Times Colonist

Pastrnak pots 3 as Bruins crush Habs

- KELSEY PATTERSON

MONTREAL — The slumping Montreal Canadiens are doing some soulsearch­ing after a second embarrassi­ng loss in as many games.

The conference-leading Bruins thrashed the Canadiens 8-1 on a threegoal effort from David Pastrnak Tuesday night, Montreal’s fifth straight defeat.

The Canadiens failed to bounce back after blowing a four-goal lead in a 6-5 loss to the New York Rangers last Saturday.

“You have two choices right now,” said forward Brendan Gallagher. “You can continue to fight and battle as a group, or you can choose to shy away from little bits of adversity. That’s the opportunit­y that we have right now — choose to fight and work our way out of this.

“It’s not fun, but it’s something that can be pretty rewarding if you’re able to do it. If you’re not, it’s frustratin­g and it continues to grow and grow.”

Pastrnak and the Bruins (16-3-5) scored early and often for their fourth straight victory. Boston extended its point streak to eight games (5-0-3) and jumped ahead of Washington atop the Eastern Conference standings.

Carey Price gave up five goals on 11 shots for the Canadiens (11-8-5) before being pulled in the second period — the first time in 112 consecutiv­e starts dating back to Dec. 9, 2017.

Keith Kinkaid stopped 10-of-13 shots in relief.

“There’s always a way to turn things around” said Price, who gave up six goals on 34 shots to the Rangers. “Every team goes through tough scenarios throughout a long season and right now we’re in one of those funks.

“We can’t dwell on it for too long. I’ve been in this game long enough to know you can’t pout your way out of a situation like this one.”

Patrice Bergeron missed the game with a lower-body injury, but the Bruins offence was firing on all cylinders without him.

Pastrnak, with three, Jake Debrusk, Brad Marchand, Anders Bjork, Charlie Coyle and Danon Heinen all scored. Marchand, Coyle, David Krejci and Torey Krug notched two assists apiece while Sean Kuraly had three.

Bruins backup Jaroslav Halak made 36 saves and improved to 6-0-0 against Price, his former teammate in Montreal.

A nice give-and-go led to Debrusk’s opener on the power play at 8:03 of the first period before captain Shea Weber tied the game at 12:41 on a rebound at the side of the net.

That’s when Pastrnak got to work on his seventh career hat trick.

The NHL’s leading goal scorer beat Price with a one-timer on the power play at 14:24 for Boston’s second tally on five shots.

Marchand made it 3-1 on a bad giveaway by Jeff Petry behind his own net with 37 seconds remaining in the first — the winger’s 600th NHL point.

“The mistakes are costing us,” said coach Claude Julien. “We have to fix that if we hope to get back on track. It’s a loss of focus. Right now those mistakes are more than they were before. We’re trending in the wrong direction.”

Pastrnak’s goal eight seconds into the second period sealed Montreal’s fate and Bjork gave Boston a 5-1 lead on a breakaway a minute later.

Julien took a timeout and pulled Price from the game, but the onslaught continued.

 ??  ?? Bruins forward Brad Marchand flips the puck past Canadiens goaltender Carey Price during the first period in Montreal on Tuesday. Price was pulled after giving up five goals on 11 shots.
Bruins forward Brad Marchand flips the puck past Canadiens goaltender Carey Price during the first period in Montreal on Tuesday. Price was pulled after giving up five goals on 11 shots.

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