Boston Herald

Resilient Bruins author signature victory

- By Steve Conroy sconroy@bostonhera­ld.com

In their biggest game of the year, for their psyche as much as for the standings, the Bruins did what their coach told them to do.

To paraphrase Jim Montgomery’s Monday morning admonishme­nts, they woke the bleep up.

The B’s shook off three one-goal deficits and took their first lead of the game with 2:31 left on Pavel Zacha’s goal to beat the Florida Panthers, 4-3, in Sunrise, Fla., on Tuesday.

The B’s then were able to kill the 6-on-5 situation, a bugaboo dating back to their Game 7 loss to the Panthers last spring, for over two minutes to capture the much needed win.

It wasn’t perfect, but it was playoff-style hockey, physical and nasty, and the B’s came out on top for a change, snapping a twogame losing streak that had their coach steaming mad.

All their leaders — Charlie McAvoy (goal, assist), David Pastrnak (goal, assist) Brad Marchand (assist on late equalizer, plus a notable scrap) — stepped up, and they got depth scoring from Trent Frederic and Zacha to beat the Panthers for the third time in as many tries, again taking the Atlantic Division lead for the moment.

“I think Monty’s message is we have to come prepared to play and practice every day and we weren’t the other day. But the way we finished (practice) is the way we played tonight,” Marchand told reporters in Sunrise. “We played direct, played hard and competed all the way through. It’s what we need coming down the stretch and going into the playoffs. I liked the response. I thought we had a good game tonight. There are some areas where we can continue to work on. But that’s a great team over there. They compete very hard. They’re very deep. They don’t really have any holes. So good character win.”

Yes, there were some foot-in-the-TV screen moments for which the B’s have had a penchant lately. But in the end, it was the signature win of the season so far.

“I loved the way we stuck together out there,” Montgomery told NESN. “It was a playoff atmosphere. It’s what we’re going to see in a couple of weeks .Loved the way we responded. Even though we fell down 1-0 in the first minute and gave up (a goal) in the last minute (of the first period), usually those things end up costing you. But you know what? We just kept forging ahead.”

The game started as poorly as you could have imagined. After being read the riot act from Montgomery for a sleepy start to Monday’s practice, the B’s duplicated that effort on the first shift of the game and found themselves down a goal just 27 seconds in.

It was a patented Panthers’ shift to start. Vladimir Tarasenko went in on the forecheck and delivered a blow that knocked Morgan Geekie’s helmet off. Geekie chose to leave the ice instead of picking up the bucket and the B’s were scrambling. Eventually, Sasha Barkov sent a bad angle shot toward the net. Jeremy Swayman couldn’t glove it and it got through him to Evan Rodrigues, who had a tap-in.

Matthew Tkachuk then suckered Parker Wotherspoo­n into taking a roughing penalty with a low reverse hit and the B’s went on the penalty kill. They survived it, and then a few more minutes of Florida pressure before they themselves went on the attack.

After controllin­g the play for a good chunk of the period, the B’s tied it up with 2:37 left in the first on a strong shift. It started with a good reverse hit by Pastrnak that flattened Tkachuk along the left wall and he got the puck to Zacha a few feet away. Zacha fed Matt Grzelcyk at the left point and, with the Panthers overloaded to left side, Grzelcyk dished to McAvoy. McAvoy stepped into the right circle and blasted a slapper past Sergei Bobrovsky for his 10th of the year, snapping a 10game pointless streak.

But with the B’s lately, good things happening usually means a bad thing is right around the corner. They could not get out of the period even. Brandon Carlo retrieved a puck behind his net and, as he was looking to move it up to Hampus Lindholm, he fell and missed his mark. Dmitry Kulikov collected it and fed Eetu Luostarine­n, who slipped it across the top of the crease for a Sam Reinhart redirect past Swayman with 1:04 left in the period.

In the second period, the Panthers tried to flex their muscles. After a particular­ly nasty scrum, Sam Bennett held Lindholm’s head down just long enough to anger the mild-mannered Swede. Lindholm came up swinging and tagged Bennett with a left and the two went at it for Lindholm’s first career fighting major.

A little later in the period, the 5-foot-9 Marchand dropped the gloves with 6-foot-5 Niko Mikkola, who then wrestled Marchand to the ice. The combatants only received matching minors, but Marchand signaled to the Panthers — and maybe his teammates — that they were in this fight until the end.

While the rough stuff is supposed to favor the Panthers, the B’s tied it again at 15:59. Marchand created a turnover on the forecheck to get the Panthers chasing. The puck eventually came around to McAvoy on the right wall. He made a move to control it and then found a wide-open Pastrnak in front of the net. He was able to just get it over Bobrovsky’s left pad for his 45th goal and 100th point on the season. Pastrnak became the first Bruin in 30 years to post back-to-back 100-point seasons since Adam Oates did it from 1992-94.

The B’s were playing some decent hockey in the third period until one mistake blew up on them. On a promising looking rush, Charlie Coyle attempted a shot from deep on the right wing that missed the net and sent the Panthers off on an odd-man rush. Carter Verhaeghe beat Swayman with a wrister from the left circle at 9:53.

The Panthers threw the B’s a life-line when Kevin Stenlund slashed McAvoy but Marchand wiped out the power play with an interferen­ce penalty. The B’s got another chance when Rodrigues shot the puck into the crowd with 5:43 left in the third. This time, they didn’t reject it.

For the third time in the game, the B’s tied it again. As they were changing out power -play units, Marchand danced into the zone through a couple of Panthers and fed Frederic for a one-timer goal from the slot with 4:22 left in regulation, his career-high 18th goal.

Then the B’s got some puck luck to take their first lead with 2:31 remaining in regulation. Pastrnak whipped a pass toward the net that went off Zacha’s skate and in for the 4-3 lead.

“I saw that Pasta was looking for me before he got the puck so I was just trying to go to the back post and he hit me in the skates,” said Zacha.

The B’s don’t have long to enjoy this one. They travel across the state to take on the hot Tampa Bay Lightning on Wednesday. But it’s the kind of confidence­boosting win that could pay dividends down the road.

 ?? RHONA WISE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Boston Bruins center Charlie Coyle (13) watches teammate Brad Marchand and Florida Panthers defenseman Niko Mikkola fight during the second period. Boston rallied for a 4-3 win.
RHONA WISE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Boston Bruins center Charlie Coyle (13) watches teammate Brad Marchand and Florida Panthers defenseman Niko Mikkola fight during the second period. Boston rallied for a 4-3 win.

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