Mark Kastelic Goals Scored Props • Boston

Bell Centre
The Bruins are the lowest-scoring team in the NHL during their active 3-14-3 run, and they’ve also dropped nine straight and by two or more in six of those contests. There's also a potential goaltending mismatch, with Boston No. 1 Jeremy Swayman going 1-5 with a disastrous .863 save percentage, 3.61 GAA and -1.68 goals saved above average across his past six road starts. In the opposite crease, Sam Montembeault has been solid on home ice since returning from the 4 Nations Face-Off. He’s 6-0-1 with a .917 save percentage and 2.24 GAA, with the lone blemish coming to the powerhouse Colorado Avalanche when he was bombarded with 37 shots. The Bruins don’t have the same level of offensive firepower jumping the boards.
Newhook has been a consistent secondary shooter of late with two or more shots in 12 of his past 17 games while ranking third in shots (12.12) and fourth in attempts (14.84) per 60 minutes for the Habs. Those numbers are also way up from his respective 5.18 and 12.01 marks to start the year. Of course, the Bruins also sport a 26th-ranked 46.8 Corsi For percentage and 29th-ranked 46.0% shot share at 5-on-5 during their active 3-14-3 skid. As a result, I like Newhook’s potential to keep the uptick in shot volume rolling Thursday.
Last Meeting ( Dec 1, 2024 ) Montreal 3, Boston 6
The Montreal Canadiens continue their playoff chase and a three-game homestand with eyes on banking a third consecutive win when they host the archrival Boston Bruins on Thursday night.
Montreal (35-30-9, 79 points) stayed two points ahead of the Columbus Blue Jackets and New York Rangers for the final Eastern Conference wild-card spot after concluding a season sweep of the Florida Panthers with a 3-2 Tuesday win in overtime. The teams also played Sunday in Florida, with the Canadiens winning 4-2.
The victories followed a five-game winless streak (0-3-2) for Montreal, which was on the wrong side of the cut line as recently as Saturday.
"I almost feel like we've been better coming back than holding a spot," Montreal coach Martin St. Louis said. "You hope you get better at it every time. To me, we can't be tight as a group because we are in the playoff picture right now. It's the old cliche, ‘stick to the process' and all that, but it's really true."
The Canadiens stuck to it and found two points on Tuesday, with captain Nick Suzuki providing the heroics for the Canadiens by scoring with 8.4 seconds left in regulation and ending the game 29 seconds into overtime to top Florida.
As defenseman Kaiden Guhle put it, every game is "do-or-die" these days -- and recent games have shown a playoff-like atmosphere in the iconic Bell Centre.
"The pressure is on us, and you want that pressure," he said. "I think we're thriving with it right now and when the fans are how they (were on Tuesday), and the energy that's in the building and you score with eight seconds left to tie it and win in overtime, it's pretty unbelievable."
Lane Hutson has continued to dazzle. He dished out three assists -- including helpers on Suzuki's tying and winning goals -- to break Montreal's record for a rookie defenseman. With 57, he sits just four shy of Larry Murphy's NHL mark.
"Elite players always rise to occasions, and I feel he's probably done that his whole life," Suzuki said of the NHL's reigning Rookie of the Month. "Big games don't really get in his head. He just goes out there and does whatever he can to help the team."
Forward Oliver Kapanen, a 21-year-old who made his NHL debut on Oct. 10 in Boston, was expected to join the Canadiens later on Wednesday.
While Boston (30-36-9, 69 points) won its first two games against Montreal in October and December, a current nine-game skid (0-8-1) leaves it at the bottom of the conference standings for the first time since 1997.
The Bruins' woes continued with a 4-3 Tuesday loss to the Washington Capitals, despite two David Pastrnak goals. It was another strong performance for interim coach Joe Sacco's club but a second straight one-goal defeat.
"We have to have that sticktoitiveness, that mindset where regardless of what happens, we're going to play hard right to the very end," Sacco said.
Pastrnak has six multi-goal games and 37 total tallies.
Despite the Bruins' faded playoff hopes, all they can do is focus on what is to come. Goaltender Jeremy Swayman did that in a 28-save effort and has seen that mindset carry throughout the dressing room.
"You can't really point a finger. It's the way it's going right now and we're not going to dwell on the past," Swayman said. "We have to stay in the present. And even then, I thought we had to push after (Washington made it 3-2 in the third period). It just goes to show what kind of team we have here and what we can do and keep pushing, no matter what."
--Field Level Media