The Boston Globe

Bruins sink fast in East showdown

Brazeau goal ties it in third before Rangers turn tide

- By Jim McBride

Celine Dion stole the show.

The Rangers stole the two points.

The Bruins’ three-game winning streak came to a crashing halt at the hands of the Broadway Blueshirts, who danced out of town Thursday night with a 5-2 win, disappoint­ing the majority of the 17,000-plus at TD Garden.

That included Dion, the internatio­nal superstar songstress, who showed up in the Bruins dressing room to deliver the starting lineup and then several times on the Jumbotron, eliciting the loudest cheers of the night.

Even with the loss, the Bruins (41-15-15, 97 points) remained on top of the NHL heap, with the Rangers (46-20-4, 96) right on their heels in the Eastern Conference and overall standings.

Despite looking sluggish for large stretches, Boston was in it for most of the game, knotting the score at 2 just 3:17 into the third on Justin Brazeau’s third goal in two games. Just 40 seconds later, however, Adam Fox went top shelf to beat Jeremy Swayman and restore the lead for New York, which closed it with a pair of emptynette­rs, including the final one by Artemi Panarin, which capped his seventh career hat trick and third this season.

The Rangers played a more physical and more connective game, taking time and space away from the Bruins in all three zones.

“Yeah, they checked really well. I don’t think we checked well enough. I don’t think we competed hard enough on pucks,” said Bruins coach Jim Montgomery, who added he was “surprised and disappoint­ed” by his club’s effort.

The Bruins squashed an early Rangers power play (Brandon Carlo for high-sticking) and

seemed buoyed by the kill, jumping on the visitors for a good stretch. They gained their own man advantage (Fox for highsticki­ng) and peppered Jonathan Quick with several testers.

Trent Frederic, on a nice feed by Brazeau working out of Gretzky’s office, had a pair of swipes on Quick (24 saves) before Jake DeBrusk pounced on a second rebound. The red-hot winger glided across the top of the slot and ripped one past Quick’s left pad just four seconds after the penalty expired.

Panarin tied it up with the first of his two gift-wrapped goals of the second period.

Danton Heinen tried to swipe at the puck but Panarin intercepte­d. The crafty winger closed on Swayman (26 saves) and, using Pavel Zacha as a screen, popped one into the net.

“It was kind of a broken play and then it went through a couple skates, so one that I could work on seeing through traffic and again, another opportunit­y that I can work on to make a save,” Swayman said.

Panarin’s second present came off Hampus Lindholm’s stick. As the defenseman closed on Panarin, he got a stick on a pass and the puck struck DeBrusk, who was diving across the slot to prevent the back-door relay, and it slid between Swayman’s pads to give the Rangers a 2-1 lead with just 35 seconds left in the period.

Brazeau pulled the Bruins even after he fought off being mugged by K’Andre Miller on Quick’s front porch to bang home a Marchand rebound.

Fox’s answering goal was a gut punch from which the Bruins never recovered. Even with Swayman pulled for an extra skater in the final minutes they couldn’t dominate, leading to goals from Mika Zibanejad and Panarin, who now has 41 on the season.

“I think overall we look over the game for 60 minutes, I think they outworked us a little bit,” Lindholm said. “I think we weren’t really playing our ‘A’ game and even the nights when we don’t play our ‘A’ game, I think we’re usually pretty good at getting into winning those battles and stuff, and that’s something we kind of lacked a little bit here in this game.”

DeBrusk was at a loss for why Boston couldn’t match the Rangers’ emotion.

“We knew it was a big game,” he said. “Obviously, they’ve had our number — we haven’t beaten these guys [0-2-1], so I don’t think the emotions were really a question coming in. I think it was just a matter of just answering their push, which we didn’t do.”

For Quick, the Milford, Conn., native and former UMass star, it was career win No. 391, tying him with Ryan Miller for most among American-born goalies.

The Bruins next will hit the road for six games, the last five of which are against teams fighting for playoff spots or slots. Swayman believes the trip will have its benefits.

“I have no doubt in this team. There’s no doubt in this locker room and again, when we lose, when we win, there’s opportunit­ies to grow,” he said. “Experience is gained with work and we’re going to do that on this road trip. So yeah, we’re looking forward to it.”

 ?? JOHN TLUMACKI/GLOBE STAFF ?? The Rangers’ Artemi Panarin beat Bruins goalie Jeremy Swayman twice in the second period and finished a hat trick into an empty net.
JOHN TLUMACKI/GLOBE STAFF The Rangers’ Artemi Panarin beat Bruins goalie Jeremy Swayman twice in the second period and finished a hat trick into an empty net.
 ?? JOHN TLUMACKI/GLOBE STAFF ?? The Bruins were a glum bunch after Mika Zibanejad scored into an empty net with 2:03 to play to give the Rangers a two-goal lead.
JOHN TLUMACKI/GLOBE STAFF The Bruins were a glum bunch after Mika Zibanejad scored into an empty net with 2:03 to play to give the Rangers a two-goal lead.
 ?? JOHN TLUMACKI/GLOBE STAFF ?? Artemi Panarin (left) bumped into Barclay Goodrow after finishing his hat trick for the Rangers.
JOHN TLUMACKI/GLOBE STAFF Artemi Panarin (left) bumped into Barclay Goodrow after finishing his hat trick for the Rangers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States