Post-Game Talk: GAME 30 - Winterpeg 8 BRUINS 1

Fenway

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WINNIPEG, Manitoba (AP) — Mark Scheifele scored two goals and added an assist to lead the Winnipeg Jets to a convincing 8-1 victory over the Boston Bruins on Tuesday night.

Nikita Chibrikov, Mason Appleton, Alex Iafallo, Gabriel Vilardi, Kyle Connor and Vladislav Namestnikov scored the other Winnipeg goals.

Scheifele now has a 13-game point streak at home, totaling 20 points in that stretch.

David Pastrnak replied for the Bruins, who had a four-game winning streak snapped.

Connor Hellebuyck made 23 saves for Winnipeg. Jeremy Swayman stopped 27 shots for Boston.

Scheifele scored his second goal of the game, one-timing a perfect setup from Josh Morrissey on a second-period power play, increasing the Winnipeg lead to 3-0.

Namestnikov opened the scoring in the first period with Boston defenseman Brandon Carlo off for four minutes after clipping Kyle Connor with a high stick. With an assist on the goal, Neal Pionk reached the 200-point mark since joining the Jets in a trade with the New York Rangers.

Takeaways
Bruins: Boston was on their heels after the Jets scored on the power play in the first period, but came to life in the second, scoring their first goal and missing a number of chances. Then they fell apart in the third.

Jets: Winnipeg seemed sparked by the energy displayed by call-up Chibrikov. He drew an early penalty, started the play that led to Winnipeg’s first goal, then assisted on Iafallo’s power-play goal. Then, Scheifele took over, converting two great passes, and dominating play whenever he was on the ice.

Key moment
Connor scored on a setup from Scheifele 1:15 into the third period giving Winnipeg a 4-1 lead and deflating the Bruins.

Key stat
The Jets scored three power-play goals.

Up next
The Bruins visit the Seattle Kraken on Thursday. The Jets host the Vegas Golden Knights on Thursday.



 
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Hookslide

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Nov 19, 2018
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He might be 7-7 after the road trip don.
I am not here to endorse Sacco, but he is not the problem at this point, this has gone all season, Sweeney and Cam need to get off their asses and do something about it. They had a little run, and they were misguided if they thought it was to continue, no better time to at least try and make a deal rather than when you are desperate or in a panic mode, sorry to say they are in both. This team needs a shakeup, and no one should be considered untouchable. They have 16 mil tied up in a center and a goaltender, the center has NTC, the goaltender does not for two years, I would not wait. Those two contracts prohibited Sweeney, and I must say it is his fault, but they had no room to add to this roster. Sweeney must get bold and creative, and time to show some balls. I am so pissed off at what I am watching, it is disgusting. And please do not tell me that Lysell, or Poitras is the answer, you are reaching if you do. I think Brazeau has played well, but he is not top six, and neither is Geekie, .........Donnie, Cam do you here me get off your FN ASSES and do SOMETHING!!!!!!!
 
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Mick Riddleton

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I’m not even debating what goalie is better cause right now it’s obvious but this drives me nuts sometimes with the Swayman hate.

Does Sway deserve criticism like everyone on the team ? he sure does but some are so butthurt by the summer they throw logic out the window.

I don’t recall one amazing save by Hellebuyck all game I’ll fully admit he’s a great goalie but let’s not steer off coarse here he never faced anything that Swayman was facing last night other then the Pasta onetimer that finally hit the net after 33 PP’s and 167 shot attempts..

The way this team floats softly tapped beach balls toward the opposition net with no screens or havoc in front of the net or how they’re afraid to take it to the net cause contact may occur or something heck some aren’t even skilled enough to stop shooting at the opposition legs it’s hard to watch.

After watching them play game in and game out basically all year we still say well that came down to goaltending and our goalie sucks oh 8.5 mil blah blah blah ..

Again I agree Sway does need to better but the opposition goalies are collecting cheques for doing absolutely nothing even any Minor League goaltender would love facing us..

Hey stop this limp noodle wrister or wait stand there while I blast this off the boards ok you ready in your position I’m gonna take a bad angle shot oh boy this is fun k k I’m gonna pass this epically slow pass here comes a onetimer can you get across in time..

Please..

Offence is F’n joke
Offense is the biggest problem. Letting Jake go hurt. He would be our top scorer at 13 goals.
 

Gee Wally

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WINNIPEG, Manitoba — Security rent-a-cops continued to wrap yellow tape around the Canada Life Centre crime scene Wednesday morning, hours after the Bruins were beaten up beyond recognition in their 8-1 aggravated assault at the hands of the Winnipeg Jets.

