The sellout crowd in Florida was absolutely raucous during the playing of the national anthem. Singing it loudly, yelling at times, the energy in the building was palpable.
Boston goalie Jeremy Swayman looked around at those fans during the song, a most confident look upon his face. It was almost like he knew he was going to keep them quiet for the majority of the remainder of the evening.
And that’s exactly what he did.
Swayman’s brilliant post-season continued by stopping 38 shots, Brandon Carlo scored a goal just a few hours after his wife gave birth to their son and the Bruins topped the Panthers 5-1 in Game 1 of their second-round playoff series Monday night.
“I was just so impressed by the way all of us didn’t take no for an answer,” Swayman said. “The physicality, the mental and everything was so good to see and I’m really excited for what’s to come.”
Morgan Geekie, Mason Lohrei, Justin Brazeau and Jake DeBrusk also had goals for Boston, which improved to 5-0-0 against the Panthers this season. Pavel Zacha had a pair of assists for the Bruins, who scored three times in the final 7:08 of the second period to erase a 1-0 deficit and seize control.
Swayman has been in net for all five of Boston’s wins so far in these playoffs and was stellar yet again – just as he was against Toronto in a Round 1 series that ended with a Game 7 overtime thriller on Saturday night. He stopped all seven shots he saw on Florida’s three power plays, improving the best stats of any netminder so far in these playoffs.
Through seven playoff appearances, Swayman has made a league-best 210 saves with a most-stingy goals-against average of 1.42.
“We made a lot of mistakes,” Bruins coach Jim Montgomery said. “If not for Jeremy Swayman, that would have been a lot closer game and maybe they come out on top.”
Matthew Tkachuk had the goal for Florida, which has rallied from a 1-0 deficit to win an NHL playoff series only twice in nine previous opportunities – one of those was last year against Boston in Round 1. Sergei Bobrovsky stopped 24 shots for the Panthers, who were playing for the first time in a week.
Game 2 is in Sunrise on Wednesday night.
“I didn’t care for our game,” Panthers coach Paul Maurice said. “And I think we can fix a big chunk of the things we didn’t like.”
It was the first one-sided game of the five this season between the clubs who finished 1-2 – Florida first with 110 points, Boston second with 109 points – in the Atlantic Division. Boston won them all in the regular season, three by one goal and the other by two, but Florida was either tied or ahead in those games 78 per cent of the time.
This one was different. Once Boston got the lead, the Bruins – who have now successfully rallied from deficits of 1-0 in four of the five games with Florida this season – went completely airtight defensively.
“We made some mistakes and probably weren’t as hard as we needed to be tonight,” Tkachuk said. “And they played well.”
Swayman gave up the game’s first goal to Tkachuk, the Florida star’s fourth of the post-season, midway through the second after he and Bobrovsky were in a goalie’s duel for the first 31 minutes. He didn’t deal with the deficit for long.
It took Boston only 67 seconds to get the equalizer, with Geekie cleaning up a loose puck in front. And the lead came 3:25 later, when Lohrei got his first playoff goal by going over Bobrovsky’s shoulder from a tough angle.
That set the stage for Carlo to add to a day he’ll never forget.
He wasn’t on the flight with the Bruins to South Florida on Sunday, staying behind because his wife Mayson was about to give birth. She delivered their son Crew on Monday morning, in time for Carlo to hop on a plane for the three-hour trip south. He arrived at the arena after the rest of his teammates, but in time to be in the lineup – and he scored with 21 seconds left in the second, staking his club to a 3-1 edge.
“Definitely wanted to play,” Carlo said. “and very happy I did.”
Brazeau sealed it with 12:47 left, getting behind the Florida defence and beating Bobrovsky with a backhander. The Panthers pulled Bobrovsky with 5:30 left, and DeBrusk added an empty-netter about two minutes later.