Actually,
Pittsburgh's offensive struggles are the beginning of the story for
this Boston team, which has lost once in its past 10 games after
surviving a first-round Game 7 against the Toronto Maple Leafs.
During the course of this series, the Bruins illustrated how lethal a
combination their suffocating defense and Rask playing at the top of
his game can be. The Penguins entered the third round as the
highest-scoring team in the 16-team tournament. They went home for a
long summer of soul-searching wondering what happened to an offense
that was averaging 4.27 goals through two rounds. They are the first
team since 2009 to trail for an entire series, a dubious distinction
last achieved by the Columbus Blue Jackets against the heavily
favored Detroit Red Wings in the first round of the 2009 Stanley Cup
Playoffs. It also didn't hurt that the Bruins had Rask as their line
of last defense. The goalie, who was a backup when Boston won the Cup
in 2011 with Tim Thomas delivering clutch performance after clutch
performance, stopped 134 of the 136 shots he faced. That, by the way,
is a save percentage of .985. In the dying seconds of Game 4, Rask
made a couple of saves, including a glove save on Iginla at the
buzzer, to preserve his second shutout of the series as the Penguins
threw everything they had into trying to tie the score and extend
their season. As he had done throughout the series, Rask left the
game's best offensive players shaking their heads. The Bruins go into
the Final with their game seemingly in top gear again and four wins
from adding to the championship they won in a seven-game title series
against the Vancouver Canucks 24 months ago.
NHL coverage from the United Kingdom, by Hockey Nerd 'Sergei Adamov' Follow me on Facebook.com/Hockey-From-Across-the-Pond Twitter: @SergeiAdamov
Monday, 10 June 2013
Playoffs - Fri, 07 Jun - Results
Pittsburgh v Boston 0-1 - Game 4 - The defense of the Boston
Bruins dominated the Eastern Conference Final so thoroughly that
it made absolutely perfect sense for a stay-at-home defenseman to
score the only goal in Game 4 on Friday. Adam
McQuaid, who had one previous postseason goal and seven career
goals in the regular season, rifled a slap shot just under the
crossbar early in the third period to provide the winning margin in a
1-0 victory at TD Garden that allowed Boston to complete a stunning
sweep of the top-seeded Pittsburgh
Penguins. With the win, Boston advances to the Stanley Cup Final
for the second time in three seasons, where it will face either the
Chicago Blackhawks or the Los Angeles Kings. The Blackhawks lead the
best-of-7 Western Conference Final 3-1 and get their first chance to
clinch Saturday with Game 5 at United Center (8 p.m. ET; NBC, CBC,
RDS). In essence, that was Boston's game plan for the series. Play a
five-man team defense in the hope of smothering Pittsburgh's big
guns. Allow Rask to do what he does best, and score some opportune
goals. But even the Bruins didn't know that blueprint had the ability
to build something so beautiful. Pittsburgh managed two goals in the
series, and neither came from its biggest stars, Sidney
Crosby, Evgeni
Malkin, Kris
Letang, James
Neal or NHL Trade Deadline import Jarome
Iginla. Pittsburgh managed one goal in the final 106 minutes and
28 seconds of the series and was outscored 12-2 in the four games.
Most tellingly, Pittsburgh never led in the series and was tied for
75:02 of the 275:19 of game play. Letang, the top-scoring defenseman
in the playoffs heading into this round, had no points, 16 shots and
was a minus-5.
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