Posts Tagged ‘Montreal Canadiens’

MONTREAL CANADIENS HEAD COACH JACQUES MARTIN
On the win tonight…
I thought it was a good team effort tonight. Great team, they’ve got a well-balanced hockey club, and we knew we’d be in a battle, especially in the first period. I think our goalie made some key saves that kept us in the game, and gave us a chance to battle back and play much better after.

On winning back-to-back games…
I think our special teams have been better. Tonight our penalty kill did a good job, but also our goaltending has picked up. I think as a team we’ve played better defensively and getting some success.

On Tomas Plekanec’s game tonight…
Well I think Tomas [Plekanec] gave us a strong game. When you play the Bruins you’re in a battle, and I think overall he had a strong performance. That was a big goal. It was a real nice play on the forecheck, but a real good pass by Josh [Gorges] to move the puck quickly to Brian [Gionta] and then [Tomas] Plekanec to score.

On the Canadiens taking a lot of penalties tonight…
I think we probably deserved our penalties, but I think there might have been some in the third that weren’t called, so we’ll look at the tape and analyze it.

On Erik Cole’s game tonight…
Yeah, I think I really liked his line. They got a big goal. They got the first goal for us to tie the game, which was big, and we got the winning goal out of [Tomas] Plekanec’s line tonight. I thought in the third period when there was no penalty, our four lines were strong, and that was important.

On Mathieu Darche’s net-front presence tonight…
I think he did a real nice job there. It was a good play by [Jaroslav] Spacek to throw the puck right at [Erik] Cole, to tip it in.

On the altercations between P.K. Subban and Brad Marchand
I think some of those things happen sometimes.

On if it bothers him that P.K. Subban had nine penalty minutes because of those altercations…
Sometimes those things happen.

KEVIN HARRIMAN

MONTREAL CANADIENS FORWARD ERIK COLE
On getting back to back wins
I think the biggest thing is that, maybe it’s a good thing that we won last night and had to get right back on it again tonight and play, and not have a few days to pat ourselves on the back and think that things are just going to happen for us. So, we got off to a slow start tonight but worked our way back into the game, and it’s another big two points. But at the same time, you know, wins don’t matter unless you keep winning, so we’re just going to have to enjoy tonight, regroup, get some rest tomorrow, and be ready for a game on Saturday. It’s going to be a tilt.

On his goal…
Well, it was a bit of a 3 on 2 slash 3 on 3. They maybe over back checked a little bit on me. Davy [David Desharnais] was coming in behind me, made a good play over to Spacho [Jaroslav Spacek], it was just out of his reach, but he took a glance over his shoulder as he was heading to the puck on the wall, and I had yelled for it as it was going to him the first time, so he kind of glanced around and knew as to my whereabouts, and just turned around and fired a good shot right on the ice, and I was able to get a stick on it. And Darchy [Mathieu D’Arche] did a great job up front.

On playing in the Garden as a Hab…
No, it’s the old [Hartford] Whaler franchise so, it’s not, I think obviously there is the history and the rivalry here and everything but I didn’t feel like it was overbearing.

On fitting in in Montreal…
Yeah, it’s slowly getting there, for sure. It’s been almost a month now of the regular season so I feel like I’m gaining some confidence but still feel like I got more. And hopefully I will continue to get better.

On playing against Joe Corvo
Yeah, I yapped him when he got me on that, I turned hard up the ice and he had a good stick position on me. And what can I say, he knows how to defend me because we are so close, but it’s a good situation for him here and I think it’s a real good fit for him. And I think that he can do some great things for this group.

KEVIN HARRIMAN

STARTING GOALTENDERS: Thomas (3-3-0, 2.16 GAA, .926 Save %) vs. Price (2-4-2, 2.86 GAA, .887 Save %). Thomas is 10-14-4 (3.04 GAA, .906 Save %) in 29 career appearances against the Canadiens while Price is 13-4-2 (2.71 GAA, .915 Save %) in 19 appearances against the Bruins.

