Games

Recap
 
Savard powers Bruins past Canadiens
BOSTON 2, MONTREAL 1 (OT)
 

By Tony Lee
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

BOSTON (Ticker) -- After 13 straight losses over 13-plus
miserable months of play against their archrivals, the Boston
Bruins finally hit back.

All-Star Marc Savard scored his first career playoff goal just
9:25 into overtime to propel the eighth-seeded Bruins to a 2-1
triumph over the top-seeded Montreal Canadiens in Game Three of
their Eastern Conference quarterfinal series on Sunday.

Rookie Milan Lucic had a goal and All-Star Tim Thomas made 27
saves - including a series of stellar stops in overtime - as
Boston defeated Montreal for the first time since March 3, 2007.
The Bruins host Game Four on Tuesday night with a chance to
knot the series heading back to Canada.

"It's a great win for us for all the right reasons," Boston
coach Claude Julien said. "It gets the monkey off our back.
Thirteen losses. Obviously it gets us back in this series but
we realize we're still trailing and there's still lots of work
to be done."

The Canadiens, who won Game Two on Alexei Kovalev's overtime
tally on Saturday, got a goal from Tom Kostopoulos and solid
goaltending from rookie Carey Price, who stopped 29 shots in
losing to the Bruins for the first time in six starts.

It also Montreal's first loss in its last six playoff games
against Boston. Count Canadiens coach Guy Carbonneau as one of
those who wasn't surprised.

"No one expected to win in four games," Carbonneau said. "We
still have a game Tuesday. We'll just have to regroup."

Savard's game-winner ended over 44 minutes of tense, scoreless
hockey and signified a major turnaround for the veteran, who
missed the final seven games of the regular season with a back
injury.

"It was nice to see him score that goal, obviously, and the
assist on (Lucic's) goal as well," Julien said. "We all know
he's been through a painful injury and to see him come back,
battle that way, and see him rewarded is great."

The dramatic finale came after a Boston rush left the puck on
the stick of defenseman Dennis Wideman, who shot it cross-ice to
Savard in the circle. The veteran found an opening past Price
and was soon mobbed by his teammates along the boards.

Savard said he was screaming for the puck, left alone to Price's
left.

"When (Wideman) picked it off, I knew he saw me and I was
yelling at the top of my lungs," Savard said. "He made a great
play to get it over to me. I knew I had an open net there."

Although the rivalry had been so one-sided on the scoreboard,
there was no shortage of ill feelings on both benches as Sunday
saw a physical affair.

A hard-hitting first period ended with a post-horn fight between
Boston defenseman Shane Hnidy and Montreal's Guillaume
Latendresse. Amid all the nastiness came a pretty goal by Lucic
that gave the Bruins their first lead over the Canadiens since
March 22, 2007, the second game of Montreal's winning streak.

Savard won a puck along the boards near the left circle and
snuck a pass to Lucic in front. The 6-4, 220-pound left wing
beat Price with a one-timer for his first career playoff goal.

"It was huge, the first time all year we've started off with
first goal of the game," Lucic said.

"It was a different feeling obviously, but we are not going to
quit just because they scored first," Price said.

And they didn't.

Although Boston opened the second period on the power play, its
hard-earned advantage was short-lived. Less than five minutes
in, Kostopoulos skated in from the side of the net and muscled
the puck by the feet of Thomas.

It was Kostopoulos' second goal of the series and served to
reinvigorate the portion of the sellout crowd dressed in red,
white and blue, sprinkled throughout TD Banknorth Garden.

The 17,565 on hand vied for the upper hand in noise throughout,
lending a soccer-like atmosphere to the arena.

"It was great, especially when you looked around at the
beginning and saw a lot of Montreal fans, they tried to take it
over," Julien said. "Our fans stood tall and wouldn't let them.
It was nice to see, obviously we let them know that this was
our building, not theirs."

Thomas provided most of the cheers just before Savard ended it,
stopping Kostopoulos with a tremendous pad save on a shot that
looked as if it might end things.

"I was just coming out in overtime trying to be ready for
everything, ready for all the little bounces because a lot of
overtime goals are like that," said Thomas, who made six saves
overall in the extra session. "So I was just telling myself be
ready for everything. When they did get some chances I was
focused."


 
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