The Bruins have lost 17 of their past 19 regular-season games (2-12-5) against the Capitals dating to Oct. 11, 2014. But with seven more to play against Washington this season and coming off a better showing in that overtime loss, there's a chance for Boston to change the narrative in this budding rivalry.
"The more you play a team, the more you're going to battle and if something happens at some point, then that even amps it up even more," Bruins forward Brad Marchand said Saturday.
Boston and Washington, each in the MassMutual East Division, play again Monday at Capital One Arena (7 p.m. ET; SN1, SNE, SNO, TVAS, NBCSWA, NESN, NHL.TV).
"This is definitely the way that you create rivalries and I think obviously the other way is in playoffs, and the more you play teams in the playoffs, the bigger the rivalry is," Marchand said. "And that's almost what we have here. We play them a lot this year and we're going to be competing and they'll be one of the better teams. It's going to be fun."