Hey!
Sports Illustrated!
Yeah, you. You jerk face.
I got your Blackhawks repeat right here!
You sonofa….
With 76 seconds left in game six, the Bruins were leading 2-1. Bob Stanley walked in the tying run. Then with 59 seconds left Mookie Wilson hit a little dribbler that went through Bill Buckner’s legs and the Bruins lost the game, the series, and the Stanley Cup finals.
And I never want to speak of it again.
Game six of the Stanley Cup finals…
It’s tied at one after two periods. As a Bruins fan, this is torture!
We need us some goals, Bruins! Take this game, it’s yours!
Go Bruins!!!!!
At about 7:30 tonight we had a huge thunderstorm roll through. When it was over, our cable and Internet were out, and less than an hour to puck drop!
Oh no!
Go Bruins!!!
Hey Bruins. One more game. That’s all we want. Just one more game after tonight. This playoff run has been a blast. Please don’t let it end tonight. The schedule allows for one more game after tonight, so why not just win tonight and make use of it? That would be pretty cool, right? Extend this magical little run you guys are on for a couple of days and play that game seven. All you need to do to keep the fun alive is win tonight. That’s not a big deal, is it? You’ve already beaten these Chicago pukes twice in this series, what’s one (two) more win? Nothing, right? So why not win tonight? Then you get to go back to Chicago (where I’m sure it’s really nice to visit, despite the bandwagon and all) and play game seven on Wednesday. I don’t want to look ahead to the ramifications of a game seven, I just want there to be a game seven. Don’t you guys want that too? I bet you do. You’re so close, why not keep it alive for a few more days?
So go out there on the Garden ice tonight with your die hard fans backing you up and win the game. No biggie, just win the game. We all know you can do it. Chicago is a good team, but so are the Bruins. Go ahead, win game six. We all know you wanna.
Go Bruins!
Hi everyone, I am writing this post whilst standing in line at the Tobin Bridge. There are about 13,909 Bruins die hard fans here all lined up to hurl themselves off the highest point on the bridge due to the sheer misery of last night’s loss. I figured as my final act before throwing myself into oblivion with all of these other fine Bruins-obsessed folks, that I would talk to some people and maybe find out what is going through the minds of the fellowship of the miserable.
First I spoke to a man named John Doe. He was wearing a Bruins hat, a Bruins replica game jersey (black), Bruins pajama pants, and had Bruins shoe laces on his black and gold sneakers. He looked very tired, as if he hadn’t slept since “the good old days” which is how he referred to life as a Bruins fan prior to the start of game four. “I can’t take it,” said Mr. Doe. “I can’t stand the thought of losing to those damn Chicago Blackhawks with their damn bandwagon fans. I watched game two in a bar on the South Side of Chicago and I had one guy ask me if a goal was worth seven points, like a touchdown. Another ‘fan’ says to me, ‘so if the ‘hawks lose tonight they’re out of it, right?’ One other fan took me aside during a commercial break and asked me, ‘what is this icing thing they keep talking about?’ I wanted to slit my wrist right then and there, but then we won the game so I celebrated like crazy for a couple of days instead.”
Later I spoke to a curiously dressed woman who told me her name was Jane Roe. She was wearing a wedding dress that had a big spoked B painted on it. After last night’s loss she took a black sharpie and covered the dress with black ink. She even colored her veil black. I asked her why she was wearing a wedding dress on the Tobin Bridge and she said she couldn’t remember. She thought it had something to do with trying to tie the happiest day of her life, her wedding day, to the happiest day of her hockey life, winning a second cup in three years, but she said the details were fuzzy. “I’ve been drunk since overtime started in game four,” she said. I asked her why she was on the bridge and all she could say was, “Bergeron’s in the hospital. No Bergeron, no cup.” She repeated it constantly before her turn on the edge arrived. Just before she threw herself off she looked relieved and said, “I’ll never have to live in a world where we lost the Cup to the friggin’ Blackhawks.”
A third gentleman I saw was wearing an impeccable tuxedo and holding a home made tin foil replica of the Stanley Cup. I tried to ask him his name and what brought him to the bridge, but all he would say was, “friggin’ Jagr. So close. No goals. Friggin’ Jagr.” He stood there patiently for a few hours as fan after fan ended it all in Stanley Cup misery. Then out of nowhere he lost his head completely. He started screaming obscenities and forced his way past the security to the front of the line and then lept into thin air yelling, “screw you, Corey Crawford!” It was one chaotic moment in an otherwise orderly mass hockey suicide.
That pretty much sums up the scene here on the Tobin. Most people won’t talk. They just stand there, waiting patiently for their turn on the ledge. Most look dazed, pale, confused. They are wondering what happened. They are unable to figure out how the Bruins could be down three games to two to Chicago and they frankly can’t take it anymore. The line is moving at a steady clip. I figure my turn should come right around the start of game Six tomorrow night. Maybe if they can get off to a good start, those who are still in line might change their mind for a while. Umm… Bruins? Speaking on behalf of everyone here… we could really use a win tomorrow. I mean… really. Really, we could seriously use a win tomorrow. Just saying. No pressure or anything but. We sort of NEED A WIN. If you know what I mean.
