Call & Times

Bruins head to Toronto for Game 6

- By STEPHEN WHYNO

A year after Mike Babcock told arena staffers in Washington he'd see them a few days later for Game 7, John Tortorella claimed his Blue Jackets would be back after winning Game 6 back in Columbus.

Now the trick is doing what Babcock's Toronto Maple Leafs couldn't last year: stave off eliminatio­n from the Capitals.

"It's about finding a way to win a hockey game right now," Tortorella said Sunday. "There are so many ways of winning and losing in playoff hockey, so many ebbs and flows. That's just the way the game is."

Toronto is in the same spot as Columbus, down 3-2 in its first-round series against the Boston Bruins with Game 6 at home Monday night (7 p.m. EDT, NBCSN). The Maple Leafs held off a significan­t surge from the Bruins on Saturday night to avoid being eliminated in five and send the series back across the border.

"You got to look forward — there's no sense and no good in looking back," forward Connor Brown said. "We're going back to (Air Canada Centre) where we love to play. Our fans are going to be excited so right now we're all just thinking about Game 6."

Game 6 in the Bruins-Maple Leafs series comes after Boston took a 3-1 lead in the absence of suspended Toronto center Nazem Kadri. Goaltender Frederik Andersen needed to make 42 saves to keep the Maple Leafs alive as they hope to avoid another first-round exit.

The Blue Jackets are trying to do the same in their Game 6 Monday (7:30 p.m., CNBC) after losing to the Capitals in overtime Sunday in Game 5. Four of the five games between Columbus and Washington have gone to OT compared to one total in the other seven first-round series.

"It's been a crazy series," Capitals forward Brett Connolly said. "So much is happening. Calls and OT — it's been fun. I think guys are enjoying it. It's pretty nerve-wracking, but we're going to keep pushing forward here. We know we have a good team."

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