After falling behind, 4-3, on Justin Barron's shorthanded goal just 1:09 into the third period, the Bruins responded with two unanswered tallies for the win. Charlie Coyle tied things up with a nifty dangle at 8:48 of the final frame, before David Pastrnak struck for his 61st of the season just 2:12 later to put Boston ahead, 5-4. It was the B's 24th comeback win of the year, tying a club record (2017-18).
"The little stuff can help give some confidence, scoring touch," said Coyle, who finished the season with 16 goals. "But we were just happy to win that and go [into the playoffs] on a winning note, I guess. We've been playing some pretty good hockey lately. Last game of the year, you never know how it's gonna go when it doesn't really mean much.
"But it did mean a lot to us because we wanted to go in on a winning note and make sure we were playing the right way and creating those good habits. We don't want to sink back and have bad habits come in. We wanted to make sure we got the job done and play the right way for the most part."
Pastrnak, meanwhile, fell one goal shy of Jaromir Jagr's single-season record for goals among Czech-born players (62).
"I learned that today to be honest. I had no clue," said Pastrnak. "My thoughts are totally somewhere else than 60 goals right now. I had my fun when I scored it, I enjoyed it, I must say, with the guys. They were amazing. My thoughts are totally somewhere else now."
Pastrnak finished the season with 113 points, the 15th-highest total in Bruins history and most since Adam Oates in 1992-93 (145). He also closed out the year with a 10-game point streak (11-6-17), his second such streak of the season to join Connor McDAvid (five), Leon Draisaitl (three), Steven Stamkos (two), Nikita Kucherov (two), Aleksander Barkov (two), and Mitch Marner (two) as the only players to record multiple 10-game point streaks this season.