SELLOUT STREAK: The Bruins enter today’s game having sold out their last 90 consecutive games at the TD Garden, including regular season and playoffs.

FIVE B’S DONATE 5K EACH FOR TROOPS: Johnny Boychuk, Andrew Ference, Nathan Horton, Milan Lucic and Dennis Seidenberg will each donate $5,000 so that military members and their families can attend the Bruins/Devils game on Tuesday, November 15.  November 15 is “Military Appreciation
Night” at the Garden and the Bruins will honor military members and their families throughout the
evening.

RIVALRY RENEWED: The Bruins and Habs combined for 10 fighting  majors during their six 2010-11 regular season meetings, which is the most fights Boston had against any single team last year. David
Krejci’s two career NHL fights came last season against Montreal, including one against current teammate Benoit Pouliot. When the two teams squared  off on February 9, 2011, there were six fights (including one between  Tim Thomas and Carey Price), seven misconducts, 45 penalties and 182
total penalty minutes.

MCQUAID VS. THE HABS: If Bruins defenseman Adam McQuaid plays tonight, it will be his first game action since suffering a  head/neck injury on October 12 against Carolina (4 games). McQuaid has scored
four goals in his career, three of which have come against the Habs.

HOME AND HOME: The Bruins and Canadiens will meet again on Saturday, October 29. The game will be the first of three visits to the Bell Centre for the Bruins this season.

CONNECTIONS: Benoit Pouliot played 118 games with the Habs (28-26=54 totals) from 2009-11 but was signed by Boston as a free agent on July 1, 2011…Claude Julien had  a record of  72-62-10-15 in 159 games behind the Montreal bench from 2003-06…Canadiens defenseman and Concord, MA native
Hal Gill played four seasons at Providence  College and was drafted by Boston in the eighth round (207th overall) of the 1993 NHL Entry Draft… Gill played 626 games (20-77-97 totals) from 1997-2006
with the B’s…Montreal’s Petteri Nokelainen played 90 games (7-6=13 totals)  for the B’s and was traded to Anaheim for Steve Montador on March 4,  2009…Brian Gionta played four seasons at Boston College,
winning a NCAA  National Championship in 2001 as the Eagles’ captain.

CANADIENS NOTEBOOK: Last night, the Habs defeated the Philadelphia Flyers by a score of 5-1 at
the Bell Centre, for the 100th win of Carey Price’s career. Max Pacioretty led Montreal’s offense with two goals and an assist… Tonight marks the first  time this season Montreal has played on back-to-back nights. They went 6-7-3 in the second game of back-to-backs last season… In 10 career games against
the Bruins, Mike Cammalleri has 7-4=11 totals… One week ago today, Hal Gill  played in his 1000th career NHL game. For his career, Gill has 35-137=172 totals and 917 PIM in 1003 NHL games.

SPECIAL TEAMS: The B’s are tied for 21st in the NHL on the power play, going 4 for 31 (12.9%), and 9th on the  penalty kill (29 for 33 kills, 87.9%). The Habs are 27th on the power play (4  for 37, 10.8%),
and 19th on the penalty kill (32 for 39 kills, 82.1%).  Montreal has yet to surrender a power play goal on the road this season (16 for 16 kills).

KEVIN HARRIMAN

Thursday, October 27, 2011

BOSTON BRUINS HEAD COACH CLAUDE JULIEN PREGAME PRESS BRIEFING
On the significance of playing Montreal…
I think it wouldn’t matter who- honestly- who was here right now. There obviously has to be a sense of urgency from our hockey club to turn things around so, does Montreal bring probably extra motivation, there’s been a rivalry there for years. So let’s not be hypocritical about it and say well, it’s the same for them, trying to do the same thing so we got two teams here trying to find their winning ways.

On the status of Adam McQuaid
He’s been cleared to go so we’ll have seven D’s out there tonight [for warmups] but the possibility of him playing is probably very good.

