The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Slump-busting Bruins oust Leafs, get another shot at Panthers

- By Kyle Hightower

BOSTON — Boston Bruins coach Jim Montgomery wanted to do something different with his team heading into a firstround Game 7 matchup with the Toronto Maple Leafs.

The Bruins were facing the prospect of blowing back-toback 3-1 leads in the opening round, and a sense of impending doom hung over the team.

Montgomery hoped a little change of scenery might do the trick. So instead of sleeping in their own beds ahead of the winner-take-all game Saturday night, they stayed at a hotel and took buses to TD Garden.

“The thinking was, we’re 2-5 at home the last two years in the playoffs, and what’s going to allow us to eliminate the noise?” Montgomery said.

He thought back to a visit he made to the New England Patriots’ spring minicamp last year. There he spoke with former coach Bill Belichick about the importance of limiting distractio­ns.

“It’s something that stuck with me. And it’s something that I’ve been preaching as the playoffs have been nearing,” he said.

It just may have saved Boston’s season.

The Bruins overcame a deficit to tie it in regulation, then David Pastrnak scored 1:54 into overtime, and the Bruins beat the Maple Leafs 2-1.

It was the kind of total team performanc­e Montgomery was aiming for since taking a 3-1 lead on Toronto.

It was also a slump-busting night for Pastrnak, who had a team-high four shots on goal after posting just two goals and two assists through six games. His puck handling was integral to jump-starting Boston’s offense in the third period and in overtime.

Boston moves into the next round with netminder Jeremy Swayman playing at nearly his highest level of the season. Since Montgomery stopped alternatin­g Linus Ullmark and Swayman in Game 3, Swayman hasn’t allowed more than two goals in a game.

“He was our best player in the series, and it’s not close,” Montgomery said.

It helped them narrowly avoid becoming the first NHL, NBA or Major League Baseball team to lose consecutiv­e bestof-seven series after holding a 3-1 lead.

Next up is another chance at redemption against a Florida Panthers team that rallied from 3-1 in last year’s first round to send home a Bruins team that set league records for wins and points in the regular season.

“That’s playoff hockey,” Montgomery said. “Last year had no bearing on how this was going to bear out. We knew that. It’s a storyline, and that’s part of what comes with playoffs.”

 ?? MICHAEL DWYER/AP ?? David Pastrnak and the Bruins celebrate his overtime goal to close out Game 7 and win their first-round playoff series against the Maple Leafs. The Bruins rallied from a 3-1 series deficit and will take on the Panthers next.
MICHAEL DWYER/AP David Pastrnak and the Bruins celebrate his overtime goal to close out Game 7 and win their first-round playoff series against the Maple Leafs. The Bruins rallied from a 3-1 series deficit and will take on the Panthers next.

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