Boston's goal differential is plus-106. Carolina is next at plus-57.
"It's just finding a way with this group, never panicking, no matter what happens, whether we're getting outplayed, outshot, whatever the case is," forward Charlie Coyle said after the run reached 10 with a 4-2 win against the New York Rangers on Saturday. "It's just sticking with it. There's no sense of panic. Everyone's calm. Everyone knows what the task is."
A record-setting pace and extended winning streaks haven't lulled the Bruins into complacency. They traded for forwards Tyler Bertuzzi and Garnet Hathaway, and defenseman Dmitry Orlov, and gave Pastrnak an eight-year, $90 million contract late in the final season before he could have become an unrestricted free agent. The new arrivals will be quick to learn about what's been working: elite goaltending, a shut-down defense and the ability to roll four lines.
The package continues to create new ways to win and build a season flirting with history.
"There's always a different hero and that's what's special about that locker room," Montgomery said after Boston defeated the Calgary Flames 4-3 in overtime March 1. "They kind of have a saying in the locker room: 'Never a doubt.'"
Voting totals (points awarded on a 5-4-3-2-1- basis):
Jim Montgomery, Bruins, 75 points (15 first-place votes); Lindy Ruff, Devils, 47; Rod Brind'Amour, Hurricanes, 21; Dave Hakstol, Seattle Kraken, 16; Don Granato, Buffalo Sabres, 13; Peter DeBoer, Stars, 13; Jared Bednar, Colorado Avalanche, 11; Rick Bowness, Winnipeg Jets, 9; Bruce Cassidy, Vegas Golden Knights, 9; Todd McLellan, Los Angeles Kings, 5; Sheldon Keefe, Toronto Maple Leafs, 3; Derek Lalonde, Detroit Red Wings, 2; Dean Evason, Minnesota Wild, 1.
NHL.com staff writer Amalie Benjamin contributed to this report