Still sitting pretty with a strong 8-0-1 record and a nice cushion atop the Atlantic Division, Florida's winning streak was tied for the fourth-longest to start a season in NHL history.
"We lost, but it was a good game," Panthers captain Aleksander Barkov said. "We played a really good game. We battled hard. We did it all. A couple unfortunate bounces … We played well. We just want to keep going. We don't think about any winning streaks or anything. The most important is playing the right way, fixing the little things, and keep playing the right way."
Despite being on the second half of a back-to-back, the Cats showed their claws in Boston.
After Spencer Knight stopped the first 13 shots he faced, the Bruins finally got the puck past the Panthers rookie goaltender when Charlie Coyle connected on a top-shelf snipe from the center of the left circle to make it a 1-0 game with just 41.9 seconds left on the clock in the first period.
For Knight, who grew up in Connecticut and starred for two seasons at Boston College, playing his first game at the rink where he spent so much time in throughout his life was very special.
"It was eight months ago or so that I was watching [the Bruins] on TV while I was at BC," said Knight, who had friends and family scattered throughout the arena cheering him on. "I'd been coming to games here since I was 6 or 7 years old, had hockey tournaments here. It's cool."
Pulling the Panthers even less than a minute into the second period, Anthony Duclair took a pass from Carter Verhaeghe and, rather than attempting a low-percentage pass through traffic, skated straight into the slot and lifted a shot over Linus Ullmark's glove to make it a 1-1 game.
In the third period, it was all about special teams.
Sent to the man advantage, Barkov won a crucial faceoff, skated into the right circle and then one-timed a pass from Jonathan Huberdeau into the twine to put the Panthers up 2-1 at 7:49.
Not too longer after that, the Bruins then brought the game back to a tie when Charlie McAvoy took a cross-ice feed from Brad Marchand and scored on the power play to make it 2-2 at 13:35.
After Knight helped the Panthers stay alive in overtime with a critical save on David Pastrnak, Coyle then went on to register the lone goal in the shootout to secure the 3-2 win for the Bruins.
Happy with their overall effort, the Cats will now look to start a new winning streak next week.
"We played hard," Panthers Interim Head Coach Andrew Brunette said. "Heck of an effort by the guys. Back-to-back nights in tough places to play. An emotional week.
To come up with the energy and the desire to compete that hard shows the resiliency of this group." Here are five takeaways from Saturday's shootout loss in Boston…