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‘He’s all-in’: Bruins laud G Ullmark after near fight

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SUNRISE, Fla. — Linus Ullmark left the ice with a few minutes left to play, which ordinarily isn’t a great thing for hockey goaltenders.

In this case, it only made the Boston Bruins appreciate him more.

Ullmark stopped 41 shots before exiting with 3:11 remaining after drawing a misconduct penalty — he wanted to fight Florida’s Matthew Tkachuk as the highlight of a late-game scrum — and the Bruins defeated the Panthers 6-2 on Sunday to move one game away from the second round of the playoffs.

“I love it,” Bruins coach Jim Montgomery said of his goalie. “He’s all-in.”

Taylor Hall had two goals and two assists, Jake DeBrusk scored twice and the Bruins took a 3-1 lead in the Eastern Conference first-round series — with a chance to advance coming in Boston on Wednesday.

Brad Marchand and Tyler Bertuzzi also had goals for the Bruins, who got a second consecutive win on Florida ice. Hall’s goals came in the final 3:36, the second one an empty-netter.

But the talk of the locker room was Ullmark, for good reason.

“Tkachuk’s kind of doing a lot of things to try and get under our skin, but for the most part, we’re doing a great job of keeping it between the whistles, and I’m proud of our group for doing so,” Bruins defenseman Brandon Carlo said. “But at times, you’ve got to show a little passion and push back.”

Tkachuk and Sam Bennett tallied goals for Florida, while Sergei Bobrovsky stopped 25 shots for the Panthers.

Hall put it away with 3:36 left, getting behind Florida’s defense and beating Bobrovsky easily for a 5-2 edge that sent Panthers fans to the exits — possibly for the last time this season.

“I liked the way we started,” Panthers coach Paul Maurice said. “Certainly didn’t like the end result. But we’ll go into Boston feeling free.”

All Boston needs to do now is avoid a three-game losing streak to reach the second round for the fifth time in the past six seasons.

The Bruins dropped three in a row only once all season on their way to having the best regular-season mark in NHL history at 65-12-5. Sunday’s win was Boston’s 68th of the season; only 10 teams, including playoffs, have ever won more in a single season.

The Bruins did all of this without veteran forward David Krejci. Montgomery, during his pregame availability, said Krejci would miss not only Game 4 but likely Game 5 with an upper-body injury.

“I wouldn’t think he’s a real option for Game 5,” Montgomery said.

Boston also is still without captain Patrice Bergeron, 37, who did not make the trip to Florida and has missed the entire series with an illness.

Both of DeBrusk’s goals put Boston on top by two — the first a power-play score 1:52 into the second for a 2-0 lead, and the other when he merely had to swipe a puck that popped out of Bobrovsky’s glove into the net for a 4-2 edge with 11:55 remaining.

Boston improved to 39-1-1 this season when leading after the first period, 50-1-2 when leading after two periods and 52-1-1 in games it led by two or more goals at any time.

“We don’t have to think about 3-1 or what’s going on,” Bobrovsky said. “We just have to take the approach of one shift at a time and keep grinding.”

The Panthers had two notable lineup changes: Bobrovsky was in, and Aaron Ekblad was out.

Alex Lyon‘s run of 11 consecutive games as Florida’s starting goalie ended, with Bobrovsky getting the call there. Ekblad was listed as a game-time decision after leaving Game 3 early with an undisclosed injury; he wound up sitting out, and Casey Fitzgerald played instead.

Information from the Associated Press and Reuters was used in this report.

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