Boston v Chicago 2-1 - Game 2 - The Boston
Bruins were on the ice in the first period Saturday night, but
they weren't exactly skating at the same frenetic, fantastic pace as
the Chicago
Blackhawks. Rask made 18 saves in the first period to keep Boston
in the game. The Bruins slowed the pace and established the style
they wanted to play in the second period before winning 2-1 in
overtime in Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Final at United Center. The
Bruins tied the game on Chris
Kelly's first goal of the Stanley Cup Playoffs late in the second
and kept it that way into overtime, when they had several dangerous
chances before Daniel
Paille finally won it with a shot from the left side at 13:48.
Boston coach Claude Julien scratched together a new third line of
Paille, Kelly and Tyler
Seguin that provided the offense Boston needed. Rask made 33
saves, and by withstanding the opening 20-minute surge by the
Blackhawks, the Bruins found a way to ship the best-of-7 series back
to Boston tied 1-1. Game 3 is Monday at TD Garden (8 p.m. ET; NBCSN,
CBC, RDS). Down the hall in the home dressing room, the Blackhawks
were trying to explain how they didn't grab a bigger lead in what was
a dominating first period. They held a 19-4 edge in shots on goal and
30-5 lead in shot attempts. Patrick
Sharp (six) and Marian
Hossa (five) each had more shots on goal than the Bruins team.
Boston's top-six forwards managed a combined one shot on goal.
Despite all that dominance, all Chicago had to show for its efforts
after 20 minutes was a 1-0 lead on Sharp's ninth goal of the playoffs
at 11:22. The Blackhawks nearly had a second goal 70 seconds after
Sharp scored, but Rask fell flat across the goal line and had the
puck near his feet when referee Wes McCauley, who was standing behind
the cage and looking through the top mesh, blew his whistle to stop
the play. Replays showed the puck did cross the goal line, but upon
video review, the NHL's Situation Room ruled that McCauley had blown
the play dead before Marian
Hossa pushed Rask's pads and the puck across the goal line. After
the first period, the Hawks' scoring threats were few and far
between. Why? The answer depends on who you ask and what color jersey
the responder wears. Neither side seemed too inclined to give the
other team much credit for the dramatic change in how the game was
being played. The Bruins felt their physical edge helped them pick up
the pace and slow down the Blackhawks' dangerous transition game. The
Blackhawks felt they were guilty of slowing down, trying to be too
cute and too fancy instead of pushing the pace. Whatever the theory,
the fact of the matter is the Bruins were able to tie the game on
Kelly's goal with 5:02 left in the second period. Seguin forced Sharp
to turn over the puck behind the goal line and Paille was able to
dance past Blackhawks defenseman Nick
Leddy to put a wraparound attempt on Crawford, who had his paddle
down to make the save. But the puck bounced off the paddle, slid
through Patrick
Kane's legs and went right to Kelly, who chipped it in from the
slot for his first playoff goal since Game 1 of the 2012 Eastern
Conference Quarterfinals. Paille did it with help from Seguin and
defenseman Adam
McQuaid. Blackhawks defenseman Brent
Seabrook rimmed the puck up the left-wing boards, but it got past
left wing Brandon
Bollig and McQuaid played it back down the wall to Seguin, who
quickly moved it across the zone to a wide-open Paille. He took his
time and fired a high, glove-side shot that went past Crawford and
just inside the far post with 6:12 left in the overtime. Relieved may
be an even better word, especially considering the night was looking
like a disaster in the first period.
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