Miami Herald

How Bobrovsky stays locked in and excels even when he faces very few shots

- BY JORDAN MCPHERSON jmcpherson@miamiheral­d.com

BOSTON

Sergei Bobrovsky knows he can control only so much. On any given night, the Panthers’ veteran goaltender could be challenged with nonstop shots on goal or face extended stretches with no action coming his way.

“I’m not choosing what they’re going to throw at me, what’s happening around me,” said Bobrovsky, a finalist this year for the Vezina Trophy given annually to the NHL’s best goaltender. “I try to keep my attention, keep my focus and stay with the moment.”

That is how he thrives. Take these past three games of the Panthers’ second-round playoff series against the Boston Bruins, all Florida wins, as a shining example.

Combined, Bobrovsky has faced just 50 shots on goal in the three games. The Panthers have held the Bruins to fewer than 10 shots on goal in eight of nine periods over the past three games — including five periods when Boston had five shots or fewer. This included just two shots on goal in the third period Sunday as Florida rallied for a 3-2 win at Boston’s TD Garden

to take a 3-1 lead in the best-of-7 series.

Bobrovsky gave up two goals in a five-shot first period — a one-timer by David Pastrnak on the power play and a Brandon Carlo shot from the point that trickled past him through traffic — before stopping all 13 shots he faced in the final two periods (11 in the second, just two in the third).

“Staying mentally focused — when you think about those words, you think about Sergei Bobrovsky right away,” said Panthers captain Aleksander Barkov, who scored the game-winning goal 7:31 into the third period Sunday. “He’s mentally focused. He’s ready. He’s prepared whenever. He’s huge for us. He’s our best player. He delivers every single night.”

It’s something one has to watch to truly appreciate, especially when he doesn’t have a high volume of shots to defend.

Consider this: Bobrovsky is 7-2 so far in the playoffs entering Florida’s potential series-clinching Game 5 against Boston at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Sunrise.

He and the New York Rangers’ Igor Shesterkin are the only goalies with seven wins so far this postseason. Bobrovsky’s goals-against average of 2.55 is the fourth best among starting goaltender­s still in the playoffs, behind only Dallas’ Jake Oettinger (2.12), Shesterkin (2.25) and Boston’s Jeremy Swayman (2.28).

But Bobrovsky’s save percentage is just .892 — for comparison, Swayman has a .930 save percentage, Shesterkin .927, Oettinger .919.

“He’s had this kind of really unusual playoffs,” Panthers coach Paul Maurice said. “What’s his record now? 7-2? And he has a sub-.900 save percentage.

“You know how sometimes plus-minus doesn’t tell you how a guy’s playing? Sometimes, the save percentage is just not accurate. He won’t like the second goal and that’s fine, but everything after that is world class. We had two shots in the third period given up, but there was also some close really ones and I think they missed one. I think he had a bigger impact on one. To be good at that time, that’s the key.”

Bobrovsky, 35, has been especially clutch late in games. In Florida’s seven wins, he has allowed just four third-period goals on 45 shots against in the final frame.

“[Goaltendin­g coach] Robbie Tallas tells me that Sergei is almost oblivious to statistics,” Maurice said. “The wins are the most important thing, and he’s at a point in his career where he should be oblivious to the stats. They don’t matter. His stats won’t be good, but his play is fantastic.”

REINHART UPDATE

Panthers All-Star and top-line winger Sam Reinhart did not play the final 15:40 on Sunday after taking a puck to the face early in the third period.

“He was bleeding a bucket on the way off,” Maurice said. “The first time he came out, I’m all over Dave DiNapoli, our athletic trainer, going, ‘What the hell is going on?’ ... The second time I barked at him, he just grabs my arm and says, ‘I’ve never seen one this bad.’”

Florida 0 1 2—3 Boston 2 0 0—2

First Period—1, Boston, Pastrnak 4 (DeBrusk, J.van Riemsdyk) 8:53 (pp) 2, Boston, Carlo 3 (unassisted) 15:12.

Penalties—Pastrnak, Bos (roughing), 3:56; Ekblad, Fla (interferen­ce), 8:45; Maroon, Bos (high sticking), 11:55.

Second Period—3, Florida, Lundell 1 (Rodrigues, Ekblad) 14:48. Penalties— Verhaeghe, Fla (tripping), 1:55.

Third Period—4, Florida, Bennett 2 (Lundell, Rodrigues) 3:41 (pp) 5, Florida, Barkov 5 (Okposo, Tarasenko) 7:31.

Penalties—Lindholm, Bos (interferen­ce), 1:42; bench, Bos (delay of game), 3:41; Lindholm, Bos (interferen­ce), 7:58; Geekie, Bos (goaltender interferen­ce), 10:31; Forsling, Fla (tripping), 13:38; Ekblad, Fla (interferen­ce), 19:23.

Shots on Goal—Florida

Boston 5-11-2—18.

Power-play opportunit­ies—Florida

6; Boston 1 of 4.

Goalies—Florida Bobrovsky 7-2-0 (18 shots-16 saves). Boston Swayman 5-4-1 (41-38).

A—17,850 (17,565). 15-13-13—41.

T—2:39.

Maurice said Reinhart is fine should be available for Game 5.

Jordan McPherson: 305-376-2129, @J_McPherson1­126

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 ?? WINSLOW TOWNSON USA TODAY Sports ?? The Panthers’ Sergei Bobrovsky, turning away a shot Sunday night in Boston, has faced just 50 shots on goal in the past three games, all Florida victories over the Bruins.
WINSLOW TOWNSON USA TODAY Sports The Panthers’ Sergei Bobrovsky, turning away a shot Sunday night in Boston, has faced just 50 shots on goal in the past three games, all Florida victories over the Bruins.

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