Bruins blow 4-goal lead, lose to Lightning in NHL Stadium Series game
By ERIK ERLENDSSON Associated Press
Nikita Kucherov scored the tying goal in the third period, Jake Guentzel scored the only goal in the shootout, and the Tampa Bay Lightning rallied from a four-goal deficit to beat the Boston Bruins 6-5 in front of 64,617 at an NHL Stadium Series game at Raymond James Stadium.
Tampa Bay's four-goal comeback is the largest in NHL outdoor game history and the largest comeback victory in franchise history.
Kucherov finished with a goal and three assists, Brandon Hagel had a goal and two assists, while Oliver Bjorkstrand, Darren Raddysh and Nick Paul all scored power-play goals after Tampa Bay fell behind 5-1 in the second period.
Andrei Vasilevskiy finished with 29 saves.
Morgan Geekie had a pair of goals and three points for the Bruins. Viktor Arvidsson, Alex Steeves and Matthew Poitras also scored for Boston, which improved to 10-1-2 in the past 13 games. Charlie McAvoy had a pair of assists while Jeremy Swayman finished with 41 saves.
Kucherov completed Tampa Bay's comeback with a one-timer from the left circle with 8:10 left in the third period.
The game featured the first goalie fight in outdoor game history when Vasilevskiy and Swayman exchanged blows at center ice in the second period. The Lightning pointed to the goalie fight as a spark to their comeback when they were down 5-2.
"That was a game-changing moment for our team, and that's what we needed,'' Guentzel said. "That was definitely cool to watch.''
The Bruins thought they won it in overtime when David Pastrnak's goal was negated by a penalty. Pastrnak, who was celebrating his goal at 4:38 of overtime, was called for slashing J.J. Moser and the score was waved off.
Pastrnak was upset and confused by the call by referee Jon McIsaac.
"I have no clue what happened, honestly," he said. "It's a freaking turnover. We got a 2-on-1. The referee has an arm up and is letting it go. Sway is going to the bench. We finish the play, score a goal, and all of a sudden, I'm in the penalty box. So, (it's a) joke. I don't understand. I've never seen something like that."
With an opening puck drop temperature of 41.8 degrees Fahrenheit (5.44 Celsius), Hagel fired up the crowd with a goal just 11 seconds in - the fastest goal in NHL outdoor game history and tying a franchise history for fastest goal to start a game.
The Bruins scored the next five as Steeves, Geekie and Arvidsson all scored within a span of 7:39 to give Boston a 3-1 lead after the first. Poitras scored on a backhander at 2:22 of the second period while Geekie notched his second of the game at 8:18.
"We came out strong, obviously they scored right away but we got to our game right after,'' Geekie said.
Bjorkstrand scored at 10:28 to make it 5-2.
The Lightning scored a pair of five-on-three power-play goals 23 seconds apart. Raddysh scored a goal for the fourth consecutive game to set a franchise record for a defenseman. Paul then tapped in a pass from Guentzel to make it 5-4.
"It was the game had everything,'' Lightning head coach Jon Cooper said. "It had the weather in a state which doesn't usually get weather like this. It was a phenomenal atmosphere, perfect ice hockey playing conditions. You had goalie fights, you had 11 goals, you had a shootout. It had everything. That one's going to go in the memory bank. It was a special occasion."
Up next
Bruins: At Florida on Wednesday night.
Lightning: Host Buffalo on Tuesday night.