Game 7 pressure? Bruins are tested

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Game 7 of this epic Boston-Montreal showdown is scheduled to kick off tonight at a sure-to-be-crackling Bell Centre.



The thing is, the Bruins have been taking on seventh games for the past month.

To finish two points ahead of ninth-place Carolina and qualify for the playoffs, the Bruins rattled off points in nine of 10 regular-season matches, the streak culminating in their clinching a postseason spot with a 2-1 win over Ottawa April 4.

Then when the Canadiens won three of the first four games in their first-round series, the Bruins had to stare down elimination for the last two matches, emerging with a pair of victories to force tonight's do-or-die contest.

The pressure couldn't be greater. Game 7. In Montreal, a city that is the steward of Stanley Cups. Within the walls of a building that will contain 21,273 rabid, towel-waving fans. A guaranteed handshake line at the end of the night.

For the Canadiens, tonight will be the first time they face a possible season-ender. The Bruins, however, have been fighting to extend their season for quite some time.

"Game 7s are almost like those games that we had [Saturday] night," said Andrew Ference, referring to the 5-4 win at TD Banknorth Garden. "It's pretty emotional. It's pretty wild. When you're down in a series, I guess, our last game was a Game 7 anyway. I don't think it's going to be different than the last couple games. [Saturday] night, we were basically on the verge of elimination. So it's really a very similar type of game."

Montreal swaggered into the series with all the confidence expected of a club that had claimed all eight meetings with the Bruins this season. Their chests ballooned even bigger when they took Games 1 and 2 at the Bell Centre, riding hotshot goalie Carey Price and the stick of world-class talent Alex Kovalev, who netted a seemingly back-snapping overtime goal to give Montreal a 2-0 series lead.

But four games later, Montreal looks like a broken team that's staggering at the wrong time. Price, who blanked the Bruins in Game 4 to make it a 3-1 series, has seen 10 pucks enter his net over the last two matches. Kovalev has vanished, smothered by the tight checking of Zdeno Chara (with help from partners Aaron Ward and Shane Hnidy). The once-potent Montreal power play, the best in the NHL during the regular season, has been successful only twice in 29 occasions, clicking at a measly 6.9 percent, the worst conversion rate of the playoff teams.

At this point, coach Guy Carbonneau is struggling to find some solutions.

"There were [nearly 10] minutes left when [defenseman] Francis Bouillon scored," Carbonneau said after Game 6. "Then we gave them three goals on breaks. They created those breaks and took advantage of them. We didn't react the right way. We have to regroup now. Obviously, everyone wishes they can close it in four games. But that's why you have that seventh game. That's why you play 82 games - to have a chance to play that seventh game at home."

Bruins coach Claude Julien knows there are still areas of concern. The flammable Kovalev could explode. The Bruins were "pathetic," in Julien's description, in the faceoff circle in Game 6, especially when they lost 13 of 16 first-period draws. They can't afford to let up on the Canadiens like they did in Saturday night's third period when winger Christopher Higgins negated Phil Kessel's second goal by tying the game 11 ticks after the 20-year-old netted his second strike of the night.

What doesn't worry Julien, however, is his team's mental approach. The Bruins have been punched in the face all season, starting from the injuries to Patrice Bergeron and Manny Fernandez to the 3-1 deficit. Through it all, they have rammed through every roadblock to put themselves in their current situation.

"The reason we are where we are is because of the adversity we've had this year," Julien said. "It was painful not only to miss a guy like Patrice Bergeron all year, but we lost Manny Fernandez all year. He's a great goaltender. We're lucky that both Tim [Thomas] and [Alex Auld] have played great.

"[Andrew] Alberts was out for a while, which is the reason right now it's hurt him a little bit. That kind of stuff allowed us to become a stronger team because everybody had to step up. I think we are where we are right now because of those situations. Despite all of the negative stuff that's happened to us, it's really thrown us a lot of positive things too."

The 20 times they've fallen behind by a 3-1 margin, the Bruins never have rallied to win the series. This group, however, has proven capable of disproving whatever fate history dictates.

"We've been playing our whole careers and dreaming about this," said Glen Metropolit. "It's going to be a great chance for us to really step up and prove to everyone that we're a great team. We're a resilient bunch of guys. Hopefully we can pull it off [tonight]."
 

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Nothing different

The Bruins, winners of their last two elimination games, aren't planning to change their approach heading into tonight's do-or-die match.

"This is going to be our third game with our backs against the wall," Claude Julien said. "I don't see why tonight should be different. The last two games, we've played to allow ourselves to live another day. And tonight's the same thing. We play tonight in order to live another day. That shouldn't change."

* Julien said the Bruins will not think about the fact that it's Game 7. "You don't allow it to sink in," Julien said of the moment's gravity. "We're coming out here in a building that's going to be packed, and we're going to play our game. The fans were really into it in Game 5 when they thought they could end the series. They were as pumped as I've seen them. And it didn't bother our hockey club. We'll make sure the same approach is there tonight."

* Tonight will be Glen Murray's sixth career Game 7, most of any Bruin. "It's exciting. No question about it," Murray said. "The series comes down to one game. Both teams are going to give it their all."

* Murray hasn't scored a single point in the series. "Hopefully one goes in off my head tonight," said Murray. "I'll take 10 stitches for anything like that. Just have to go to the net and keep shooting hard."

* Opening faceoff is scheduled for 7:10 p.m.

The following lineup during the morning skate shouldn't change tonight, with the exception of flipping Murray and Phil Kessel:

Sturm-Krejci-Murray
Lucic-Savard-Kessel
Axelsson-Metropolit-Nokelainen
Schaefer-Sobotka-Thornton

Chara-Ward
Ference-Wideman
Stuart-Hnidy

Thomas
 

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* Teams have fallen behind by a 3-1 margin 224 times in NHL history. Of those 224 occasions, there have only been nine comebacks (9 percent).

* Since going to the best-of-seven format in 1939, there have been 120 series extended to seven games. The home team has won 76 times (63 percent).
 

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Referees tonight

Kevin Pollock and Bill McCreary will be the referees tonight.

Jean Morin and Pierre Racicot will be the linesmen.

Tonight will be Bill McCreary's second game of the series. McCreary and Greg Kimmerly were the referees for Game 3 (2-1 Boston win in overtime).

McCreary and Kimmerly called a total of 11 penalties in Game 3. There were no power-play goals scored.

Tonight will be Kevin Pollock's first game of the series.
 
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