough cushion that was tough for them to come back from.”

Boston capitalize­d on the major penalty with three goals. Pastrnak gave Boston its first lead when he took the puck end-to-end and split a pair of Vancouver defenders in front of the net and beat Anders Nilsson 9:03 into the first. Just after the faceoff, Boston was right back in the Canucks zone and Bjork scored his second of the game on a snap shot from the circle at 9:26 of the first off a setup from Krejci.

Still on the major power play, the Bruins scored again 1:24 later when a long rebound off a shot by Bergeron bounced right to Krejci at the left circle and he knocked in the puck for his first goal of the season.

“It was good that we were able to kind of find our groove again. You know, we were really good last year and we’ve struggled a bit early on here,” Marchand said.

Jacob Markstrom finished with 16 saves on 18 shots. Nilsson was pulled after allowing four goals on 17 shots in the first.

Oilers 2, Blackhawks 1 (OT)

CHICAGO — Mark Letestu scored on a power play with 15.8 seconds left in overtime to give the Edmonton Oilers a 2-1 victory over the Chicago Blackhawks on Thursday night.

Letestu beat Anton Forsberg on the short side with a one-time shot from the left circle after taking a pass from Oscar Klefbom. Edmonton’s 4-on-3 advantage was set up after Patrick Kane was called for hooking at 3:45.

Edmonton’s Cam Talbot made 30 straight saves after giving up a fluke goal to Kane on Chicago’s first shot.

The Oilers snapped a fourgame losing streak.

Anton Forsberg, Chicago’s backup, stopped 40 shots in his second start this season, but the Blackhawks lost their second straight and third in four games. No. 1 goalie Corey Crawford got the night off following a 5-2 loss at St. Louis on Wednesday night.

 ??  ?? Canucks forward Alexander Burmistrov looks to pass while under pressure from Bruins winger Riley Nash during the second period in Boston on Thursday.
Canucks forward Alexander Burmistrov looks to pass while under pressure from Bruins winger Riley Nash during the second period in Boston on Thursday.

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