BOSTON BRUINS not BOOED OFF THE ICE

BOSTON BRUINS not BOOED OFF THE ICE

NHL told Bruins, Panthers their series will be ‘heavily scrutinized’

The physicality during the third period of Game 2 between the Boston Bruins and Florida Panthers on Wednesday night got the attention of the NHL offices.

TSN’s Darren Dreger reported Friday, a few hours before Game 3 at TD Garden, that the league told both teams their Eastern Conference second-round series will be “heavily scrutinized.”

Game 2 got out of hand around the midway point of the third period. Pat Maroon and Nick Cousins got into an altercation and were both given 10-minute misconducts. The action only escalated from there as the two teams combined to tally an astounding 136 penalty minutes during the period.

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The craziest scene was Bruins forward David Pastrnak and Panthers forward Matthew Tkachuk dropping their gloves for a fight at 12:42 of the period. If you made a list of players most likely to fight each other in this series, a Pastrnak-Tkachuk tussle probably would be at the bottom.

It sounds like the league doesn’t want chaos to take over Game 3, but that might be tough to prevent because the Bruins fans in attendance are going to be fired up on a Friday night, and Boston likely will want to send a message and show they won’t be pushed around. You can bet Pastrnak will receive a raucous ovation if he’s in the starting lineup, or whenever he takes his first shift. Tkachuk, of course, will receive plenty of boos from the home crowd.

If the referees call these games tightly and a bunch of penalties are assessed, power plays would be a pivotal factor in the outcome of the series.

The Panthers scored once on six power-play opportunities in Game 2, and they’re 1-for-9 in the series overall. The Bruins have failed on all five of their power-play chances in this series so far, and they haven’t scored a goal with the man advantage since Game 4 of their first-round series against the Toronto Maple Leafs.

Panthers seize a 2-1 series advantage against the Boston Bruins, netting four power-play goals in a commanding 6-2 win

The Florida Panthers capitalized on their power-play chances, scoring twice during a Bruins double-minor penalty and tallying four power-play goals overall to take a 2-1 lead in the Eastern Conference semifinal series.

Vladimir Tarasenko and Carter Verhaeghe found the net just a minute apart while the Panthers had the man advantage, contributing to their 6-2 victory over the Bruins on Friday night. Sergei Bobrovsky made 14 saves to secure the win.

The Panthers’ success on the power play was crucial, especially considering Boston’s strong penalty-killing record in the postseason. Prior to this game, the Bruins had only allowed one power-play goal in 28 penalty kills.

However, Florida managed to break through and has now scored in five of their last seven power-play opportunities in the series.

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