The Bruins super charged power play took a rare backseat to the penalty kill on Wednesday night. The B's man advantage was without a goal on seven tries, while the PK was able to successfully thwart five of the six Oilers power plays.
"I think both penalty kills were clearly better than the power plays tonight," said head coach Bruce Cassidy. "I thought the puck was bouncing a bit, that had something to do with it. But at the end of the day, you're going to have those nights. Both teams have good special teams on both sides of it, good goaltending. Listen, yeah, you're glad to see you win a game you don't need your power play to score."
Edmonton's lone power play strike came in the third period when a seemingly harmless point shot deflected through a screen and past Rask. The goal was the lone blemish on an otherwise impressive night for the PK unit.
"We were battling hard," said goaltender Tuukka Rask. "We kept them to the outside. And I think the second period, they had the most dangerous chances on their power play. We, I think, whenever rebounds were laying there, guys cleared them out…good battle."
Cassidy echoed Rask's assessment of the penalty kill.
"I think with second chances we were pretty good," said Cassidy. "They had the one power play in the second period there where they chucked it at the net a little more and banged it around. That was a dangerous one, but for the most part we were able to limit that. I think we blocked shots at key times.
"Clears are getting better, we're doing a better job with that. With pressure, stopping up pucks, they're getting clears. We didn't have those long, extended shifts where guys were tired. Like I said, there was one in the second we fought our way through. Even the third period, I thought we didn't give up much. They got a nice deflection, those are going to happen."