On what he sees in the Chris Kelly line that is enabling it to click so well…
Just, they seem to be able to read off each other well. All three players are playing extremely well also as individuals. You see Milan [Lucic] find his legs and you see the old Milan back as far as straight forward game, forechecking and making things happen because of that. Chris Kelly, as you all know, he’s so versatile in all areas of the game that we’ve put him in and Tyler [Seguin]‘s off to a great start and arguably our best forward so far this year.

On if McQuaid will play tonight…
He’s a good possibility.

On what effect he thinks the break in games has had on the team…
Well, I guess, the best way to find that out is see what we do here in the next couple of days. But it allowed us to get some mental breaks, mental rest which we know is important for us I think right now, having had a short summer.  The physical part is not an issue right now but the mental part is. We’re being challenged that way. I think our focus and our sense of urgency everything else right now is what has to fall into place so we had a couple of good days at practice and a couple of days of good rest so we hope that that combination will certainly help us turn things around.

On if he would consider McQuaid to be one of the guys who hasn’t yet found his game, based on how he was playing before the injury…
Well I guess- I’m certainly not the type of coach that wants to start  pointing fingers here. I’ve always been supportive of the players and would rather have the finger pointed my way than at them. I’m going to help them find their way individually and as a team so probably, you guys have seen Adam as much as I have and you could probably make that assessment yourself without me making any big comments here.

On if there is something about McQuaid’s game that the team has missed in his absence…
Yeah, obviously his experience when you compare him to the other two guys and he’s a very, very physical player, great at winning battles in the corners and when he’s on top of his game he makes a good first pass, keeps his game simple but very effective. That’s what Adam’s brought to this team and that’s why Adam was a big part of us winning last year- because he brought that night in, night out, so he’s certainly not a guy that is being overlooked because of his style.

On if he talked to Benoit Pouliot about keeping his emotions in check while playing against his old team…
Well, no I don’t think you go into a big meeting with this guy. Sometimes it’s just a couple of words, just you know, don’t try and do too much, go out there and play your game and our game and everything will be fine. So do you relax him a little bit? You help him through it, but I think he also knows that he’s motivated for this game.  It’s- again it’s not a big secret to see a player play against his old team for the first time and really want to do well so it’s about making sure he channels his emotions in the right way.

On if he puts stock into how the team reacts when they’re playing an opponent coming off another game the previous night….
Well, there’s no doubt you have to have a good start and a team that’s played two games and is going to play two games in two nights wants to make sure that they take care of that first period and make sure they stay in the game and handle that barrage that the team that’s fresh is giving them. Every team’s going to handle it his own way. I know that we have to have a good start, but we also have to start playing with the lead here and that’s something that we’ve failed to do now for many games.

On how he would describe last year’s series with Montreal…
It was a great series in the playoffs, that’s one thing I can tell you. A seven game series and it went back and forth and certainly gave people a lot of highs and a lot of lows. When you lose the first two games at home there’s a lot of highs at one end and a lot of lows at this end here and then we were able to turn those things around and we found a way to win. And that’s certainly one of the things that made us believe that we had potential to go all the way. Because, you know, you have to have breaks along the way in the playoffs and things have to go your way a little bit at times and they did. We knew how hard it was to win in Montreal and it wasn’t easy to go there and win the next two games. But overall I think people like watching those two teams play; there seems to be a lot of emotion in those games so at the end of the day, we won and that’s basically the way I see things and whether they were part of helping us succeed, that’s up to you guys to decide.

On the irony that the first sign of snow in the weather forecast comes when Montreal arrives in Boston…
Is it snowing? Yeah, I haven’t – I’ve seen a lot of rain this morning so I don’t know. That’s a topic that I haven’t really thought about.

On if the team might be preoccupied with concentrating on Max Pacioretty tonight…
Well, I don’t know. I’ll- I’m surprised it took that long for that question to come out but I can tell you that honestly, the one thing we’re happy about- and that would be for anyone else- is that he’s healthy. As a player in the league you don’t want to see somebody end his career on an unfortunate accident but what you want to see is a player come back and be healthy. And as far as that’s concerned, he’s healthy, we’ve turned the page and now it’s time to move on.

