
BOSTON — The Bruins had a great chance to bounce back from their Game 3 loss against the Buffalo Sabres three days ago and even their first-round playoff series with a Game 4 win Sunday afternoon at TD Garden.
Instead, they played one of the worst playoff games in team history. Literally.
The Sabres became the first team since the Hartford Whalers in 1991 to score four goals against the Bruins in the first period of a playoff game. Buffalo dominated from start to finish in a 6-1 victory to take a commanding 3-1 series lead.
Now the series shifts back to Buffalo for Game 5 on Tuesday night, and the Bruins must win that matchup (and the next two) to stave off elimination.
Here are four quick takeaways from the Bruins’ historic defeat.
1. David Pastrnak is really struggling
David Pastrnak led the playoffs in scoring with five points (one goal, four assists) through the first two games of the series. Was he dominating in those matchups? No, but he was making an impact at even strength and the power play.
He hasn’t given the B’s much of anything offensively the last two games, though, and it’s one of the primary reasons why Boston faces a 3-1 series deficit.
Pastrnak tallied zero points in Games 3 and 4 in Boston. He was especially ineffective Sunday with zero shots on net through two periods and one shot through 60 minutes. Nearly every time Pastrnak tried to make a move past a Sabres player, he lost the puck and the rush up ice was halted.
Pastrnak was asked postgame if he’s healthy and replied, “Yes.”
Even if he’s not 100 percent, the Bruins need him to play like a top 10 offensive player (which he is) to have any chance at mounting a series comeback. The Bruins badly need goals — they’ve scored only one in each of the last two games — and as a five-time 40-goal scorer, he has to lead the way in that department.
2. Turnovers prove costly
The Bruins were very sloppy with the puck, especially in the first period. Three of the Sabres’ first four goals were the direct result of a B’s turnover in their own zone.
Buffalo’s 10 goals scored within 10 seconds of forcing a turnover lead the playoffs.
“They did a good job getting on us quick. They had a lot of speed tonight,” Bruins defenseman Hampus Lindholm said. “They came out on us quick. It’s something we have to look at to try to be a little stronger on pucks and kill their speed a little bit and not play into their game.”
3. Marco Sturm’s lineup changes don’t work
Taking top prospect James Hagens out of the lineup and putting Lukas Reichel in at third-line left wing did not have the intended impact. Reichel had a golden look at the net in the second period but he couldn’t get off a shot and failed to score. He didn’t make much of an impact the rest of the game.
Hagens is 19 years old and has very limited playoff experience. He didn’t play amazing in Game 3. But his speed and high-end offensive skill set are really needed for the Bruins right now. Putting him back into the lineup for Game 5 should be a no-brainer.
Jordan Harris also replaced Mason Lohrei on the right side of the second defense pairing next to Hampus Lindholm. It was a tough night for Harris in his playoff debut. He turned the puck over in the first period and the Sabres immediately capitalized with a goal that increased their lead to 3-0. Harris had enough time and space to clear the zone but didn’t execute.
Harris was on the ice for two goals against, he had two turnovers and played the fewest minutes (13:37) by far of any Bruins defenseman. The Sabres had a 12-3 edge in scoring chances during Harris’ 12:18 of even-strength ice time.
In fairness, the whole team was bad, not just Harris. Now Sturm has to decide what to do with the blue line entering Game 5. Will the Bruins go back to Lohrei? Could Henri Jokiharju draw in? There aren’t many good options.
4. No home-ice advantage
The Bruins played awesome at home this season. Their 29 wins at TD Garden were tied for the second-most home wins of any Eastern Conference team in the regular season.
Finding that same success in the playoffs has proven very difficult. But it’s not just a 2026 problem.
The Bruins lost the last two games of this series at home, extending their losing streak in home playoff games to five. Boston’s last home playoff victory was Game 7 against the Toronto Maple Leafs in the 2024 first round.
The B’s have lost 10 of their last 13 playoff games at the Garden dating back to the 2023 first-round series versus the Florida Panthers.
“Very disappointing,” Bruins defenseman Charlie McAvoy said when asked about the team’s home struggles in this series. “I don’t know if we maybe thought it would just be easy here. I don’t know what happened, but we can’t do anything about it now except look forward and realize this is still a series.”
Home-ice advantage isn’t as powerful in the NHL as it used to be, but there’s still no reason for the Bruins to play so poorly in their own building, especially when it’s not an issue the first six months of the season.
