USA TODAY US Edition

Bruins win old school way

- Kevin Allen

Boston rallies to go one up on Blues

BOSTON – The Bruins’ 4-2, comefrom-behind win against the Blues resulted from a game plan that would have worked as well in the 1950s as it did in this year’s Stanley Cup Final opener.

The Bruins didn’t panic when they fell behind 2-0 Monday night. They were relentless. Defenseman Torey Krug even lost his helmet and delivered an old school, Original Six-style hit on Robert Thomas with the game on the line in the third period.

“He just got a haircut a couple of days ago, so he was looking pretty good,” Bruins teammate David Pastrnak said of the moment.

Both teams were playing so well coming into the Stanley Cup Final that it was impossible to say which team had more momentum.

But Boston is clearly that team now heading into Wednesday’s Game 2. The Bruins have won eight consecutiv­e postseason games and have outscored the opposition 32-11 in that span.

“I think we can be even better, and we are going to have to be,” said St. Louis winger David Perron.

The Bruins showed rust after not playing a game for 10 days between the Eastern Conference final and the Stanley Cup Final. The Blues claimed a 2-0

lead on goals by top-line players Brayden Schenn and Vladimir Tarasenko.

However, the Bruins rediscover­ed their game in the second period when they outshot St. Louis 18-3.

“We weren’t perfect, but I don’t think we’re ever expected to be perfect,” said

defenseman Connor Clifton, who scored Boston’s first goal. “We pushed back.”

Brad Marchand did contribute an empty-netter, but the Bruins won this game on the strength of two goals by defensemen (Clifton and Charlie McAvoy) and a game-winner by fourth-line center Sean Kuraly. The Bruins’ balanced scoring has been crucial to their success since the first round.

“If you get contributi­ons from your back end, if you get contributi­ons from your bottom-six forwards, you’re going to win a lot of hockey games,” Krug said.

Both teams have depth, but Boston’s showed more in Game 1. Boston coach Bruce Cassidy used his No. 1 line (Marchand, Patrice Bergeron and Pastrnak) against the Blues’ No. 1 line (Jaden Schwartz, Schenn and Tarasenko). But then Cassidy assigned the Kuraly line to check the Schenn line and the team had more success.

“They use everybody,” St. Louis coach Craig Berube said. “They use all six D. They are a good team, but we are a good team, too.”

Krug’s helmet-less hit also seemed to give the Bruins a lift. “It’s part of a game — momentum swings,” Krug said. “It gives your team a boost of energy. I don’t know what they were feeling on their bench, but if it pushes them back and catches them off-guard, it’s great for our team. I think it gave our team energy.”

Krug said he didn’t know if it was smart to charge down the ice to make the hit without a helmet, but he did it.

“You don’t want to mess with that guy,” Clifton said. “Don’t make that guy mad.”

 ?? SEAN KURALY BY WINSLOW TOWNSON/USA TODAY ??
SEAN KURALY BY WINSLOW TOWNSON/USA TODAY
 ?? BOB DECHIARA/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Bruins forward Sean Kuraly celebrates after scoring during the third period Monday against the Blues in Boston.
BOB DECHIARA/USA TODAY SPORTS Bruins forward Sean Kuraly celebrates after scoring during the third period Monday against the Blues in Boston.

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