But they are in danger of dropping three in a row on Wednesday as they take on Florida after back-to-back losses to Los Angeles and Tampa Bay. The good news is that they are headed to Sunrise, Fla., to take on the Panthers.
The Bruins have enjoyed their trips to the greater Miami metro area of late, winning five of their last six games there, including both contests at Florida last season. Add in last Thursday's convincing 4-0 victory over the Panthers at the Garden, and Florida might just be exactly the opponent the Bruins would like to face right now to turn things around.
It will still be an emotional matchup, as Bruins forwards Nathan Horton and Gregory Campbell play their first games in Sunrise as visitors. They both spent their entire NHL careers with the Panthers before coming to Boston this summer in a blockbuster deal for Dennis Wideman and draft picks. Horton came up big with three assists last week against Florida, and would love to add a few more points in his first game back in his old stomping grounds.
Boston Bruins (11-6-2, 24 points) at Florida Panthers (9-10-0, 18 points)
Nov. 24, 7:30 p.m. (NESN)
BankAtlantic Center, Sunrise, Fla.
This is the second of four meetings this season between the Bruins and Panthers. The Bruins won the first meeting last Thursday 4-0 as Tuukka Rask stopped all 41 shots he faced and Milan Lucic scored a natural hat trick. Boston holds a slim 28-26-6-4 edge in the all-time series, but is 16-12-2-1 on the road.
Tim Thomas has a 10-1-1 record and leads the league with a 1.49 GAA, .954 save percentage and four shutouts. He's just 4-6-2 with a 3.36 GAA and an .893 save percentage against the Panthers though, which is part of why Rask got the start last Thursday. Rask earned his only win of the year so far against Florida, and is 1-5-1 despite a 2.36 GAA and a .935 save percentage. He's 2-1-0 with an 0.98 GAA and a .966 save percentage against the Panthers.
For the Panthers, Tomas Vokoun is 8-7-0 with a 2.38 GAA, .924 save percentage and two shutouts, and he's had success against the Bruins of late, with a 2.60 GAA, .930 save percentage and two shutouts. Scott Clemmensen is just 1-3-0 with a 3.18 GAA and an .898 save percentage this year, but is 5-3-0 with a 1.98 GAA, .935 save percentage and two shutouts against Boston.
Bruins
Panthers
Bruins
Panthers
The Panthers and Bruins have exchanged players several times in the past year, with Bitz going to Florida in the deal for Dennis Seidenberg at last year's trade deadline and Wideman heading to the Panthers in the trade that brought Horton and Campbell to Boston this summer. Center Marty Reasoner also played briefly for the Bruins as well as at Boston College, while Clemmensen was also a BC Eagle and Chris Higgins played at Yale.
The Panthers are tied for last in the NHL with just four fighting majors in 19 games. Enforcer Darcy Hordichuk has two of those fights, while Wideman and Allen have the other fighting majors. Hordichuk's most recent bout was a slugfest with Shawn Thornton in Boston last week. The Bruins have 19 fighting majors in as many games, but have gone without a fight in back-to-back games for just the second time this season. Thornton, Mark Stuart, Campbell and Adam McQuaid lead the club with three fights each and Lucic has two.
The Bruins have fared well on the road this season with a 7-2-0 record, but the second of those losses came Monday in Tampa in the start of this two-game swing through Florida. The Panthers are one game under .500 overall but 5-3-0 at home. They lost to 3-2 Pittsburgh at home on Monday, but won three straight on home ice before that.
The Bruins won three straight games last week and don't want to match that with a three-game losing streak now.