December 23, 2024

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How a disputed Panthers goal helped put the Bruins in a 3-1 series hole: 5 takeaways

How a disputed Panthers goal helped put the Bruins in a 3-1 series hole: 5 takeaways

BOSTON — To add insult to injury in a game where the Boston Bruins may have felt Sam Bennett probably wasn’t supposed to play in the first place, the Florida Panthers provocateur scored a controversial tying goal in the third period Sunday night, helping lift his team to a come-from-behind 3-0 win. 2.

It came after the Bruins said there was “clear evidence” of Bennett Sucker punching captain Brad Marchand on Friday night.

Bennett scored after Bruins center Charlie Coyle pushed into goaltender Jeremy Swayman.

“He got hit by my momentum, so he couldn’t get past him,” Coyle said of Swayman. “So, yeah, that’s how I think it worked.”

Coach Jim Montgomery challenged, and it looked like it would be a complete coup, but after a long review, the NHL Situation Room in coordination with referees Francis Charron and Frederic Lecuyer decided it was a good goal.

The Panthers ended up on the power play for the unsuccessful challenge, and an angry Montgomery lashed out at the referees during the ensuing action and then a TV timeout. The Panthers didn’t score there, but 3:50 after Bennett’s goal, Aleksander Barkov continued his tremendous playoff run with the eventual winning goal.

David Pastrnak and Brandon Carlo scored first-period goals for the Bruins, and Swayman made 38 saves.

The match became tense in the second half when Anton Lundell spoiled Swayman’s masterpiece with a clear shot after being first to the forehand and beat Swayman with a quick volley from Ivan Rodriguez’s pass. Swayman had stopped all 26 shots he saw at that point, including 16 in the first period, when Boston outscored 16-5. At some point in the game, Natural statistics trick He had scoring chances for Florida at 15-2 and high-danger chances at 7-1.

Game 5 of the series will be played in South Florida on Tuesday night.

Here are five takeaways about what happened in Game 4 and how it led to the Panthers taking a 3-1 lead in their second-round series.

Takes on a contested target

Even the retired referees were surprised that Bennett’s goal was awarded. In texts with athlete, “The call caught me by surprise,” said one former referee.

Another said: “Not sure exactly why. Maybe they felt the batch wasn’t as bad as the result. Hard to say without being on headphones.”

Former referee Tim Bale said: “I have no idea why this goal was awarded. I’m really confused.”

The NHL Situation Room said it felt that “a video review supports the on-ice referees’ call that Florida’s Sam Bennett’s push on Charlie Coyle and subsequent contact with Jeremy Swayman did not prevent Swayman from playing his position in the crease ahead of Bennett.” Goal.”

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Pat Maroon wanted a piece of Sam Bennett

One of the reasons the Bruins acquired Pat Maroon from the Minnesota Wild at the trade deadline was because of the veteran forward’s playoff pedigree. Marrone has won three Stanley Cups and is a vocal player in the locker room who is never shy about sticking up for his teammates.

Marrone was barking at Sergei Bobrovsky during warmups and his chatter extended into the first period. After the ice, he barked at Bennett and wanted to fight the Panthers forward who injured Marchand in Game 3 with a feint to the chin.

Bennett, who returned in Game 3 after a left hand or wrist injury, probably can’t fight now and is skating away. Marrone then tackled Brandon Montour. The two have history from Maroon’s time with the Tampa Bay Lightning. Maron nodded as if to say he wanted to fight several Panthers. No one accepted the fourth-line player’s invitation, but the crowd – already ecstatic at the 2-0 lead – loved it.

Charlie McAvoy is an alternate captain. He is the Bruins’ most punished defenseman. These two elements came together in McAvoy’s first shift. With Marchand unavailable for Game 4, McAvoy told the Panthers that pain is coming. As Sam Reinhart was trying to get out of Florida territory, McAvoy brought down the right winger with an open ice slam to immediately raise the roof for TD Garden.

Jacob Lauko draws a decisive penalty kick

Pastrnak can hit home runs all day long, as he did at 8:53 of the first game to give the Bruins a 1-0 lead. The hard part is preparing him for such opportunities. That was Jacob Lauko’s mission. Eight seconds before that goal, Lauko took a pass interference penalty on Aaron Ekblad by driving toward the net, giving Boston the power play.

The No. 4 left winger, a healthy scratch for seven straight games between Rounds 1 and 2, made his first appearance in the series and scored in Game 3 against the Panthers.

Bruins PK follows up a rebound to Bennett’s goal

The Panthers were a combined 0-for-17 against the Bruins on the power play during the regular season and the first two-plus games of the series until they erupted with four power-play goals in Game 3, including scoring in both hemispheres. A double minor to turn a 1-0 lead into a 3-0 lead.

They returned to their previous ways on Sunday. Or, better said, the Bruins rebounded. They converted five penalty kicks in the match, including two key ones in the first half where Swayman made four saves. On the Panthers’ second power play, the Bruins actually outscored the Panthers and made it 2-0 shortly thereafter with Carlo’s third goal of the playoffs.

Unfortunately for the Bruins, the success did not continue. Bennett’s contested goal was on the power play.

(Photo: Steve Babineaux/NHLI via Getty Images)