The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Bruins edge Flyers on late goal by Stafford

-

Drew Stafford scored with 5.6 seconds left in the third period when his dump-in shot tipped off Philadelph­ia defenseman Brandon Manning’s stick, lifting the Boston Bruins to a 2-1 win over the Flyers.

It was a low-percentage chance that might just help the Boston Bruins reach the playoffs for the first time in three seasons.

It also could lead to the end of Philadelph­ia’s hopes.

“Ninety-nine out of 100 it’s not going to go in,” Boston’s Drew Stafford said of his dump-in shot that went into the net with 5.6 seconds left after it tipped off Philadelph­ia defenseman Brandon Manning’s stick, giving the Bruins a 2-1 win over the Flyers on Saturday in Boston.

David Pastrnak had a power-play goal, and Tuukka Rask made 26 saves for Boston, which improved to 10-3 under interim coach Bruce Cassidy, who replaced fired Claude Julien on Feb. 7.

“Hey, you never know,” Cassidy said. “You never know, throwing it at the net. It’s lucky. We all know that. A heartbreak­er for Philly and a benefit for us.”

Jordan Weal had the Flyers’ goal, and Steve Mason stopped 25 shots. Philadelph­ia may be sliding out of a chance at a playoff berth with its ninth loss in 14 games (5-8-1).

“It’s a tough loss. We played a pretty darn good road game,” Flyers coach Dave Hakstol said. “It’s tough to go away without any points.”

Stafford had the puck along the right boards, spun around and just shot a seemingly harmless attempt at the net. Manning skated in front and it slipped past Mason after hitting his stick. The defenseman put his hand to his helmet in disbelief.

Manning said it was just his instinct to attempt to block the shot.

“That’s just the way hockey is or sport or whatever,” he said. “Unfortunat­ely it was a big moment, big time of our season right now. It’s tough right now, but you’re moving away from it, I guess.”

When asked if he wished he would have done anything differentl­y, he said: “What do you think? It’s the game-winning goal and biggest time of the year.”

Trailing 1-0 early in the second, Philadelph­ia tied it when Weal scored out of a scramble. The score stood after a challenge by the Bruins, who felt the Flyers were offside.

Philadelph­ia controlled play for lengthy stretches in the second, holding the Bruins to four shots on goal. Many times during the game, chants of “Let’s Go Flyers!” could be heard echoing around the balcony seats.

Boston led 1-0 after a first period that featured solid end-to-end play, a couple of break-ins for good scoring chances, a long Flyers’ two-man advantage and a fight that saw Boston’s Matt Beleskey send Manning to the ice with a right-handed punch.

Pastrnak’s one-timed Patrice Bergeron’s pass by Mason for his 28th goal, making it 1-0 with 1:22 left in the period.

Rask made a splendid right-skate stop on Jakub Voracek, who collected a pass and broke in alone when the Bruins were caught on a line change midway into the period. Mason dropped to stop Pastrnak’s close bid a few minutes later.

Philadelph­ia had seven shots on goal during the power plays that lasted 1 minute, 43 seconds the best was Wayne Simmonds’ rebound from the edge of the crease that Rask made a pad save on.

Lundqvist out

Rangers goaltender Henrik Lundqvist is out two to three weeks with a lower-body injury.

The team recalled goaltender Magnus Hellberg from Hartford of the AHL on an emergency basis.

Lundqvist played New York’s entire game Tuesday against Florida and stopped 43 of 45 shots. Now he’ll miss about six to 10 games because of this unspecifie­d lower-body ailment

The 35-year-old is 3017-2 with a 2.65 goalsagain­st average and .913 save percentage in 49 starts and 51 appearance­s this season.

With Lundqvist out, the Rangers are expected to lean heavily on backup Antti Raanta down the stretch. They’re in fourth place in the strong Metropolit­an Division and in no danger of missing the playoffs.

 ?? MICHAEL DWYER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Bruins’ David Pastrnak (88) celebrates his goal during the first period against the Flyers Saturday.
MICHAEL DWYER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Bruins’ David Pastrnak (88) celebrates his goal during the first period against the Flyers Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States