Bruins Hold Off Avalanche, Start Road Trip with Win

Bruins Hold Off Avalanche, Start Road Trip with Win

Lindholm has goal, assist as Boston picks up 5-3 victory in Colorado

Bruins at Avalanche | Recap

DENVER — Hampus Lindholm had a goal and an assist, and the Boston Bruins held on for a 5-3 win against the Colorado Avalanche at Ball Arena on Wednesday.

David Pastrnak, Charlie Coyle and Cole Koepke each scored for the Bruins (3-2-0). Joonas Korpisalo made 22 saves in his first win for Boston.

“I think that’s the best team game we’ve had so far this year, and I thought it was a complete 60-minute effort,” Bruins coach Jim Montgomery said. “They’re a really good team, and they’re going to have their moments, but I really liked our poise.”

BOS@COL: Pastrnak puts home a backdoor pass on power play

Korpisalo was acquired in a trade with the Ottawa Senators on June 24.

“He allows us to get our feet into the game, under us, by that great save on [Miles] Wood’s breakaway early in the first two minutes,” Montgomery said of Korpisalo. “Then he just kept making big-time saves throughout the game and especially in the third.”

Cale Makar and Mikko Rantanen each had a goal and two assists for the Avalanche (0-4-0), who have lost four straight to open a season for the first time since 1998-99. Nathan MacKinnon had two assists, and Alexandar Georgiev made 20 saves.

“Always, no matter how good or bad it’s going, we’re not going to dwell on the previous game. Whether we were really good or whether we were really bad, you have to correct it and move on,” Colorado coach Jared Bednar said. “Build on it and move on. It’s the same thing now, the loss stings. It doesn’t feel any better or worse than it did after the last game. We got to find a way to get a win and try to build it from there.”

BOS@COL: Makar drills a slap shot into the net in 2nd

Koepke gave Boston a 1-0 lead at 13:46 of the first period when he deflected in Andrew Peeke’s shot from the right wall.

“I saw ‘Peeker’ coming down with the puck. I just tried to get out front in case he was going to throw it there,” Koepke said. “I saw him make a heads-up play. [He] kind of looked right at me and made a great play, and (I) just deflected it in.”

Ross Colton tied it 1-1 with a power-play goal at 15:07. He took a pass from Rantanen inside the right circle and snapped it far side beyond the blocker of Korpisalo.

Coyle put the Bruins back ahead 2-1 at 17:09 on the power play, redirecting Mason Lohrei’s centering pass at the right post.

“I didn’t know how it was going to come, but I knew he saw me, and I just tried to present myself,” Coyle said. “Mason’s a pretty skilled player, and he found me pretty good. I didn’t have to do much with that. He put it on a platter.”

BOS@COL: Coyle scores PPG against Alexandar Georgiev

Pastrnak extended it to 3-1 with a power-play goal at 9:09 of the second period. He drove the crease from the back side and deflected Lindholm’s centering pass into the open net.

“I got a little space there. So good play by [Brad Marchand] giving me some time and space,” Lindholm said. “Then (I) took it down and then saw ‘Pasta’ sneaking back door.”

Lindholm pushed it to 4-1 just 13 seconds later with a shot from the left half-wall through traffic.

BOS@COL: Lindholm scores goal against Alexandar Georgiev

Makar cut it to 4-2 with a power-play goal at 11:15 on a slap shot from the point.

Rantanen made it 4-3 with a power-play goal at 4:52 of the third period, one-timing a pass from Makar at the right face-off dot.

John Beecher scored an empty-net goal at 17:59 for the 5-3 final after MacKinnon lost the puck at center ice.