Grzelcyk gave the Bruins a 1-0 lead with 4:38 to play in the first period when he took a feed from Marcus Johansson (two assists) and sneaked a wrister through Carolina goalie Petr Mrazek from the left circle. The Charlestown native picked up his second of the night with a beautiful backhanded power-play tally off a dish from fellow BU alum Charlie Coyle with 2:04 remaining in the second to extend Boston's advantage to 4-0.
"I think we were expecting a very physical game out of them," Grzelcyk, who last registered a two-goal game on Causeway Street when he won the 2015 Beanpot for the Terriers, said of shaking off the Ferland smack. "It's something that we kind of had that experience going up against Columbus in the second round, so we didn't get phased by that game and I think we responded really well. We knew how important it was to take advantage of home ice so I'm glad we got the win today."
Grzelcyk became just the fifth Bruins defenseman in the last 35 years to score multiple goals in a playoff game (Ray Bourque, 1990; Darren Van Impe, 1998; Daniel McGillis, 2003; and Zdeno Chara, 2011). He is also the 19th different player to score for the Bruins this postseason, matching the franchise record set in 1988.
"Guys are coming to play at the right time. Depth scoring is so crucial for playoffs," said Torey Krug, who matched a career postseason high with three assists, becoming just the fifth defenseman in Bruins history with more than one such performance (Bourque, Bobby Orr, Brad Park, and Carol Vadnais).
"We have it right now…we want to bottle that up and continue to use it to our advantage."
Krug, at 5-foot-9, was particularly pleased to see his fellow diminutive defenseman (Grzelcyk is also 5-foot-9) have some offensive success.
"I've been one of Grizz's biggest fans since he came in the league and we joke about it all the time now that we have a couple of guys under 5-10 winning games in the National Hockey League…we're causing havoc and doing the job," said Krug.
"When he's skating there is no one that can skate like him and break out pucks. We take a lot of pride in that, so it was fun to watch him scoot around today."