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Bruins melt down in 3rd period, lose 6-2 to Canadiens

Steve Conroy, Boston Herald on

Published in Hockey

BOSTON — After a terrific 40 minutes of hockey on Tuesday night between the Boston Bruins and Montreal Canadiens, the sellout TD Garden crowd was settling in for what they hoped would be another great chapter in this storied rivalry.

What they witnessed instead was a massive Bruin meltdown.

Amidst a flurry of penalties, the B’s gave up four third-period goals and lost to the Canadiens, 6-2, for their fourth straight loss (0-3-1).

Not a great way to head into the Christmas break.

The Canadiens broke a 2-2 tie at 7:04 of the third period on a flukish play. Nikita Zadorov’s stick snapped in his hands and created a turnover. Nick Suzuki broke in alone and Jeremy Swayman made a skate save but was in no position to stop the rebound attempt and Zach Bolduc scored.

Suzuki made minimal contact with Swayman and B’s coach Marco Sturm, who declined to challenge a waved off Bruin goal at the end of the second, decided to challenge this one.

It didn’t go his way, and disaster ensued. The B’s were charged a minor and then found themselves down two men when Tanner Jeannot was whistled for crosschecking. It was a ticky-tack call but it didn’t matter. On the two-man advantage, Cole Caufield made a mind-boggling move to tuck it between Swayman’s legs at 8:43.

The Canadiens weren’t done. With Montreal still on a one-man advantage, Hampus Lindholm was called for tripping and, at 10:06, Suzuki scored.

Juraj Slafkovsky added another one and what was once a terrific game turned into a blowout.

After the morning skate, Sturm made a declaration.

“I know my guys will be ready,” Sturm said. “I don’t know if we’re going to win, but they’ll be ready.”

It didn’t take long to see those words were not hollow. Just like the first meeting between the two teams, there were fisticuffs off the opening draw – and it was good one. Jeannot locked up with Josh Anderson and the two big men staged a lengthy brawl that had the TD Garden crowd on its feet. Both landed some shots until Jeannot scored with a knockdown overhand right.

 

Midway through the period, Arber Xhekaj and Zadorov went at it. The appointment was made in the Bruins’ zone and Xhekaj skated to the center circle for dramatic effect. The Canadien defenseman, who was quickly felled by Jeannot in the Nov. 15 game in Montreal, landed some good shots on Zadorov before the Bruin defenseman wrestled him to the ice.

With the tone appropriately set, the teams got into some hockey. It was the Habs who drew first blood on the scoreboard at 11:08.

It started with a bad turnover by Mason Lohrei in his own zone that created chaos. Eventually, Sammy Blais banked one off the back of Swayman’s head from behind the goal line to give the Habs a 1-0 lead.

But Lohrei redeemed himself immediately and the B’s took a 2-1 lead into the first intermission. After the Habs turned it over in their own zone, Lohrei made a nice move at the left point to elude a Montreal defender and took it in deep, making a great pass to Marat Khusnutdinov for the young Russian’s third of the year at 12:25.

Montreal’s goalie, former Boston College star Jacob Fowler, made some excellent saves in the first and he was helped out by his post on a Morgan Geekie power-play shot. The B’s held a 17-8 shot advantage in the first. It looked like the B‘s might have to settle for a tie after 20 minutes.

But with just 18 seconds left in the first, Alex Steeves gave the B’s the lead. Operating on their third power play, Steeves beat Fowler with a shortside wrister form the right circle, his eighth of the season.

It didn’t last long. Zadorov tried to tap a loose puck up to David Pastrnak in the neutral zone from his blue line. But Pastrnak had already headed up ice and the puck skittered in no-man’s land. Higly skilled rookie Ivan Demidov was only too happy to pounce. He went in on Swayman on a clean breakaway and beat him on a backhand move to even the game at 1:58 of the second.

The B’s were forced to kill off a double-minor to Steeves for high-sticking on a careless swing of his twig with 5:23 left in the period. What made it even more difficult was Zadorov could not get on the ice because of an apparent equipment issue. But the B’s managed to kill it off.

They also thought they retaken the lead wit 4.7 seconds left in the second after Geekie set up Elias Lindholm but it was ruled that Pastrnak had interfered with Fowler and immediately waved off. There wasn’t much contact there but, after the B’s had just killed off four minutes, Sturm did not challenge.

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©2025 The Boston Herald. Visit at bostonherald.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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