Kessel takes charge

He beats Lightning in marathon shootout

December 01, 2006|Fluto Shinzawa, Globe Staff

For his entire playing career, Phil Kessel has shown natural offense and goal-scoring instincts that can break games open.

The 19-year-old rookie, once projected as the No. 1 pick of the 2006 draft, has been plagued by a bugaboo that's followed him to the NHL: defensive indifference.

On Tuesday, it got to a point where coach Dave Lewis slashed his ice time against the Toronto Maple Leafs, aiming to alert the centerman to the two-way responsibilities he'll need to acquire.

Last night before 11,150 at TD Banknorth Garden, it wasn't Kessel's defense that powered the Bruins to a 4-3 shootout victory. It was his wheels and hands, the assets that made him the No. 5 pick in the draft.

In the shootout, 12 skaters -- six from each side -- fired and were stymied by Tim Thomas and Marc Denis, the goalies who stared each other down in a who'll-blink-first showdown.

Kessel, with his helmet on backward like every other Bruin, sat on the bench and studied Denis. He thought. And when Lewis tapped him on the shoulder to be the seventh shooter, Kessel knew what he wanted to do.

Aim high.

Kessel did just that, steaming toward the net and snapping a neat wrister over Denis's glove. At the other end, after turning aside the first six Tampa Bay shooters, Thomas forced forward Ruslan Fedotenko to shoot wide of the net, giving a turned-away Lewis -- he watched all 12 previous shooters but stared at Zdeno Chara's helmet instead of tracking Kessel and Fedotenko -- the confirmation he needed.

"It certainly was music to my ears when it hit the glass," said Lewis of Fedotenko's shot.

Kessel's strike gave the Bruins 2 points on a night when they committed careless turnovers and were stretched by Tampa Bay's offensive system. But like he's done of late, Thomas (31 saves) walled up the net, making several spectacular stops, including a dive-to-his-right beauty on forward Martin St. Louis in the third period that kept it a 2-2 game.

"He's the reason why we were still in the game," Lewis said. "He made some fabulous saves."

Thomas couldn't do much on goals by St. Louis and Eric Perrin, his former teammates at the University of Vermont. In the first period, after Brad Boyes -- the right wing has scored a goal in each of the last three games -- gave Boston a 1-0 lead, Perrin stripped Andrew Alberts in the neutral zone and beat Thomas with a wide-open slapper, tying the score at 1-1.

Then it was St. Louis's turn, courtesy of a Brad Stuart turnover that put the puck on Perrin's stick. Perrin spotted St. Louis at the far post for an easy tap-in at 4:44 of the second period.

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