Forwards: Campbell, Caron, Clark, Hamill, Horton, Marchand, Paille, Pouliot, Sauve, Seguin, Thornton, Whitfield 
 Defensemen: Corvo, Chara, McKelvie, McQuaid, Kampfer, Warsofsky

Goaltenders: Khudobin, Rask

 

BOSTON BRUINS QUOTES
FREE AGENCY CONFERENCE CALL

BOSTON BRUINS FORWARD BENOIT POULIOT
On his initial thoughts on joining the Stanley Cup Champions…
I’ve heard a lot, you know, throughout the year, with playing in Montreal [against] Boston, you know, a big rivalry. They always do well in the playoffs. This year, especially winning the Cup was a huge thing.

On his flexibility and ability to move up and down the lineup…
My first year in Montreal, when I got there, I played on the second line the whole year and it went well, [this] year was a whole different story, by starting on the third line, fourth line, up and down like that. I did the job well on the third line. It’s a little different but at the same time it’s good for my game, you know, it shows that I can do. I can maybe be a top two-line guy or maybe play on the third line, do the same thing there. So I learned a lot from it, playing a little bit everywhere this year, and it helped during my game, with my game.

On if joining a strong Bruins lineup is daunting and if he looks forward to competing to prove himself…
For sure, but the thing is, too, it’s part of why I love Boston. They have three awesome [lines], all four lines can roll pretty easily. All the guys are very good there, so it’s something I’m looking forward to, you know. Sometimes, you know, you go to the third or fourth line anyways, you still play with good players. So it’s going to be awesome, it’s going to be fun, and I just can’t wait to show up at camp and prove to Mr. Julien that I can do the job and have his trust.

On if there are any members of Boston’s roster that he’s looking forward to playing with…
Yeah, I know Patrice [Bergeron] a little bit, we’ve got the same agents and stuff, so I know him a little. I haven’t really talked to him in a couple of years, but it’s going to be — I’m looking forward to [it] you know, they have so many good players that it’s hard to name a couple, but it’s going to be fun. Every line’s got some good players and I’m just looking forward to that.

On joining the Bruins as a former Canadien…
Not too worried, actually. You know what, it’s part of the game, it’s part of the business, it’s what you have to do. Now I’m on the Boston Bruins and I’m going to enjoy every moment of it and try to help the team out as much as I can, and this is my team now. So I’m not looking to the past, I’m looking in the present, and what’s going to happen later on, when the camp starts. So I’m not too [worried]. Yeah we play Montreal often, which is going to be fun, I’m not going to lie, I’ll love it, but I’m a Bruin now and that’s what it is.

On playing in Boston and if he looks forward to that…
Yeah, the atmosphere’s awesome. When we played, the first round playoffs [was] awesome and all throughout the year. It’s a big rivalry [with] Montreal, but even though I would be on Montreal, just coming to Boston would be fun to play. It’s a big sports city and they’ve been a good team for a few years now and I’m looking forward to joining them.

On what he is looking to improve upon in his game…
Yeah, for the summer-wise, it’s just, I try to gain weight every summer. My thing is to keep my weight up and try to get to camp as big as I can, as in shape as I can, for me it’s a little tougher to gain weight but then, at the same time, when I show up at camp I’ll be ready and yeah, that’s pretty much it.

On improving upon last season’s performance…
I can do more. Obviously, this year was a tough year, not saying that I didn’t really get the chance that I should have, but sometimes, you know, you want to be on the top two lines, you want to be a power player, especially when you’re playing well. And at times, I was playing well and sometimes it’s the coach’s decision and you can’t really do anything about it, you just have to keep playing. It’s just a thing about being consistent every night, being good, playing good, in practice and in games. It’s just a thing about, my game, I mean the game is fine, it’s just being able to compete every night and every time you step on the ice.

