Rask, eternally Zen about his place in the hearts and minds of the fickle Boston fans, shrugged off most of the praise, most of the questions about how much he contributed to the team making it this far -- and potentially further.
"We battled for each other all year," Rask said. "I try to make that save, guys try to block a shot, make that right play defensively, offensively. Everybody's just playing for each other. Great team effort, again."
The Bruins took a 1-0 lead at 12:13 of the second period on a one-timer by David Krejci after Jake DeBrusk hit a post.
Marcus Johansson made it 2-0 at 8:58 of the third on a shot that popped over Bobrovsky, and David Backes scored his first of the playoffs at 10:39 for a 3-0 lead.
But the Bruins hadn't really been worried, not when they had the one-goal lead. Not when they hadn't yet extended it.
They knew who they had in goal, a player who has a 2.02 goals-against-average and a .938 save percentage through 13 games and two rounds of the playoffs.
"You could tell this whole playoff he's been in a real good place," Cassidy said. "Been consistent, just solid and composed. Comes to the bench, there's no issues between periods, any little thing. He doesn't seem to be bothered by anything. He really seems to be in his own zone right now, where he's just going to go out and stop the puck, not worry about all of the banging in the crease or if a goal is disallowed, allowed, any of that stuff. He's done a terrific job for us in that regard. Hopefully it continues."
For the Bruins, the focus coming into the game had been to close out the series, to prevent the Blue Jackets from coming back to Boston for Game 7 on Wednesday, as coach John Tortorella guaranteed after Game 5. They had already fought through a draining seven-game series against the Toronto Maple Leafs in the first round, while their opponent rested after a sweep, and didn't want to do it again, knowing the Carolina Hurricanes swept the New York Islanders and were idle, waiting for the winner of Bruins-Blue Jackets.