Monday, April 20, 2009

bruins beat habs 4 - 2 & push the habs to the brink of elimination

The Bruins did not have a spectacular game on the whole, but were efficient in their checking, and were an absolute defensive force in the 3rd period, and this swung the game in their favour.

The game started with the Canadiens' fans booing the American national anthem (which I am sure their US-born players, Chris Higgins and Francis Bouillon, appreciated), and then booing starting goaltender Carey Price. Over the course of the game the fans at the Bell Centre booed the Canadiens' powerplay, Koivu's efforts in the offensive zone, the referee, and then made sarcastic cheers when Price made easy stops.

Only the booing of Zdeno Chara made any sense to me.

Honestly, if your team is on the brink of elimination to a far stronger team, and your idea of home-town advantage is to boo your own players, you are not a fan of any team, nor should you be surprised when they do not win.

And I certainly do not lump all Canadiens fans into the above category. But the booing at the Bell Centre was clearly heard on the National TV broadcast, and was at points louder than the cheering.

Anyway, despite the bad blood between these two clubs, tonight's game was a relatively clean affair. The Canadiens dished out some great checks in the first period, but less as the game went on, focusing more on trying to retain puck possession. The Bruins seemed to pick up the slack in the hitting department and began finishing checks more often through the second and third periods.

The B's won tonight primarily because of a few bursts of sustained pressure on the Canadiens defense, a lot of chip-and-chase hockey to wear the Habs' D down, and (as mentioned) a smothering defensive system in the third period. Ex-Hab Michael Ryder got the game winning goal, which must have pleased Claude Julien.

Finally, unlike Saturday's game, tonight's match-up was a close affair - but in playoff hockey, those little differences are all that separates any team from a win or a loss. Or all that separates a Series win from elimination.

The B's have a chance to close-out the Series on Wednesday, here in Montreal. Should be a great game!

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