KEVIN HARRIMAN

By: Mark Harriman, Editor

PHILADELPHIA (April 30) – The Bruins and Flyers met for a Game 1 of a playoff series for the sixth time in their history this afternoon and the result was the same as the previous five meetings: a Boston victory. Only this time it was a 7-3 drubbing of Philly to kick off the festivities.

Bruins Halt Their 4 Game Playoff Skid Against Philly

David Krejci (two assists) and Brad Marchand scored two goals apiece in a lopsided game that saw Philly goaltender Brian Boucher pulled at 17:14 in the second period after giving up his fifth goal of the game. Helpers were aplenty, with blueliner Dennis Seidenberg (two) and Patrice Bergeron (three) also getting into the scoring act multiple times.

The Bruins’ Game 1 win streak dates back to the 1974 Stanley Cup Finals, though the Flyers took The Cup 4-2 and have won three of the previous five series, including last season’s disastrous four game collapse by Boston.

While Krejci wasn’t even born in 1974 , he vividly remembers last year’s conference semi-finals, when he went down in Game 3 with a season-ending wrist injury and had to watch as him teammates went down in ignominious defeat after jumping out to a 3-0 series lead.

Sitting at the press room podium after the game, Krejci admitted that while he tries to concentrate on the here and now, last season’s disappointment has its lingering effects.

“Yeah, kind of. I try not to think about what happened last year, but it’s in the back of my head,” he said while proudly wearing the team’s new 1980’s windbreaker, an award recently started by defenseman Andrew Ference for the player who has the best game.” So you don’t forget these things that often. But I try not to think about it almost at all. It’s hard but I just tried to stay focused for the game and my teammates helped me out today.”

The Bruins started this one fast and stay focused they did.

Krejci started off this puck-fest not even two minutes into the first period when he took a Nathan Horton pass and backhanded one past Boucher, much to the delight of Boston management, who let out a loud, but approving “Yes!” after their team took a 1-0 lead.

But Philly tied the game 1-1 at 11:02 on Danny Briere’s windmill shot past Tim Thomas with Horton vainly in tow.

Horton more than made up for that defensive lapse with 0:36 left on the clock in the first period when he grabbed his own rebound from a Dennis Seidenberg pass and flipped it around Boucher to grab some momentum heading into the first intermission.

But while Boston’s offense went on a roll in the second period and opened up a 5-1 lead, thanks to goals by Mark Recchi, Krejci and Marchand, the Bruins’ power play remained on life-support and the call has seemingly been made to administer Last Rites.

When they finished off Montreal earlier this week, the Bruins became the first team in NHL history to win a seven game series without scoring a power play goal, opening up an ungodly 0-21 streak. And after five more changes against the Flyers today down on Broad Street, the futility has stretched to 0-26.

In his pre-game press conference, Bruins coach Claude Julien was asked if he had found the answer to his powerplay over the past few days. “No comments,” he said with a wry smile and the slightest hint of a chuckle. “I said I wasn’t answering those questions anymore.”

And his team preferred to dwell on their positive performance on the afternoon, particularly that of Krejci.

“Yeah. Great game. Great way to start,” Nathan Horton said after the game. “(Krejci) definitely played amazing tonight and it showed on the score sheet, but off that he was pretty good for us……He is a special player. We want him to have the puck as much as possible and he creates so much off that. And he gives everyone else a chance to score and a chance to be in the play.”

“He was great all game tonight and it helped us a lot,” said assistant captain Patrice Bergeron (three assists), whose line was a positive factor on the ice after a somewhat lackluster Montreal series. “The whole line, I thought, was good.”

Over in the other locker room, Flyers goalie and Rhode Island native Brian Boucher was asked about the third and fourth goals he let up to Boston and he was candid in his response. “I let in so many, I can’t remember the third one. I can’t recall right now….So it’s not a good afternoon. But we move on and get ready for game two.”

In switching goalies from Boucher to Sergei Bobrovsky in the second period, it marked the fourth time in the past eight playoff games that Philly coach Peter Laviolette had his hand forced. “Certainly, you don’t want to do that, but tonight I think that just based on the way we played in front of our goaltender, we as a team deserve all of the responsibility as far as that goes. But it is certainly not where you want to be.”

