Bruins Look to Build Momentum With Trip to New York to Face Rangers

The Bruins ended a two-game skid with a solid 3-0 win over the Devils at the Garden on Monday to end a three-game homestand. Now they head back on the road looking to build off the momentum from that game by beating another New York area team as they head to Madison Square Garden to take on the Rangers.

The Bruins have been comfortable away from home this year, posting a 6-1-0 road record so far. The Rangers also haven't been particularly strong at home with a 4-5-1 record at MSG. But the Rangers have won three straight, including their last two on home ice, and come into this matchup with plenty of momentum of their own.

The Bruins and Rangers always seem to play tight, low-scoring games, and this one promises to be no different as the Original Six rivals are sure to slug it out all the way down to the wire.

When and Where

Boston Bruins (9-5-1, 19 points) at New York Rangers (10-7-1, 21 points)
Nov. 17, 7 p.m. (NESN)
Madison Square Garden, New York

Head to Head

This is the second of four meetings this season between the Original Six rivals. The Rangers won 3-2 in Boston on Oct. 23 and also won three of the four clashes last year, but Boston holds a 282-236-97-6 edge in the all-time series. The Rangers do have the advantage in New York, where the Bruins are just 117-138-55-2.

Goaltending Matchup

Tim Thomas continued his spectacular start with a 28-save shutout on New Jersey on Monday. He's now 9-1-0 with a 1.32 GAA and a .960 save percentage, but he's just 3-6-3 with a 2.64 GAA and a .912 save percentage against the Rangers in his career. Tuukka Rask is still looking for his first win of the season at 0-4-1 with a 2.75 GAA and a .923 save percentage, but he has had success against the Rangers with a 2-2-0 record, 1.76 GAA, .944 save percentage and a shutout.

For the Rangers, Henrik Lundqvist is the workhorse. He's 7-5-1 with a 2.61 GAA, .921 save percentage and two shutouts this year, but he seems to save his best for the Bruins. Lundqvist is 14-4-2 with a 1.42 GAA, .951 save percentage and four shutouts against Boston. Martin Biron is a more-than-capable backup, with a 3-2-0 record, 2.21 GAA and .915 save percentage this year.

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Stat Sheet

Bruins

Rangers

Infirmary Report

Bruins

Rangers

Familiar Faces

The Rangers have a strong New England flavor with forwards Drury (Trumbull, Conn./Boston University) and Brian Boyle (Hingham, Mass./Boston College) and defenseman Matt Gilroy (Boston University). Coach John Tortorella (Concord, Mass.) and assistant Mike Sullivan (Marshfield, Mass.) also have local ties, and Sullivan also played for the Bruins in 1997-98 and coached them from 2003-06. Rangers director of player personnel Gordie Clark also played, coached and scouted for the Bruins, while assistant director of player personnel Jeff Gorton was an assistant GM and interim GM for Boston.

Fight Card

The Bruins and Rangers engaged in three fights in their first meeting, with Avery instigating a scrap with Mark Stuart, Shawn Thornton battling the 6-foot-7 Boogaard and Milan Lucic slugging it out with Brandon Prust. Lucic was not happy the linesmen jumped in early on that one or that Prust appeared to claw at his eye, so that duo may bear watching in the rematch. Prust leads the Rangers with seven of their 17 fighting majors, while Boogaard has five and Avery two. The Bruins have 18 fighting majors in 15 games, with Stuart, Greg Campbell and Adam McQuaid leading the way with three each and Thornton and Lucic each adding two.

Outlook

The Bruins continue one of their busiest stretches of the season as they head to New York on Wednesday, then return to the Garden to face Florida. They shouldn't mind getting right back to work this time after the strong performance they put together Monday against the Devils. They'd like to carry that momentum into this game, but the Rangers represent a far stiffer challenge than the Devils this year, so this won't be an easy one for the Bruins.