The beatdown was the worst of the season for the fragile, recovering puck luggers of interim coach Joe Sacco. It was framed by the eyesore of a third-period collapse in which the Black and Gold surrendered five goals to one of this season’s elite squads.

For those still keeping their “Centennial Season And Beyond” records up to date, it was only the 23rd time in their 100 years that the Bruins were plucked apart for five goals (or more) in a third period. It had not happened since Feb. 25, 2021, when Bruce Cassidy’s gang also got rolled for a fin by the Islanders in the final 20 minutes on Long Island.

In a century-plus of third periods, one of those comes around about once every five years. Suggestions for that game sheet: Frame it or flame it.

At least two of the goals in the third-period KO found No. 1 goaltender Jeremy Swayman several degrees below his game — somewhere between Senior Men’s Beer League and Tuesday Night YMCA recreational floor hockey.

In his prior 172 games (including playoffs) of NHL experience, Swayman never yielded as many eight goals, though the ex-Maine Black Bear was hardly the lone slaggard at the center of the all-night deluge. The Jets repeatedly strafed the Bruins’ backend, leaving for a bare naked Swayman, and leaving blue liners Mason Lohrei and Andrew Peeke each with ugly minus-3s next to their names, along with center Elias “If-I-Were-A-Rich-Man” Lindholm.

Written to a $54.25 million guarantee on July 1 as the presumptive No. 1 pivot, a void left open since the summer 2023 departures of Patrice Bergeron and David Krejci, Lindholm through 30 games has been a bust.

Lindholm, remember, was brought aboard to produce points, drive the top-six offense. His line ahead of Thursday night’s faceoff in Seattle stands at a paltry 3-10–13. If he’s driving, it’s from way deep in the back seat, third row of the rusted eight-seat family van (don’t make me stop this car).

The 30-year-old smooth-skating Swede has chipped in with but one goal and three assists in the 15 games since Nov. 7 and is now on track to finish with a career-low 36 points. Mercy. All for a cap hit of $7.75 million. Georgii Merkulov could have done that for $775,000.

Lindholm’s performance stands toe to toe with that of onetime, short-time Bruins pivot Alexei Zhamnov, who was 34 when hired on to be an added offensive mover and shaker by then-general manager Mike O’Connell in the summer of 2005. Zhamnov went a paltry 1-9–10 in 24 games (a 34-point pace) before O’Connell defenestrated the Russian pivot, who soon slipped out of town and never was seen again in a North American rink (you can look it up with minimal forensic work).

It was the same season that O’Connell also sent Joe Thornton to the San Jose badland, and yes, the same season that owner Jeremy Jacobs subsequently ordered O’Connell’s defenestration. Enter: Peter Chiarelli, Zdeno Chara and Marc Savard in the summer of 2006, and five years later what stands today as the franchise’s lone Stanley Cup title since 1972.

Right now, roughly 2½ months through the season, Lindholm stands as the kind of signing that can change the order of things in the Jacobs family’s Causeway Street front office. GM Don Sweeney and team president Cam Neely have played their hole card, firing Jim Montgomery not even a month ago (Nov. 19), and putting the “interim” tag on Medford Joe. Sacco stands a respectable 7-3-0, albeit including Le Debacle Manitoba.

If Lindholm remains in his state of suspended vulcanized animation, and high-priced UFA defender Nikita Zadorov (six years/$30 million) keeps providing marginal impact (to be kind), then nothing catches the eye of owner Jeremy Jacobs like big money for next to no return.

Never has Jacobs, in his half-century of ownership, paid so much ($84.25 million) for so little, which is exactly what many of his TD Garden faithful say to themselves as they line up at his concession stands.

Unlike his customers, however, Jacobs is not held captive to cost. He’s rarely made change in the front office. His progeny Charlie, the Executive Son, watches over things, which is to say he leads the wicked charmed life of monitoring profits and leaves all the hockey thingys to Sweeney and Neely.

Charlie and Jeremy only will activate on the hockey side if/when the cash cow buckles in what has been the rich, green field ever since that 2011 Cup win. For some fans in the stands, and NESN viewers, it’s getting old.

Up until the stop here, Sacco had proven proficient in getting the band back together, in the sense of at least adhering to team defense, deleting the staggering boo-boos that reached dunderheadedness levels in the late stage of Montgomery’s watch.

Normally that’s a tough spot for a new bench boss, but Sacco has been on staff since the bronzed Julien era, and right now he has an opportunity, be it whatever percentage, to turn interim employment into full-time status.