Go Bruins!
It’s just one game. Keep telling myself that it’s just one game. Don’t panic. Don’t throw yourself off of the Tobin Bridge. It’s just one game. Just one game.
Last night the Blackhawks offense showed up, and the Bruins defense didn’t. Fortunately, the Bruins offense showed up, and Cory Crawford’s glove hand didn’t.
Once again we went to overtime, and this time it was the Blackhawks winning by a score of six to five. It may have been the single most exciting game of the playoffs for the Bruins thus far, with apologies to game seven of the Toronto series which was just painful until the third period and then became awesome.
Both teams put on goal scoring shows, and just when you thought one team was pulling away… BAM the other team comes back and gains all the momentum. It was an absolute blast to watch, and listen to on the radio, which I did for the third and the OT. In overtime both teams had their chances but it seemed the Bruins were carrying the play a little bit more. That might be because I was listening to the Boston radio broadcast, but it is definitely how it felt.
So now what. Instead of being up 3-1 we are tied 2-2. There are three games remaining and two of them are in Chicago. It’s down to a best of three.
I have to believe that the Bruins will play better in game five on Saturday. I can’t imagine our defense being that weak for two games. I still have confidence that the Bruins will win the series, but I am not as confident as I was. For some reason, given the way the two teams played, being up 2-1 felt like being up 3.5-1. It just wasn’t real. I kept trying to tell myself not to underestimate Chicago, but I also kept finding myself underestimating Chicago. I was actually talking about making plans to see the victory parade. Can you believe that? Me! Mister Cautious Optimism was looking past potentially four games!
No more.
I believe the Bruins will win the series. You might say I am cautiously optimistic.
Go Bruins!
We’re just about 11 hours away from the drop of the puck in game four of the Stanley Cup Finals. I wonder if I’d be this psyched up for the game if the Blackhawks were leading in the series. Do sports fans in other cities go through these mood swings, or is it just we Bostonians who live and die by our teams?
When our team wins we feel invincible. They are immortal, nothing will ever harm them. We can’t wait for the next game so that we can witness the titans squashing the mere mortals on the other team. Game time is celebration time.
When our team lost the last game it’s different. There is a sense of impending doom. The unraveling of all that is good in the world is just about to begin. When game time comes it’s a nervous feeling. Oh no… here we go again.
We take this crap way to seriously here in Boston. I wonder if the rest of the country acts the same way.
Don’t get me wrong though, I wouldn’t have it any other way. Rooting for a winning team in Boston is THE BEST. Hell, rooting for a losing team in Boston is still pretty great. We just bitch about them more, and who doesn’t love bitching? Am I right, or am I right?
Game four is tonight at 8:00ish. A Bruins win gives us a 3-1 lead in the series and brings us to the brink of another Cup. A Blackhawks win ties the series at two and gives the home ice advantage back to Chicago. That cannot happen.
Statistically speaking, is this a must win for the Bruins? No. Realistically speaking, is this a must win for the Bruins? ABSOLUTELY! We need to put them away quickly. We cannot give them any hope. We cannot give them any life.
Win game four, Bruins. You must win game four!
Go Bruins!
Here’s the NHL highlight video of last night’s game. Give it a look.
Notice anything funny about that video? Anything out of the ordinary?
I did. It’s almost all Bruins highlights. The Blackhawks highlights are few and far between? Why is that?
It’s because the Bruins pretty much owned that game last night. The Bruins got goals from Paille, again, and Bergeron, again. Allow me to jump on a bandwagon and start calling Dan Paille by his new (censored) nickname:
Yippee Paille, muthaf*cker. Heh heh, Die Hard meets Bruins. Some how it fits.
The Bruins now have a two games to one lead in the Stanley Cup Finals. Far be it from me to start feeling anything more than cautious optimism. This is far, far from over. Chicago is a fantastic team. Don’t count them out. Even though they threw the best they possibly could at the Bruins in game two and still ended up losing, and then came out in game three and seemed to play as if they were constantly hearing footsteps behind them. The Blackhawks are not done. Not by a long shot.
Boston is two wins away. Two painfully difficult wins that we should not assume are ours for the taking. No. There is huge work left to be done by our heroic Bruins, but they are definitely up to the challenge.
Game four is tomorrow night in Boston.
Go Bruins!
We still have more than six hours to go until the start of tonight’s game three of the Stanley Cup Finals between the glorious, brilliant, magical, majestic, kingly, heroic, noble Boston Bruins, and the douchey, pucky Chicago Blackhawks.
What do you mean, I am a homer?
Game one went to triple overtime and the Blackhawks stole the game from the Bruins. Game two included the single most one sided period of the entire post season as the Blackhawks dominated the Bruins in embarrassing fashion. The Bruins then won the game in overtime.
Two games. Both team won a game they had no business winning.
Now we come home to Boston for game three. I am hoping for a convincing Bruins win in regulation because frankly, with an 8:20ish start time, I don’t think I can make it through another overtime.
Six hours to go. I say we flip the bird to the television network and drop the puck right now. Who’s with me?!?
Go Bruins!