Boston 7, Toronto 4
When: 7:30 PM ET, Wednesday, April 25, 2018
Where: TD Garden, Boston, Massachusetts
Referees:
Wes McCauley, Kelly Sutherland
Linesmen:
Scott Cherrey, Jonny Murray
Attendance:
17565
By Field Level Media
Jake DeBrusk's go-ahead goal with 14:35 remaining in the third period led the host Boston Bruins to a 7-4 win over the Toronto Maple Leafs in Game 7 of their Eastern Conference first-round series Wednesday night.
DeBrusk scored two goals and David Pastrnak added one, giving them a share of the team playoff lead with five. Patrice Bergeron had a goal and two assists while Pastrnak and Brad Marchand each had a goal and an assist. Danton Heinen and Torey Krug also scored for the Bruins.
Boston, which earned its first playoff series victory since the 2013-14 season, will face the Tampa Bay Lightning in the Eastern Conference semifinals.
"I think that we're all just pretty excited right now to have a chance to continue playing together and take on Tampa," DeBrusk said. "We're going to enjoy this one tonight, but then go back to the drawing board. I think our next game's Saturday, so we've got a couple days to regroup and get re-energized."
Patrick Marleau had two goals, giving him a team-best four playoff goals. Travis Dermott and Kasperi Kapanen each scored his first of the postseason for Toronto, which forced a decisive seventh game with back-to-back wins after falling into a 3-1 series hole.
The Maple Leafs have not won a playoff series since 2003-04.
"It's always disappointing," Marleau told reporters after the game. "Obviously, you're trying to win the Cup. To fall short once again, it's heartbreaking every time."
Boston goalie Tuukka Rask finished with 20 saves and improved to 2-2 all-time in Game 7s. Frederik Andersen made 29 saves for Toronto.
DeBrusk skated end-to-end for his decisive third-period goal, finding Andersen's five-hole.
"It was a very special feeling, especially making it 5-4 at that point," DeBrusk said. "I knew that as soon as we got the lead there, the next goal, we were going to be fine. It was very special."
Pastrnak made it a 6-4 game on his goal at 11:39 of the third. Marchand scored an empty-netter with 50.9 seconds left.
Toronto coach Mike Babcock said of Boston's third-period surge, "We'll have lots of time to look at those goals and get that figured out. The bottom line is we went out for the third period and they scored and we didn't. Once they scored, they tilted the rink, and I don't even know how many looks we had if we had any."
Marleau's first goal with 17:55 left in the first period gave Toronto a 1-0 lead before Boston tied it on DeBrusk's first goal with 15:13 to go in the first.
Marleau's second tally at 6:12 of the first made it 2-1 before Heinen (at 9:10) and Bergeron (at 19:23) scored to put the Bruins up 3-2 after one.
Dermott scored 2:07 into the second and Kapanen struck at 6:05 of the second to restore a one-goal lead for Toronto.
Krug's goal tied the game at 4 just 1:10 into the third.
Toronto's Morgan Rielly left the ice with a bloody face in the first period after being hit by a Zdeno Chara slap shot, but he returned in the second. Boston's Adam McQuaid exited in the second after spinning into the boards, but he also returned.
Leo Komarov (lower-body injury) missed his fifth straight game for the Maple Leafs.
--Field Level Media
Top Game Performances
Toronto |
|
Boston |
Patrick Marleau 2 |
Points |
Patrice Bergeron 3 |
Patrick Marleau 2 |
Goals |
Jake DeBrusk 2 |
William Nylander 2 |
Assists |
David Krejci 3 |
Patrick Marleau 1 |
Power Play Goals |
Jake DeBrusk 1 |
Kasperi Kapanen 1 |
Short Handed Goals |
N/A |
Frederik Andersen .829 |
Save Percentage |
Tuukka Rask .833 |
Frederik Andersen 29 |
Saves |
Tuukka Rask 20 |
Team Stats Summary
Team |
Shots |
Goals |
Power Play |
Penalty Kill |
Penalty Mins |
Face Offs Won |
Toronto
|
24 |
4 |
1-2 |
1-2 |
8 |
29 |
Boston
|
36 |
7 |
1-2 |
1-2 |
8 |
38 |
Upcoming Games
-
Boston will play their next game on the road against Tampa Bay. The Bruins have a W/L % of .560 after a win and .688 after a loss.