BOSTON — The Boston Bruins almost made it into their mid-winter break completely healthy.
Forward Joakim Nordstrom is recovering from a fractured lower leg and goaltender Tuukka Rask is dealing with a concussion sustained against the New York Rangers on Saturday. Otherwise, the Bruins’ lineup from the start of the season was on the ice when they completed their 49th game with a 3-2 loss to the Rangers.
A nearly full complement of players had the Bruins excited about what they could accomplish after the break. They’re in third place (27-17-5) behind Tampa Bay and Toronto in the Atlantic Division despite fighting injuries throughout the first half.
Bruins Need to Build on Early Success
“I think we can continue to build on some of the success we had in the beginning of the season,” said defenceman Kevan Miller, who missed 26 games because of injuries. “We think we still have some areas in our game that we need to work on. But I think the break will help a little bit, some guys get their legs.”
The eight-day vacation, which combines the NHL-mandated break and the NHL All-Star break, possibly came at just the right time because of Rask’s head injury. He was bowled over by Rangers forward Filip Chytil in the midst of the wing scoring a goal on an end-to-end rush in the first period on Saturday.
Rask is 14-8-3 with a .919 save percentage and 2.43 goals-against this season and has formed an impressive goaltending tandem with Jaroslav Halak. He signed as an unrestricted free agent last summer and is 13-9-2 with a .919 save percentage and 2.47 GAA. When Rask struggled early in the season and took a four-day leave of absence to attend to a personal matter, Halak carried the load. Rask has returned the favour after Halak struggled in the weeks leading up to the break.
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Their performances were a big reason the Bruins overcame their injury issues, including a 16-game absence of four-time Selke Trophy-winning centre Patrice Bergeron and 19 games without captain Zdeno Chara. The Bruins are tied for second place in the NHL at 2.61 goals allowed per game.
“Our goaltending . they’ve been healthy, a balanced workload,” Bruins coach Bruce Cassidy said. “You look at the numbers, they’re almost identical now. So you’re getting a chance to win every night.”
Bruins Look Good in Back-to-Backs
Cassidy noted their back-to-back record has been good — finishing 6-1-1 in the second game.
“Guys pick each other up around here,” he said. “So they understand if someone, a major part of the lineup is out, they’ve got to pick it up.”
More than a week off between games could give Rask and others a chance to heal up for the stretch run and could prevent an unfortunate slide in the standings. The Bruins followed a 6-1-0 stretch with a 1-2-1 record before the break, including regulation losses to the Rangers and Philadelphia Flyers, teams 10 points or more behind them in the standings.
Boston ranks just 17th in goals scored per game (2.90) and leans a bit too much on its second-ranked power play (27.2 per cent).
“I thought we had some really good games,” Chara said. “You know we had some games we could’ve played better, but overall I think we’re in a good position going into the break. It’s always very important to play better and keep improving the closer you get to the playoffs. You demand to play the best hockey.”
Matt Kalman, The Associated Press