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Thursday, October 17, 2019

The NHL In October Doesn't Get More Exciting Than That 4-3 Shootout Loss for the B's to Tampa

No matter what time of the year it is (fall, winter or spring), you can always bet that whenever the Bruins (5-1-1) and Lightning (4-2-1) meet up, it is going to be a hell of a game. Yes, it was the end of a road trip for Tampa Bay and Halloween is still weeks away but tonight at TD Garden it felt like an Eastern Conference Final contest instead of game seven of the regular season for both clubs. Boston coughed up a pair of one-goal leads but also rallied late in the third period to tie it before a crazy (but scoreless) overtime followed by a four-round shootout. The Lightning came out on top 4-3 in this first of four meetings between arguably the two best teams in the Atlantic Division, maybe Eastern Conference and possibly the entire NHL.

The B's were going for a 3-0 start on their inaugural homestand of the season but Tampa had other plans. Boston's top line (all 3 goals) and power play (3-for-5) continued to produce at an incredible level but conversely, their secondary scoring not to mention quality scoring chances that they allowed continued to be real issues for them. Coming off a career-high four goals on Monday vs. Anaheim (5-2-0), Pasta picked right up where he left off with a power play strike at 9:34 of the first period for an early 1-0 Bruins lead. Bergeron found the loose puck and sent it over to him for his team-leading seventh goal of the season. Torey Krug had the secondary assist to what is guaranteed to be the NHL's first star of the week. Tampa Bay answered with the dictionary definition of a back-breaking (regular season) goal. With 0.8 seconds left in the opening frame, Brayden Point got behind Boston's defense and used a forehand shot to go top shelf on Tuukka Rask (33 saves, 3-0-1). His third goal of the season was assisted by Yanni Gourde and Victor Hedman.

Brad Marchand hit his second post of the contest in the second period before Tampa Bay made the unfortunate mistake of putting Boston's lethal power play unit back on the ice. This time Pastrnak was the playmaker as his pass towards the net was redirected in by Bergeron at 7:26 for the 2-1 advantage. Marchand had the second assist on Bergeron's second goal of the season. It didn't take long though for the Lightning to strike back (sorry) as Mathieu Joseph collected a rebound on the doorstep and put it in the net at 10:32 for his second goal of the season. Harvard's Alex Killorn and Eric Cernak had the helpers there.

In the third period, Tampa Bay took its first lead of the game at 15:13 as former BU star Kevin Shattenkirk's shot went through Zdeno Chara's giant legs and past a screened Rask. Already up to four goals on the season, Shattenkirk has gotten his Lightning career off to a very fast start. Steven Stamkos and Point had the assists on the go-ahead goal that left the Garden pretty quiet for a few moments. Somehow Tampa Bay made another mental error as Anthony Cirelli was called for tripping which led to the tying power play goal by Pastrnak. Andrei Vasilevskiy (34 saves, 4-1-0) was under siege and couldn't do anything to stop Pasta's quick release from in close and through a host of bodies. Marchand and Krug had the assists at 16:55.

Boston's first overtime of the season did not result in a goal but it continued the theme of end-to-end high level action. The B's outshot the Lightning 5-3 but Tampa Bay held on to get to the shootout. The first three shooters for both teams (Hedman, Charlie Coyle, Point, Pasta, Nikita Kucherov and Marchand) all failed to score before Stamkos finally beat Rask up high with a filthy shot. Jake DeBrusk had a chance to tie it with a shootout goal on his 23rd birthday but he flubbed his shot so no presents for him.

The schedule does no favors for the Black and Gold the next week as they go to Toronto (4-3-1) on Saturday night (7, NESN)-their first matchup since Game 7 of the first round last spring-then the Maple Leafs come here on Tuesday (7, NESN). The next game isn't until Saturday night (7, NESN) but it's another doozy as the Blues (3-1-3) return to the scene of their first Stanley Cup in franchise history. I would assume that Rask will play one of the Toronto games with Jaroslav Halak (2-1-0) getting the other. The Leafs have allowed twice as many goals as the Bruins this season (28-14) so this weekend is a good time for Boston's struggling second and third lines to get untracked and build their confidence back up.














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