Boston 8, Vancouver 1

Rome has B's burning

Bruins go on scoring binge after losing Horton to hit

Stanley Cup Canucks Bruins Hockey
Boston Bruins defenseman Andrew Ference is mobbed by teamates after scoring the first goal against the Vancouver Canucks during the second period in Game 3 of the NHL hockey Stanley Cup Finals between the Boston Bruins and the Vancouver Canucks in Boston, Monday, June 6, 2011. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Jonathan Hayward)
Share this

BOSTON - Shortly after the Boston Bruins lost Nathan Horton to a frightening injury, they found a dazzling offensive rhythm that got them back into the Stanley Cup finals.

Andrew Ference and David Krejci each had a goal and an assist during Boston's four-goal second period, Tim Thomas made 40 saves, and the Bruins beat the Canucks, 8-1, in Game 3 last night, trimming Vancouver's series lead to 2-1.

Mark Recchi scored two goals for the Bruins, who turned a big win into a blowout with four more goals in the final 8½ minutes of the third period against beleaguered goalie Roberto Luongo, who won the first two games of the series in Vancouver.

The Bruins were one goal shy of equaling the finals record of nine in a game, set by Detroit in Game 2 of the 1936 series and matched by Toronto six years later in Game 5. The eight goals were the most scored in the finals since Colorado topped Florida, 8-1, on June 6, 1996, in Game 2, according to STATS LLC.

Boston emerged from its offensive slump after Horton was taken off the ice on a stretcher in the first period after taking a late hit to the head from Vancouver defenseman Aaron Rome.

"It's always tough when a guy goes down," said forward Brad Marchand, who scored a shorthanded goal. "We really wanted to get this win tonight for him. It's a very tough situation, and everyone is worried about him, but it definitely gave us motivation to win."

Game 4 is tomorrow in Boston.

Marchand scored a shorthanded goal in the second period, and Daniel Paille added another shorthanded goal in the third. Recchi, Chris Kelly and Michael Ryder - who finished with three points - scored in the final 2½ minutes as the Bruins emphatically avoided a daunting 0-3 series deficit.

Boston had managed just three goals in its previous 10 periods before torching Luongo, who stopped 30 shots. Boston hadn't even scored six goals in a finals game since May 5, 1970, in Game 2 against St. Louis.

Jannik Hansen broke up Thomas's shutout bid with 6:07 to play for the Canucks, who finally hit a major bump in their late-season roll toward their first Stanley Cup title.

NHL scoring champion Daniel Sedin got a 10-minute misconduct late in the jarring loss for the Presidents' Trophy winners, who had won seven of eight games. The Canucks had given up just six total goals in their previous four games while closing out the Western Conference finals and taking a two-game lead over Boston.

The palpable excitement of Boston's first home finals game in 21 years turned into unease just 5 minutes into Game 3.

After Horton passed the puck to Milan Lucic at the Vancouver blue line, Rome left his feet to deliver a hard shoulder check to Horton's upper chest and head. Horton appeared to be unconscious after he landed flat on his back, his arm spookily reaching up into empty space.

Medical personnel spent several minutes attending to Horton, who scored the Bruins' winning Game 7 goals in the first round against Montreal and again in the Eastern Conference finals against Tampa Bay. The crowd gave a standing ovation as Horton was wheeled off the ice, wearing a neck brace and apparently talking.

Rome got a five-minute major for interference and a game misconduct, with at least one fan throwing a yellow towel at the Vancouver bench while Rome went to the dressing room. The shaken Bruins didn't score on six shots on their marathon power play, with the Canucks blocking shots and diving to protect Luongo.

The Boston crowd rose and cheered several minutes later when a scoreboard message told them Horton could move his arms and legs when he was taken to Massachusetts General Hospital. (next page »)

Comments
Login or register to post a comment.
Don't miss this
Customer service: