Bruins battle back, but fall in overtime to Flames
The Boston Bruins couldn’t stretch their winning streak to three games, as the Calgary Flames picked up a 3-2 overtime win over them at the Scotiabank Saddledome on Thursday night.

Feb 22, 2024; Calgary, Alberta, CAN; Calgary Flames defenseman Oliver Kylington (58) celebrates his goal with teammates against the Boston Bruins during the first period at Scotiabank Saddledome. Mandatory Credit: Sergei Belski-USA TODAY Sports
Sergei Belski-USA TODAY SportsThe Boston Bruins couldn't stretch their winning streak to three games, as they fell 3-2 in overtime to the Calgary Flames at the Scotiabank Saddledome on Thursday night. Nazem Kadri fired the game-winner for Calgary to cap a thrilling OT period.
The Flames drew first blood off the stick of Oliver Kylington, who beat goaltender Linus Ullmark from the high slot on a rush. Charlie Coyle would later get the equalizer, as he made Jacob Markstrom pay for aggressively handling the puck and turned a giveaway into a gift goal.
However, the Bruins couldn't get to the first intermission with the game knotted up. The Flames' Martin Pospisil crashed the net and buried an easy rebound to give his team the 2-1 lead after one period.
The teams battled to a stalemate in the second period. It was 2:33 into the third when Coyle scored his second tying goal of the game, as he slipped through the defense to handle a stretch pass off the boards by Anthony Richard. Coyle backhanded the puck home to tie the game 2-2.
The veteran forward is up to 20 goals on the season, the first time he's reached that mark since the 2015-16 campaign, when he was 23 years old.
Coyle just missed multiple chances at the hat trick, as the game ultimately ended up tied through regulation. Kadri's game-winning shot came off an odd-man rush up the left side.
Up Next: The Bruins only get one day off after the back-to-back. They'll play their third game in four nights on Saturday, when they take on the Canucks in Vancouver.
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Matt Dolloff is a writer and podcaster for 985TheSportsHub.com. Any opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect those of 98.5 The Sports Hub, Beasley Media Group, or any subsidiaries. Check out all of Matt's content.
Bruins dealt concerning news on defenseman Hampus Lindholm
When the Bruins take the ice for Wednesday's head-to-head with the Oilers up at Edmonton's Rogers Place, they will be without their left-side defensive rock, according to the team.
And that'll remain the case for the foreseeable future. That's because defenseman Hampus Lindholm, who left Monday's game with an injury after an awkward-looking collision to the left of Jeremy Swayman's net in the third period, is not even with the team right now, and has been tagged with a 'week-to-week' injury designation.
"Hampus is not on the trip," Bruins head coach Jim Montgomery confirmed following his team's morning skate. "He's week-to-week [and] will not play the four games on the trip.”
Now, the good news within that update is that Lindholm will not require surgery, and it's "not even an option" according to Montgomery.
But in the now, it does leave the Bruins down their second-best defenseman, and on a four-game swing that'll include showdowns with the third-best and fifth-best home offenses between the Oilers and Canucks.

BOSTON, MA - FEBRUARY 15: Hampus Lindholm #27 of the Boston Bruins checks Oliver Bjorkstrand #22 of the Seattle Kraken off the puck during the second period at TD Garden on February 15, 2024. (Winslow Townson/Getty Images)
In action for all 56 games this season, the 6-foot-4 Lindholm has recorded one goal and 19 points, along with a plus-19 rating, for the Bruins this season, and was being utilized in a defense-heavy role (and that may even be putting it lightly) opposite Brandon Carlo on the Black and Gold's second pairing.
Among a group of 92 NHL defensemen to play at least 800 five-on-five minutes this season, Lindholm ranked first in defensive-zone starts (198), and fifth in defensive-zone faceoffs (367). Lindholm also logged the 19th-most minutes among that group of 92, at 1,001:57 five-on-five minutes prior to his injury.
Expanding that to 'all situation' minutes, factoring in Lindholm's work on both the power play and penalty kill, Lindholm's total time on ice jumps up to 14th, at 1,327:25.
And that workload almost always saw Lindholm and Carlo go against the opposition's top offensive line.
In essence, the usage has been fast and furious for Lindholm.

Nov 25, 2023; New York, New York, USA; Boston Bruins defenseman Hampus Lindholm (27) looks to pass against the New York Rangers during the third period at Madison Square Garden. (Danny Wild/USA TODAY Sports)
And for as frustrating a year as Lindholm has had, at least when it's come to replicating last year's 53-point and plus-49 campaign, that's difficult usage to simply replace with a plug-and-play option.
Especially when looking at some of the game-to-game struggles the Bruins have dealt with elsewhere on the left side of their defense, with both Matt Grzelcyk and Derek Forbort struggling at various points this season.
But this is just the latest tough hand dealt to the left side of the defense, and with two options back in the mix for Boston ahead of Wednesday's stiff test against Connor McDavid's club.

Oct. 3, 2023; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston Bruins defenseman Mason Lohrei (6) gets set for a face-off during overtime against the Washington Capitals at TD Garden. (Bob DeChiara/USA TODAY Sports)
When it come to 'replacing' Lindholm, it appears that the freshly-recalled Mason Lohrei will be the first man up for the Bruins, as he skated to the left of Carlo at Wednesday's morning skate.
Lohrei is back with the Bruins after a seven-game excursion back down in Providence, where he scored one goal and seven points, and returns to the NHL with three goals and six points in 27 NHL games this season.
Now, this isn't too dissimilar from when we first saw Lohrei, as the Bruins had to throw him into a top-four role against the Maple Leafs in his NHL debut.
Per NaturalStatTrick, the Lohrei-Carlo pairing has played almost 59 minutes of five-on-five time together. Over that span, the Bruins have outscored the opposition 4-3 despite being outshot 32-27 and out-chanced 29-21.

Dec 15, 2023; Elmont, New York, USA; Boston Bruins defenseman Parker Wotherspoon (29) during the second period against the New York Islanders at UBS Arena. (Brad Penner/USA TODAY Sports)
The Bruins will also dress Parker Wotherspoon for tonight's contest, though it appears that his reintroduction to the Boston lineup will come on the right side, with Wotherspoon slated to skate in Kevin Shattenkirk's spot to the right of Derek Forbort.
Lindholm's absence, meanwhile, means that the Bruins will not have a defenseman who appears in every game this season. The list of Boston skaters to appear in every game this season is also down to just four, with Charlie Coyle, Trent Frederic, Brad Marchand, and David Pastrnak the only players to go 56-for-56 thus far.