Easy to say from the press gallery, but an uncut Medford Joe schoolyard eruption in that moment — or somewhere on this five-game trip? — might have cleared what has a been a competitive fog surrounding this team since the 6-4 opening night loss in Sunrise, Fla. If that fog can be cleared.

Thirty games into the 82-game slog, and some tough opponents lined up for the rest of the trip, the biggest loss of the season (by goal margin) should be a wake-up call, to the roster, to the front office, and perhaps to the sleepy ownership suite.
 
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Bruinfanatic

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So my interpretation of a lot being said in here is we much rather lose 2-1 or 3-1 .
Ok.
Fact is as bad as Swayman has been the whole team sucked last night. Out played , out talented, and out scored.

Thats my take anyways. They all need to step up in a big way to compete.
8-1 is pretty embarrassing,and I think talented is the key point in your post,more than everything else .also Swayman needs to be better.
 

Bruinfanatic

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Offense is the biggest problem. Letting Jake go hurt. He would be our top scorer at 13 goals.
I think the biggest issue is not so much him leaving,because I’m not so sure he wanted to be in Boston,but the fact they didn’t replace him and it isn’t just the goals but his breakout speed is sorely missed on this team.
 

KillerMillerTime

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Missed the game, but I don't think so. Deserve-to-win-meter says that our performance yesterday should have earned us the win 53.2% of the time.

Can't let the scoreline colour your whole perspective. That includes when we win a game which we deserved to lose handily, which happened the other night. I recall people being pretty upbeat after that win, giving mostly positive reviews of the team's performance. That was pretty telling for me.
I think your win o' meter needs some recalibration. Winnipeg deserved to win the game.
 
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UncleRico

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Peeke has been brutal since returning. Lol at anyone who thought Columbus coaching staff was his problem. A terrible pick up by Sweeney.

He is brutal. Definition of a pylon.

He is one of the worst in the league with the puck on his stick. The puck is a pure grenade when it’s on his stick.

He is 6th overall on the bruins in giveaways and the worst on the team in giveaways per 60 minutes.

Which is truly amazing considering he isn’t a guy that typically has the puck on his stick.

He is terrible.
 

KnightofBoston

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I thought the bruins started really strong and Eve me responded with some grit after going down 3-0, but it was at that moment they needed to show mental fortitude for a full 60 to make it a game or at least not get embarrassed

They failed to do so, mental mistakes made the wheels fly off the wagon


The good news is, coaching is the main antidote to that poison, the bad news is, is Sacco really that guy or is he merely holding the ship together until they can find their guy?


The irony is they needed a Cassidy or better yet a Julien in round 1 2023, and probably needed a Monty in 2019.

Who do they need now?
 

TheReal13Linseman

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cute quip but IRL it doesn’t really work that way. Bruins are borderline NHL team. We have too many players worthy of AHL than NHL. I didn’t even bother to watch last night. When I do tune in, it’s generally a chore to watch. Wish I could get my Center Ice package fee back. Sweeney’s malfeasance has led us to this. We are so far from being competitive it’s not even funny. Hosed again with Swayman, too. I never thought he was worth paying what we did for him. Another Albatross hung on our necks.
 

JerseyBruin

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That doesn't mean that they outplayed the Jets for 2 periods.

Sway is part of the team. Ending up in the box is part of the game. As is killing penalties. Getting scoring opportunities without really turning them into legit chances to score means little.

I watched the game too.
Obviously I'm not talking about the end results of periods 1 and 2 , as its black and white the Jets were winning 3-1 . My point is the Bruins weren't completely dominated like in other games earlier this season. It all fell apart in the 3rd but for 2 periods at least imo they looked like they could compete with Winnipeg.
 
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JerseyBruin

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Yeah, but Lowry will police that. Or at least he should. Plus we don't know what kind of chirping was going on before the fight. Gustafsson could have chirped something that warranted a beating.
From the clip I saw as they didn't show the lead up on the TV feed it looked like a lot of stick work from both sides.
 
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KillerMillerTime

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I thought the bruins started really strong and Eve me responded with some grit after going down 3-0, but it was at that moment they needed to show mental fortitude for a full 60 to make it a game or at least not get embarrassed

They failed to do so, mental mistakes made the wheels fly off the wagon


The good news is, coaching is the main antidote to that poison, the bad news is, is Sacco really that guy or is he merely holding the ship together until they can find their guy?


The irony is they needed a Cassidy or better yet a Julien in round 1 2023, and probably needed a Monty in 2019.

Who do they need now?
A shrink
 
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