The Boston Bruins provided a rusty return from a 10-day layoff.The Calgary Flames also resumed their 2023-24 slate with the same time off between games. But they also entered Tuesday as a team beginning to sell off their pieces ahead of the trade deadline.
With Elias Lindholm off to Vancouver, the Bruins had a prime opportunity to pick up where they left off before the All-Star break. Instead, they completely looked out of sorts in one of their worst outings of their centennial season.
Andrei Kuzmenko, one of the pieces of the Lindholm trade, notched his first goal as a Flame 4:20 in. The former Canucks winger scored on a transitional power play-rush to give his new team a 1-0 lead just seconds after Jacob Markstrom denied Charlie Coyle on a shorthanded chance.
A defensive lapse during a 3-on-2 sequence allowed Connor Zary to walk in for his 11th of the season for Calgary’s second marker with 6:59 left in the opening frame.
The Bruins hardly responded at all against Calgary’s physicality. In every attempt to push back during a scrum, they failed to come together, as seen when Brad Marchand succumbed to a late cross-check from Martin Pospisil late in the first period, resulting in a game misconduct for the Calgary winger.
Jim Montgomery tried to get his team out of a rut with another round of line changes. The forechecking struggles in the offensive, defensive and neutral zones persisted into the middle frame.
The Bruins appeared to turn a corner on Pavel Zacha’s one-timer during a 5-on-3 situation early in the third. Within a 28-second span, however, they committed an ill-timed, too-many-men penalty and found themselves in a 3-1 hole on Jonathan Huberdeau’s snipe during a 4-on-4 sequence.
Noah Hanifin, another marquee rumored name on the trade market, added insurance with Calgary’s second power-play marker midway into the third.
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