Jubilation in Toronto as Leafs beat Bruins 2-1 to force game 7
Break away to try and sick scars a roaring Scotia Bank arena after William Nielander second goal of the game with just two minutes left on the clock. The Leafs beat their longtime foe in game six of the first round series and will now head to Boston for game seven this weekend. I’m fired up for game seven. You guys are nailing it. Go back game seven song and take us your whole baby with the leaks are going to force games 7. The least beat the Bruins to one on Thursday, despite star sniper Austin Matthews off the ice for a second straight game due to an undisclosed injury. For the least, it shows like this certain amount of resiliency. Without Austin Matthews, they’re over the band together, play really tight hockey and come up with this great victory tomorrow. John *. The Leafs haven’t won a playoff game at home since game two last spring against the Tampa Bay Lightning, now ending that streak of 6 consecutive home losses. And Boston blew their first round series lead once again. They were eliminated from the playoffs last year after holding A31 series lead over the Florida Panthers. You guys are witnessing history back-to-back years. Monumental collapses. 3:00 to 1:00 This is Toronto and Boston’s 4th matchup in the Stanley Cup Playoffs in the last 11 years. The previous three series all went to game seven, and now the pressure is on for yet another game seven on Saturday. Going into game seven, everything doesn’t matter what happened before. You know you win five and six and you carry the momentum from from 5:00, that big victory into six, and you you capitalize on that. And then now into game seven. It’s a clean slate. Anything can happen. If the Leafs lose, they are eliminated. If they win, they make it to the second round set to face the Florida Panthers. And one step closer to the Stanley Cup. Adam Khan, CBC News, Toronto.