Jeremy Swayman nearly made Bruins history - and NHL history, for that matter.
Only 12 goalies in league lore have scored goals, and with time ticking down in the third period, Swayman had a clear shot at becoming the 13th. With the Columbus net empty, Swayman collected the puck beside his net and fired a wrister the length of the ice with the shot just trickling wide of the right post.
"I want to score so bad, man. It will happen, it will," said Swayman. "I've tried a lot of times, haven't made it past the red yet, so that was cool."
While Swayman came inches away from a moment to remember, his most important work came between the pipes as he rebounded from a loss in Arizona last weekend with a 31-save triumph on Saturday afternoon.
"I was pumped...that was a heads-up play," Hall said of the empty-net attempt. "That would have been awesome to see to cap off a really good night for him. He needed that and he was strong for us when we needed him. We weren't our best, but Sway was our best player back there."
Montgomery concurred as he complimented Swayman for his confidence.
"I thought he was our best player, and I think he needed to be," said Montgomery. "Very confident. Very confident in his movements…mentally, when a goalie is on top, he is taking whistles at the right moments, tries to go for that empty net goal - that's a sign of someone that the game is going slow for, which is what you want mentally.
"As we know, he is an elite goaltender in this league…and everybody has those moments in their career where things aren't going well, and that's what makes you better. He's going to come out of what that small little hiccup there, and he's going to be better for it.
"Everybody needs adversity, whether it's life or it's in sports especially. It makes you better."
Swayman, who had not played in eight days, said he used the week of downtime to improve on "everything."
"Skating, obviously, getting to my position, working on hands, rebound control, box, crease containment, all of the above, tip pucks, read tips," said Swayman. "It's what we do every week. You have a good game, you work hard, you get better. If you have a bad game you work hard, you get better.
"That's something I've been doing this year. It's been ups and downs and I'm grateful for that. I'm grateful for the ups and downs I've had and the learning lessons I've had early on."
The third-year netminder acknowledged that he has had to adjust to not playing as frequently given how well partner Linus Ullmark has played to start the season, though he has tried to use that challenge to his advantage.
"That's a good question. It's different. I've been used to getting in rotation, but again I'm grateful for the adversity coming my way early on," said Swayman, who was wearing his new vintage-style Winter Classic pads for the first time.
"Just learning from it and how to battle through games, battle through tough times and not getting the start for a couple days. That's just something I want to make sure I'm staying in the moment with, keeping a good attitude mentally, physically, and just keep working no matter what - good game, bad game, it doesn't matter, I want to have that same, steady consistent attitude."