12-19

Despite enduring a strong second-period push from the Florida Panthers, the Boston Bruins jumped out to an early lead and never relinquished it in a 7-3 win at TD Garden on Monday.
"You give them chances, they're going to score," Panthers forward Carter Verhaeghe said of the Bruins, who lead the Atlantic Division at 25-4-2. "They're a really skilled team. If you give up what we gave up, they're going to make plays to score goals. We need to tighten it up a little bit."

Back in the lineup after missing a little more than a week with an upper-body injury, Colin White appeared to open the scoring for the Panthers less than a minute into the game when, following his shot on goal, Linus Ullmark was pushed across the goal line by one of his own teammates.
But on the play officials deemed there was "intent to blow the whistle," so no goal was awarded.
Escaping the aforementioned sticky situation unscathed, the Bruins then opened the scoring when Connor Clifton pounced on a loose puck right around the blue paint and lifted a shot over Spencer Knight's blocker into the top of the cage to make it 1-0 at 10:51 of the first period.
Doubling the lead for the Bruins less than five minutes after Clifton broke the ice, Brandon Carlo wired home a shot from the high slot in transition to make it 2-0 at 14:04. Not done there, Charlie Coyle then beat Knight with a far-side shot from the right circle to make it 3-0 at 16:07.
Carrying that momentum into the second period, David Pastrnak cashed in on the power play to increase Boston's lead to 4-0 at 1:38. Down but not out, the Panthers then kickstarted a push of their own when Sam Reinhart potted a rebound to cut into the deficit and make it 4-1 at 3:02.
Feeding off that goal, Eric Staal teed up a pass from Gustav Forsling and ripped a one-timer from the right circle past Ullmark to make it 4-2 at 5:42. Pulling the Panthers within one, Carter Verhaeghe then slipped the puck under Ullmark and across the goal line to make it 4-3 at 8:21.
All three of Florida's goals were scored within a span of 5:19.
"Once we got going, we had a lot of jump," said Verhaeghe, who upped his team-leading goal total to 17. "I thought we had a really good second period and gave ourselves a chance to win the hockey game. They were up 4-0, but we had a chance. We just fell short."

Pushing back for the Bruins, David Krejci scored off a rebound after a shot from Hampus Lindholm hit off two post before landing on his stick to make it 5-3 at 11:50. Adding to that advantage in the third period, Patric Bergeron fired a shot past Knight to make it 6-3 at 8:52.
Striking again just 4:26 after his first score of the period, Bergeron backhanded a loose puck into the net from on top of the crease on the power play to put the Bruins on top 7-3 at 13:18.
With the win, Boston improved to 17-0-2 at home this season.
"I don't think our game was a whole lot different until it got to 6-3," Panthers head coach Paul Maurice said. "I think we had things that we'd like to do better with the puck and in the transition game that kind of bit us in the butt, but we put up 39 [shots on goal]. We had enough to score. We gave up more than we could tonight to have a chance to win."

KEY QUOTES

"We want to string a couple [wins] together. It's tough. We're all battling. It's just costly errors. I think we can learn from this and move on." - Carter Verhaeghe
"For us to win that game tonight we were going to have to give up almost nothing off the rush. They climbed the blue line on us a couple times in the first period." - Paul Maurice

CATS NOTES

  • Sam Reinhart recorded the 400th point of his NHL career.
    - Sam Reinhart has scored in four straight games.
    - The Panthers led 3.33-2.60 in expected goals, per NaturalStatTrick.com.
    - Four different Panthers defensemen recorded multiple blocked shots.

WHAT'S NEXT?

Facing off for the second time in less than a week, the Panthers (15-14-4) will return home to host the New Jersey Devils (21-8-2) for a rematch at FLA Live Arena on Wednesday at 7 p.m. ET.
For tickets, click
HERE
.