Subpar goaltending sabotages strong showing vs. Bruins ☕ taken in Boston (Penguins)

The Bruins' Brad Marchand celebrates his winning goal past Tristan Jarry in the third period Monday night in Boston. - AP

BOSTON -- The Penguins did not blame their goaltenders for how this game turned out.

Their teammates didn't.

Their coach didn't.

But none of those guys had to, really, because the Penguins' 6-4 loss to the Bruins at TD Garden Monday night could be painted easily -- and devastatingly -- by the numbers.

Like how Matt Murray stopped just eight of the 11 shots the Bruins threw at him.

And how, after Murray was pulled early in the second period, Tristan Jarry turned aside only 12 of 14.

What those numbers don't show is that the empty-netter Patrice Bergeron scored in the waning seconds of regulation was only a bit less difficult to get into the Penguins' net than most of the five that preceded it.

Like the Jake DeBrusk goal that gave Boston a 1-0 lead at 5:21 of the opening period, when he beat Murray from a sharp angle in the left circle.

Or when David Pastrnak drove Murray from the game by scoring from the top of the left circle at 4:22 of the second.

Or how -- after the Penguins had scored four unanswered goals to take a 4-3 lead -- Jarry could not stop Torey Krug from the bottom of the right circle at 8:14 of the third.

Or, perhaps worst of all, when Brad Marchand's shot from near the top of the left circle eluded Jarry before slamming off the right post, then hit Jarry in the back before dropping to the ice and into the net for the game-winning goal with 1:57 left in regulation.

The Penguins had not, by any means, played an error-free game -- DeBrusk got his goal, for example, after Kris Letang turned the puck over to him near the Penguins' blue line -- but had they gotten even average goaltending, let alone the consistently strong kind they'd received in most of their previous 14 games, they would have left town with more than the hollow satisfaction of having played about as well as they could for much of the evening.

"This was one of the best games we've played all year," Mike Sullivan said. "I thought our team played extremely well. ... We just didn't get the result. It's unfortunate, because I thought we deserved better."

True enough, although letting the two points -- or, at the very least, one -- they could have taken out of this game slip away might not be the most significant loss of the evening for the Penguins.

That's because they had to finish the game without Letang, who is the cornerstone of their defense.

Sullivan offered little information about him after the game, other than to say he is being evaluated for an unspecified lower-body injury.

"I don't know exactly what happened," forward Dominik Kahun said. "I don't know what's wrong with him. But we sure don't want to miss him."

If Letang is out for an extended period, it figures to significantly increase the burden on the remaining top-six defensemen. That includes John Marino, the Penguins' rookie who hails from suburban Easton and who had a fairy-tale return scuttled by Boston's third-period comeback.

In his first game at TD Garden as a pro, Marino scored his first NHL goal with just 2.6 seconds left in the second period to give the Penguins a 4-3 lead.

Marino had just finished serving a tripping minor -- he admitted it was "running through my mind a little bit" that the Bruins might capitalize on his penalty to reclaim the lead -- when he got the puck in the neutral zone and broke in alone on Boston goalie Jaroslav Halak before sliding a backhander past him.

"I was just trying to skate as fast as possible, to get away from the defender," Marino said. "And I just kind of reacted. Definitely a special moment there."

At the time, it looked as if Marino might get the storybook hat trick. His first NHL goal. In his hometown. As a game-winner.

Trouble is, there was another period to play, and while the Penguins were up to the challenge, Jarry wasn't.

He gave up a bad goal to Krug and a worse one to Marchand, as the Penguins' 4-3 lead mutated into a 6-4 defeat.

"You knew they were going to push back," Sullivan said. "They've got some talent on that team, too, but I thought our third period was strong."

The Penguins did, in fact, outshoot Boston, 14-10, during those final 20 minutes. Trouble is, Halak stopped all 14, while three of the Bruins' shots made it into the net.

The culture of hockey is such that players would sooner verbally skewer their great-grandmothers than utter a harsh syllable about their goaltender, so the Penguins were predictably complimentary toward Murray and Jarry.

"(Murray) has been so good for us, in so many different ways," Nick Bjugstad said. "It's going to happen. It's not his fault. Obviously, there were some good goals by those guys. There are some skilled guys. ... Jarry's a good goaltender, too. We have faith in both of them."

That's understandable, and it's something Murray and Jarry have earned. They just didn't do it on this particular night.

Which doesn't detract from how the Penguins dominated a team many consider to be the NHL's finest during the second period, when Kahun, Bjugstad, Bryan Rust and Marino scored to transform a three-goal deficit into an improbable lead.

Completely on merit.

"How we came back in the second period was amazing," Kahun said. "We were all over them."

The Penguins' first period was pretty good, too. Same with their third.

But the final score was the latest bit of evidence that if a team doesn't get adequate goaltending, what the 18 skaters do really doesn't matter.

"I thought it was a really good game by our team," Sullivan said. "We just didn't win."

Brian Dumoulin, whose participation had been uncertain after he did not travel here with the team because his wife was giving birth to a son, Brayden, logged a team-high 24 minutes, 18 seconds of ice time. "It was a long couple of days," Dumoulin said. "But it's good to be with the team, obviously. We wanted to win this one. It was a disappointing game for us." Dumoulin accounted for five of the Penguins' nine blocked shots.

• Kahun, who replaced the injured Patric Hornqvist in the lineup, has five points in his past three games. However, he doesn't have an official scoring streak because he was a healthy scratch Saturday against Edmonton.

• Although Halak might be best-known to many for making Montreal's upset of the Penguins in Round 2 of the 2010 playoffs possible, they were 6-0-2 in their previous eight decisions against him.

• The Penguins are 0-6-1 in their past seven games in Boston.

• Crosby and Evgeni Malkin combined to win 11 of 20 draws against Bergeron, one of the league's top faceoff men.

• Marchand extended his scoring streak to 13 games, while Pastrnak stretched his to 12.

Brandon Tanev was credited with a game-high six hits.

• Boston has scored the first goal in 11 of its first 14 games.

• Bruins defenseman Zdeno Chara is expected to play in his 1,500th career game at Montreal Tuesday.

THE ESSENTIALS

Boxscore

Video highlights

• NHL scoreboard

NHL standings

THE INJURIES

• Patric Hornqvist (unspecified lower-body) is on injured reserve.

THE LINEUPS

Sullivan’s lines and pairings:

Jake Guentzel -- Sidney Crosby -- Dominik Simon

Alex Galchenyuk -- Evgeni Malkin -- Bryan Rust

Jared McCann -- Nick Bjugstad -- Dominik Kahun

Zach Aston-Reese -- Teddy Blueger -- Brandon Tanev

Brian Dumoulin -- Kris Letang

Marcus Pettersson -- Justin Schultz

Jack Johnson -- John Marino

And for Bruce Cassidy's Bruins:

Brad Marchand -- Patrice Bergeron -- David Pastrnak

Jake DeBrusk -- David Krejci -- Danton Heinen

Anders Bjork -- Charlie Coyle -- Brett Ritchie

Cameron Hughes -- Sean Kuraly -- Chris Wagner

Zdeno Chara -- Charlie McAvoy

Torey Krug -- Brandon Carlo

Matt Grzelcyk -- Connor Clifton

THE SCHEDULE

The Penguins are scheduled to practice Tuesday at noon in Newark, N.J., then have a day off Wednesday before facing the Islanders Thursday at 7:08 p.m. at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn.

THE COVERAGE

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