It was an expected and aggressive pushback from the Hurricanes, a desperate team feeding off the energy of its home crowd. It was still jolting to the Bruins, sobering to say the least, after the way they dominated and won by four goals in Boston two days earlier.
And yet, it didn't matter. The Bruins weren't even bruised by the Hurricanes' 20-minute onslaught. They didn't give up a goal. They went into the first intermission tied, slate wiped clean, energized by the outcome instead of dismantled.
RELATED: [Complete Bruins vs. Hurricanes series coverage]
Then they responded by moving one step closer to delivering the knockout blow in the Eastern Conference Final with a 2-1 win in Game 3 at PNC Arena on Tuesday.
Boston leads the best-of-7 series 3-0. It can win the series in Game 4 at Carolina on Thursday (8 p.m. ET; NBCSN, CBC, SN, TVAS).
"We didn't play a good period at all in the first, we know that," Bruins forward Brad Marchand said. "We've been a resilient team all year, been able to bounce back from bad periods or bad breaks, bad goals or whatever it is. We were able to do that again and it paid off for us."
The Bruins were outshot 20-6 in the first period. Carolina had four power plays, including a 5-on-3 for 45 seconds that featured one shot on goal. The Hurricanes still had 12 shots on goal on the power play in the period.
Boston goalie Tuukka Rask was the difference. He made 10 saves in the first 5:48, including four on Carolina's first power play that started 55 seconds into the game. Three of those saves came during a two-second sequence near the end of the man-advantage.