Lori is a Bruins season ticket holder and the NHL Correspondent for BSD

 
BY LORI MITCHENER
Boston Sports Desk Hockey Correspondent
 
 

How much Groundhog Day can Bruins fans withstand?  All but Nathan Horton’s SECOND overtime game winning goal of the series against the Canadiens felt cursed with the haunts of hockey past.  A few soft goals (hold the hate mail), sloppy distribution of the puck, a turn over here or there; not to mention all the skating south and an inability to shoot the little black thing. Yeah we have seen that all before.  Indeed many of the chief critiques of the Bruins that put forth during the regular season, were alive and well in Round One.  It appeared as if the Black and Gold would yet again succumb to the Habs, and this season it would sting more than ever. 

Montreal highlighted a fear many have regarding the Bruins chances if they make it deep in the run for The Cup.  In the first two games the Habs neutralized home ice advantage and forced the Bruins to play their style of hockey.  Simply put, the Bruins could not keep pace with the greasers skating north-south circles around them.  If the Black and Gold go deep, it will look much worse than this I fear.    Claude if you are listening, you may have beat the groundhog this time, but if your squad has a chance to skate with the West, please use a Peverley, Kelly, Seguin line.

A POWER OUTAGE FOR THE BOOKS

While the Bruins managed to win four against the Canadiens, it was without a single power play goal.  Yes, they may be the best five on five, but this is the play offs and that simply will not do.  Special teams win playoff games.   A side note:  for the love of Stanley, if you are not going to score power play, the very least you could do is not let the opponent, pass the Maalox.  I believe the Bear from Boston lost a bet with the Bird from Baltimore and the Bruins may have the longest 0- XX in recorded sport, when history writes of the power play.  Yes the groundhog was laughing at us all as the Bruins failed with the man advantage, earning a playoff superlative most of us would like to forget (again).

THEN GAME 7 WAS HERE

And then it came to game seven, largely because the Black and Gold just did not have it in Game 6, or the groundhog made a deal with the officials.  When the Bruins went up 2 0 in the first, I actually did not want a third unanswered goal in the first.  No thank you, I had been there before and it ended with a six-year-old asking me if this meant we had to root for the Habs. 

  A three goal lead in the first would have been the warm up act for that rodent, taunting us all, reminding us that we live in Boston, where no lead is safe.  Being so close, with a comfortable lead, breeds complacency in Boston, and with lack- luster performances all series by our top goal scorers, it would have looked like more of the same.  Alas, forcing the faithful to muster through some more atrocious officiating, less than sanguine skating and a diving competition, would be the swan song, or at least a hiatus for Groundhog. 

HORTON, HORTON AND MORE HORTON, THANK YOU

While it may have been the ever streaky Nathan Horton finally getting hot at the right time and slapping the ticket to Philadelphia past Carey Price, there were a few signs that this squad was fed up with February second.  Michael Ryder no doubt wanted history to stop repeating itself by not only playing to his potential but also by revealing his net minding chops.  And finally, I would be remiss if I did not publically rescind, or at least amend some of my previous statements.

EATING CROW…..IT’S OK……

I’ll take my serving of crow now.  Actually I will do it happily, since now it is time for redemption.   The Montreal Canadiens are out Stanley Cup Playoffs and the Bruins won a game seven at home for the first time in my adult life.  I’d like to thank Andrew Ferrence for flipping off Les Habitants.  Actually, I would like to thank number 21 for several things:  standing up for what is right in the league and calling a spade a spade, despite the heat from Bruins Royalty; always defending your bruin brethren, if I learned anything from last season it is the value of having your teammate’s back.  Quite frankly, I think I speak for Bruins Nation when I say, “Phew, Ferrence can play in Phillie”.

