Game-Breaker: The moment the ‘air came out of the balloon’ for the Bruins
For a time, it felt like the Boston Bruins could battle back in their most recent game against the Carolina Hurricanes. Instead, the road team instantly sucked the life out of TD Garden.
Tuesday night’s game-breaker between the Bruins and Hurricanes was the third Carolina goal by Jake Guentzel, which came after the B’s had gotten off to a hot start in the third period. The Bruins took eight of the first nine shots, but it wasn’t until the Hurricanes’ second shot of the period that the puck crossed the goal line.
It was at that moment, when Guentzel got credited with the goal after an unfortunate mishandle by the Bruins, that the game officially swung in the Hurricanes’ favor.
“I liked our first five minutes [of the third period], and as soon as the third goal went in it was kind of like the air came out of the balloon,” Montgomery said.
Six game point streak for Jake Guentzel & he just stays red hot for the Hurricanes! It’s 3-1 Carolina! #CauseChaos pic.twitter.com/JMcuMr2Zu4
— Zachary Martin (@OneTrueZach) April 10, 2024
Guentzel started the forward momentum for Carolina with a tight forecheck to stop Bruins defenseman Charlie McAvoy from an easy breakout. The first shot attempt by Sebastian Aho caromed to Pavel Zacha along the boards, where he made an ill-advised pass attempt across the high slot that ended up back on Aho’s stick.
That gave the ‘Canes second life. Seth Jarvis beat Danton Heinen in a corner battle to get the puck to ex-Bruin Dmitry Orlov, whose shot attempt turned into a rebound by Guentzel that settled the puck in the crease. Zacha tried to make a heads-up play to whack the puck out of danger, but it bounced off goaltender Jeremy Swayman and back off Zacha’s stick and in, gifting the Hurricanes a back-breaker.
The Bruins would grab a power play less than three minutes later, with one more chance to get back in it. But the Hurricanes once again popped the balloon, grabbing a shorthanded goal to make it 4-1. Montgomery felt that score was the product of prior deflation.
“Yeah, that’s what I thought,” Montgomery said. “I mean, we had life, right? We’re on a power play, you got seven minutes left, you score it’s going to be 3-2, but I thought that was the nail.”
The game-breaking moment of Tuesday night happened on the strength of the Hurricanes’ strength, which is their relentless forechecking, which has historically been a nemesis for the Bruins. It bit them at the Garden.
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However, it wasn’t so much of an issue for the B’s when they thrashed Carolina 4-1 last Thursday night at PNC Arena, arguably a harder venue to win. That wasn’t lost on McAvoy, who looked at the big picture when he spoke to reporters after the game. Tuesday’s game, especialy the game-breaking moment, represents an opportunity for the Bruins to figure out how to counteract Carolina’s last punch.
“We just played these guys [five] days ago, so that’s playoff hockey,” McAvoy said. “We beat them, and then we lost to them. That’s how a seven-game series works. So, if there’s anything to learn from this, or to use in context, it’s that this is playoff hockey.
“We’re going to see these teams again, and it’s who’s going to adapt, who’s going to be able to elevate, from beginning of series to end of series.”
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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.