Hockey·Recap

William Nylander's 3 goals help Leafs outlast Bruins

William Nylander got his first career hat trick, James van Riemsdyk scored his second of the game to break a tie with 1:36 left and the Toronto Maple Leafs snapped a three-game losing streak with a 6-5 win over the Boston Bruins on Saturday night.

James van Riemsdyk scores winner with 1:36 left for 2nd of the night

Game Wrap: Maple Leafs win wild one against Bruins

8 years ago
Duration 1:43
James van Riemsdyk scored with 1:36 remaining to give the Toronto Maple Leafs a 6-5 win against the Boston Bruins at TD Garden on Saturday.

William Nylander ended up with bragging rights over his good friend, David Pastrnak, and the Toronto Maple Leafs beat the Boston Bruins in a wild game.

Nylander got his first career hat trick, James van Riemsdyk scored his second of the game to break a tie with 1:36 left and the Maple Leafs snapped a three-game losing streak with a 6-5 win over the Bruins on Saturday night.

"We've got to bring Pastrnak on the road with us all the time to every rink," Toronto coach Mike Babcock said. "[Nylander] always wants to be better than 88, so we've just got to get an 88 on every team and he'll be unbelievable."

Connor Brown also scored for Toronto, which moved one point behind Boston for third place in the Atlantic Division. The Maple Leafs have played five fewer games than the Bruins.

But it was Nylander's night.

"That's definitely a night he will remember, for sure," Maple Leafs rookie Auston Matthews said. "He was all over the puck. He obviously has an unbelievable shot, a really good release and he was able to utilize it on all three goals."

Pastrnak leads Boston

Pastrnak scored two goals for Boston, and Ryan Spooner, Patrice Bergeron and Torey Krug each added one. Bergeron and Krug had power-play goals.

The Bruins rallied from a 4-1 deficit and tied it at 5 late.

"You're always disappointed when you lose a game like that," Boston coach Claude Julien said.

Frederik Andersen stopped 36 shots for the Maple Leafs.

Goaltender Tuukka Rask, playing his 12th consecutive game, was pulled after the Maple Leafs' fourth goal. Zane McIntyre made 10 saves in relief.

The Maple Leafs led 4-1 after getting three goals less than two minutes apart in the second period, but the Bruins charged back to tie it on Spooner's goal with 9:54 left in the third.

"We kept battling back, which is great, but we kept putting ourselves in a situation to do that," Bruins defenceman Adam McQuaid said. "These late goals can't happen and we just have to find ways to stop that from happening."

Brown banged home a shot from the slot to put Toronto back ahead, but Bergeron tied it again with 2:54 to play.

Van Riemsdyk scored from the right point, beating a screened McIntyre. His younger brother, Trevor, also had a late game-winning goal Saturday, helping the Chicago Blackhawks beat the Dallas Stars.

Back and forth affair

One of the loudest cheers of the night came when highlights of each of the Patriots' four Super Bowl victories were played on the Jumbotron — the biggest roar came on the clip of Malcolm Butler intercepting a pass at the goal line in 2015.

Seconds later, Toronto moved ahead 2-1 when McQuaid's bad clearing pass caromed off the boards and ended up with van Riemsdyk alone in front. He tucked a shot under Rask's pads at 8:31.

On the ensuing shift, Bruins defenceman Kevan Miller fell down at centre ice and Nylander broke in alone on a 2-on-1 rush before firing a wrist shot over Rask's left shoulder. Julien called timeout after the goal.

With McQuaid in the penalty box for holding, Nylander completed his hat trick and made it 4-1 by slipping a wrist shot into the net at 10:17.

But the Bruins rallied back.

Pastrnak's second goal came midway into the second. Krug's score sliced it to 4-3 at 15:53.

Boston had jumped in front 1-0 on Pastrnak's goal 2:17 into the game, but Toronto tied it when Nylander collected Nazem Kadri's pass, skated in alone and tucked the puck behind Rask.