Nick Foligno went right back to the well.
Despite taking a puck to the face at the net front during a power-play drill at Monday's morning skate - which left him bloodied and requiring four to five stitches - he was right back in his spot on the second unit against the Lightning.
And the veteran forward appeared no worse for wear, as he potted the go-ahead goal while stretching out and diving for a loose puck at the top of the crease and whacking it by Tampa goalie Andrei Vasilevskiy to put Boston up, 2-1, at 5:07 of the second.
"It's unreal," said Montgomery. "Another guy that's been a captain in the league for a long time. You can see why. He's really dedicated to the team, he loves and relishes his role where he helps us on the power play, helps us 5-on-5, helps our grind game, helps our puck possession game. It's nice to see him get rewarded."
Foligno was hardly hesitant to get back in front of the cage, despite the perils that he faced a few hours earlier.
"It's a great time to have a beard. Thanks a lot [Hampus Lindholm]," Foligno joked as he recalled the shot from the blue liner that caught him under the chin. "It's part of being in the net front. Sometimes you're gonna take one. Not ideal in practice but it's all good. It's part of the job."
Charlie Coyle followed Foligno's goal just 31 seconds later with tally of his own from the doorstep - which was confirmed after a review - and got the Bruins back on track as they eventually struck for five consecutive goals after falling behind, 1-0, during a sleepy first period.
"I think it was an important goal at the time the way the first period took us," said Foligno. "Big goal by [David Krejci] to come out of the period tied. But then we wanted to get to our game. We just didn't have that jump that we needed to have in the first period and they came out and gave a push but I think that shows a lot of what we have in here to not get flustered by that either.
"Came out in the second and just took over. It was nice to be able to get that go-ahead and Coyle follows it up. That's what happens with our team, we just come in waves. Good teams do that. It's so hard to stop them. The momentum's going that way. We just seem to jump on board and every line starts going. It's dangerous."