David Pastrnak on Tuesday delivered once again, while Patrice Bergeron showed off his all-around game and Tuukka Rask made a couple of big stops.
Oh, and those suits, too.
It was stylish start to the new year for the Boston Bruins.
Photo: Matt Cashore-USA Today
Pastrnak had a goal and an assist, while Rask made 36 saves as the Bruins beat the Chicago Blackhawks 4-2 in the NHL Winter Classic at Notre Dame.
“You want to win those games when you’re on the big stage like that,” Bergeron said.
“I know it’s a regular-season game, but still, you know the meaning’s different when you’re playing in front of 76,000 people and on national TV,” he said. “So we know what’s at stake with those games and we want to make the most of it.”
They certainly dressed for the occasion. Bergeron and company wore tailored suits, vests and hats to the game in a nod to their surroundings and Peaky Blinders, a TV show about a gang in England right after World War I.
Rask also had Notre Dame’s iconic “Play Like a Champion Today” sign painted on the back of his helmet.
“I think these are the experiences that once you are done with the hockey career you can look back and like be happy that you were a part of and kind of cherish those moments,” Rask said.
Bergeron, Sean Kuraly and Brad Marchand also scored as Boston won for the second time in three appearances in the NHL’s annual outdoor game on New Year’s Day.
The Bruins went two for five with the man advantage and killed off each of the Blackhawks’ four power plays.
The game was tied at 2-2 when Boston (22-14-4) caught a break in the third period — a little luck at the home of the Fighting Irish. Matt Grzelcyk’s big slap-shot went off teammate Chris Wagner in front, but Kuraly beat Blackhawks defenseman Gustav Forsling to the rebound and backhanded the puck past Cam Ward at 10 minutes, 20 seconds.
“Big goal,” coach Bruce Cassidy said.
Backed by most of the sellout crowd of 76,126 in perfect conditions for outdoor hockey — the game-time temperature was 1.94°C and a gray, overcast sky took the sun out of the equation — Chicago pushed hard for the tying score in the closing minutes, but came up empty.
Jonathan Toews sent a shot off the post after the Blackhawks pulled Ward for an extra attacker with about 1 minute, 30 seconds left. Marchand then added an empty-netter for his 13th of the season.
“We had a little lull there in the third and ended up going down,” Blackhawks coach Jeremy Colliton said. “It’s hard when we were chasing them from then on. Disappointing that we did enough and probably deserved more.”
Chicago (15-21-6) had won five of six, but they remained winless in an NHL-high fourth appearance in the Winter Classic. They also dropped to 1-5 in six outdoor games — also tops in the league.
Brendan Perlini and Dominik Kahun scored for the Blackhawks, while Ward made 32 stops in his first outdoor NHL game.
“Just an unbelievable experience,” Ward said. “I’m really thankful I got the opportunity to do it and you’re just disappointed that you don’t come away with the win.”
Chicago jumped in front when they scored first for the sixth straight game. David Kampf dug the puck out from behind the net and found a wide-open Perlini in the slot 8 minutes, 30 seconds into the first.
Pastrnak responded with his team-best 24th goal. With Artem Anisimov in the penalty box for tripping, Pastrnak got free in front and slid the puck past Ward at 12 minutes, 38 seconds.
He then celebrated by flapping his arms like a bird.
The teams exchanged goals again in the second. Kahun scored his fifth of the season when he redirected Erik Gustafsson’s shot by Rask, but Bergeron broke up a potential short-handed breakaway for Kampf before tying it at 2-2 when he scored another power-play goal with 1 minute, 12 seconds left in the period.
“He never quits, and that’s why he’s Patrice Bergeron,” Cassidy said.
In other games on Tuesday, the Nashville Predators crushed the Philadelphia Flyers 4-0 and the Vegas Golden Knights shut out the Los Angeles Kings 2-0.
Additional reporting by staff writer
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