2010 RE-PEAT ????

Tune in today to NBC at 3 to watch the Bruins redeem themselves for last year’s epic implosion on ice.  The Bruins are much better matched up against the Flyers than the Habs.  Skating north south all day will be full body.  Carcillo et al. will fly right into a Bruins trap, yes this team will be easily be goaded into the aggressive play of the Bruins, now if they can just suffer up a few power play goals.  A less than healthy Pronger and weak goal tending combined with Horton’s hot streak spreading like the flu through the lockerroom and Tim Thomas continuing his vezina ways will propel the Bruins past the Flyers in 5.   

Food for thought:  “We just got by the Sabres,  and Boston is Buffalo on Steriods”, said a Flyer insider.

Don’t mess with the Bear,  groundhog !.

B's had it all the way....

 
BY KEVIN HARRIMAN
Boston Sports Desk Publisher
 
It was just a First Round Eastern Conference quarterfinal round game-7. But on the other hand, it was so much more than that.
 
Boston’s Game-7 win over Montreal had a little bit for everyone in Bruins Nation and it gave this year’s version of the Bruins a little bit of relief. Coming into last night’s game, the Bruin’s had many things going against them. Consider the following:
 
1) Boston, when falling behind 0-2 in a seven-game series was 0-26
2) The Bruins had lost three consecutive Game 7′s dating back to 2008.
3) The last time Boston won a Game 7 was back in 1994..
4) No previous playoff team had ever advanced in a series without scoring a power play goal…
 
All that is now gone. Boston put them all behind them when Nathan Horton scored in overtime to give the Bruins a 4-3 win.
 
GM Deals Pay Off
It comes as no great surprise that Boston General Manager Peter Chiarelli is on the hott seat for his teams lack of production in the playoffs. A lost last night to Montreal may have sealed his fate (along with Claude Julien’s). Instead, the Bruins lived to play another night because of two-key players brought to Boston via trades by Chiarelli. Chris Kelly, acquired at this year’s trade deadline scored in the third period to give Boston a temporary 3-2 lead in the 3rd period before Montreal answered to tie it and send it into OT.
And in overtime, Horton netted his second overtime game-winner. Horton was acquired by Chiarelli last summer from Florida. Without those two players, lord only knows what the out-come might have been.
 
Bring On the Flyers…
For the second straight year, Boston and Philly will meet in the Eastern Conference Semi-Finals. This time, the Flyers have home-ice advantage. Game 1 will be played in Philly on Saturday at 3 pm.  No Bruins Fan will ever forget last year’s total collapse by the B’s who jumped out to a 3-0 lead in the series only to lose it in 7 games.. It is their third straight post-season advancing to the second round … That is their longest such stretch since a five-year span from 1988-1992 and is the third time in their playoff history that they have advanced to at least the second round for three consecutive post-seasons (also five straight post-seasons from 1976-1980). BOSTON NOW SECOND IN THE NHL IN OVERTIME GAMES..

The Bruins played their 111th lifetime playoff overtime game, which ranks second overall to Montreal’s 138 in NHL playoff history … They are now 46-62-3 lifetime overall in overtime with a 26-25-1 mark when those games are played home ice. The Canadiens played their NHL-record 138th lifetime playoff overtime game … They are now 75-60-3 lifetime overall in overtime with a 36-36-2 record when those games take place on the road. This was Boston’s fifth lifetime game seven decided in overtime and they are now 3-2 in those games … It was Montreal’s sixth lifetime game seven decided in overtime and they are now 3-3 in those games … This was the second game seven between these teams decided in overtime with each team winning one (5-4 Montreal win in 1979 SF series).

GAME SEVEN SHUTOUT STREAK VS. MONTREAL SNAPPED:

 Johnny Boychuk’s goal at 3:31 of the first period was the first game seven goal scored by Boston vs. Montreal since Ray Bourque scored the final goal of a 5-3 win on Apr. 29, 1994 vs. Patrick Roy … The Bruins had been shut out by Montreal in their two previous game sevens to tonight, a 2-0 setback in the 2004 CQF and a 5-0 loss in the 2008 CQF.