Bruins Balancing Thoughts of Revenge With Need for Win in Philadelphia

The wounds are still fresh and may never completely heal.

But more than six months after experiencing an epic collapse against Philadelphia in last year's playoffs, the Bruins will finally get their first shot at a little bit of redemption against the Flyers as they visit Philly on Wednesday.

"There's a lot of bad memories for a lot of guys there," said Bruins defenseman Adam McQuaid. "We've got a chance to somewhat redeem ourselves, sort of. I mean, as much as you can from what happened last year."

What happened last year was the Bruins became just the third team in NHL history to squander a 3-0 series lead in a seven-game series. And they did it by blowing a 3-0 lead in Game 7 of the second-round series at the Garden.

No one in the organization has forgotten that debacle, but the Bruins have more than revenge for the past on their minds in this game. They also need to end the present slump, as Boston has won just one of its last five games.

"It still stings," said Bruins defenseman Mark Stuart. "Any time you play the team that beat you in the playoffs for the first time the next year it's a big deal. You want to get some revenge, but more than anything with where we're at right now, it's a game that we have to win."

The two goals could coalesce nicely, as the motivation to avenge last spring's embarrassment could be just what the Bruins need to snap out of their current funk.

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"You try to find motivation anywhere you can," said Bruins coach Claude Julien. "And hopefully it's not just that. We need to find motivation elsewhere, and mostly in our game as far as how do we get our speed back that we had earlier on and kind of lost. Our game has slipped, there's no doubt about it. And when you notice it more damage has been done than you think and you need to work your way out of it and climb yourself back up to where you were before."

When and Where

Boston Bruins (12-8-2, 26 points) at Philadelphia Flyers (15-6-4, 34 points)
Dec. 1, 7 p.m. (NESN)
Wells Fargo Center, Philadelphia, Penn.

Head to Head

This is the first of four meetings this season between the Bruins and Flyers. The Bruins were 2-1-1 against Philadelphia last year, including a memorable 2-1 win in the Winter Classic when Marco Sturm scored in overtime at Fenway. The postseason produced another memorable finish for all the wrong reasons for the Bruins, who blew a 3-0 series lead and a 3-0 lead in Game 7 in a historic second-round loss. Boston leads the all-time regular-season series 87-56-21-5, including a 38-33-10-2 mark in Philadelphia. The Bruins are 5-0-0-1 in their last six regular-season games in Philadelphia, with the Flyers' last win on home ice a 4-1 victory all the way back on March 10, 2007.

Goaltending Matchup

Tim Thomas is 11-2-1 with a 1.56 GAA, .951 save percentage and four shutouts, and has enjoyed success against Philadelphia with a 7-2-1 record, 2.27 GAA and .926 save percentage in 10 games. 

Tuukka Rask has an identical 2.27 GAA against Philly to go with a 2-0-1 record and a .926 save percentage, but after giving up four goals to Atlanta on Sunday, he's just 1-6-1 this year with a 2.59 GAA and a .926 save percentage.

For Philadelphia, rookie Sergei Bobrovsky has emerged as the No. 1 goalie the Flyers have long searched for, as he is 12-3-2 with a 2.19 GAA and a .926 save percentage. Backup Brian Boucher is 3-3-2 with a 2.57 GAA and a .901 save percentage. Bobrovsky has never played against Boston, while Boucher is 6-4-1 with a 2.29 GAA, .917 save percentage and two shutouts.

Stat Sheet

Bruins

Flyers

Infirmary Report

Bruins

Flyers

Familiar Faces

Flyers coach Peter Laviolette hails from Franklin, Mass., and both played and coached in the Bruins organization, leading Providence to a Calder Cup in 1999 and serving as an assistant in Boston in 2000-01. Assistant coach Joe Mullen also played for the Bruins in 1995-96 and O'Donnell played three seasons in Boston from 2001-04. Boucher is from Woonsocket, R.I., and van Riemsdyk played at the University of New Hampshire.

Fight Card

The Flyers have just 16 fighting majors in 25 games, led by five each from heavyweight Jody Shelley and injured agitator Carcillo. O'Donnell and Scott Hartnell each have two and Darrell Powe and Mike Richards one apiece.

The Bruins ended a four-game fight drought with two bouts against Atlanta, as Matt Hunwick fought Evander Kane in his final game as a Bruins and Shawn Thornton had his team-leading fourth fight against Eric Boulton. Hunwick's departure puts McQuaid (three fights in 10 games) back in the lineup. Stuart and Greg Campbell also have three fighting majors apiece and Milan Lucic has two, as 11 different Bruins have combined for 21 fights in 22 games. Last year's series produced four fights, including the first outdoor fight in regular-season NHL history between Thornton and Carcillo at Fenway, as well as a Stuart doubleheader as he fought Laperriere and Carcillo in the same game.

Outlook

The Bruins have won just once in their last five games and limp in fresh from Sunday's 4-1 loss in Atlanta. The Flyers have also lost back-to-back games in shootouts, but they have earned points in five straight and finished November with a 9-3-2 record to take over the top spot in the Atlantic Division. They have the talent and depth to cause any team problems, but the Bruins might just be up for the challenge with the extra motivation they have from last spring's playoff humiliation.