New York Daily News

Rangers’ streak stopped at four

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BRUINS RANGERS 3 1

A loss in the seventh game of the 2019 Stanley Cup Finals could have carried over to the following season, except the Boston Bruins' strong culture has helped them remain at the top of the Eastern Conference standings.

Charlie McAvoy, Charlie Coyle and Patrice Bergeron each scored, and the Bruins began a four-game trip with a 3-1 victory over the Rangers on Sunday at the Garden.

“We expect to play well every night," Bruins alternate captain Brad Marchand said. “When we play well, we are going to win a majority of the games. We just hold our- selves to a high standard.

We don't accept losing in the room, or in the organizati­on.”

Jaroslav Halak stopped 25 shots as Boston picked up its ninth win in 10 games.

Mika Zibanejad scored, but the Rangers saw their four-game winning streak snapped. Alexandar Georgiev made his third start in a row for the Rangers and notched 31 saves in his team-leading 26th start.

Coyle scored the winner with a shorthande­d goal at 18:42 of the second period. The forward stole a puck from Jacob Trouba at the blueline and outskated everyone on the ice before converting a breakaway for his 14th of the season.

“It takes a while to pick yourself up from that,” Bruins coach Bruce Cassidy said. “That was the big boost for us."

McAvoy opened the scoring at 19:18 of the first period after a puck took an odd bounce over Georgiev's head. McAvoy tossed a shot near the net and the puck bounced off two Rangers skaters before finding the back of the net. McAvoy also scored in the Bruins' 4-1 victory over the Red Wings on Saturday.

“I knew I hadn't scored, but I wasn't losing sleep at night,” McAvoy said of his 51-game goal drought to start the season. “It is nice to get a couple in a short amount of time, more importantl­y we got two wins on this backto-back.”

Zibanejad ended Halak's shutout bid with a powerplay goal at 9:52 of the third period. Artemi Panarin and Ryan Strome assisted on the play. Bergeron added an empty-net goal in the final minute.

“They are a hard team, they defend very well, they have a ton of experience, they are deep down the middle," Rangers coach David Quinn said of the Bruins. “There is a reason why they have the most points in the league."

The Rangers had an opportunit­y midway through the second to even the score when David Krejci was penalized for a four-minute high-sticking infraction. The Rangers' power play has been one of the top units in the NHL, but failed to come through in the middle period.

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