(Photo Credit: Jennifer Buchanan / Seattle Times)

By: Chad Jones | Follow me on Twitter/X @ShutUpChadJones

The Boston Bruins concluded their five-game road trip with a 7-4 defeat at the hands of the Seattle Kraken Tuesday night. The Bruins will return to Boston with a 22-19-2 record after going 2-2-1 on the trip.

For the best Puck Line bets along with the industry’s best odds and futures, there’s no better company than the FanDuel Sportsbook for your online sports gambling needs. FanDuel offers competitive odds and futures on sports worldwide and is well-trusted for its secure sites across all devices. New customers who sign up for a new account and first-time deposit will be eligible for incredible sign-up bonuses, so take advantage and get on board today, as the 2025-26 NHL regular season is officially in its second half. Please gamble responsibly.

First Period

The Bruins started off the game with some sustained pressure in the offensive zone. Alex Steeves rang iron twice in the game’s opening minutes, but neither attempt resulted in a score.

Boston has had an issue this season, especially recently, with staying out of the penalty box. And that problem reared its head again for the Bruins, as Boston took two penalties nine seconds apart in the opening frame.

Skating five against three, Seattle did not waste any time. After a clean faceoff win, Vince Dunn fired an attempt on Jeremy Swayman from the point. Boston’s goaltender made the initial save, but Jordan Eberle corralled the rebound. The talented forward showed patience to settle the puck near the goal line, get Swayman to commit to a potential shot, and then waited to rip the puck into the gaping cage.  

The Bruins killed off the ensuing Kraken five-on-four and would soon answer. From Boston’s zone, Nikita Zadorov flung a cross-corner dump-in that took a lively bounce off Seattle’s right wing boards.

A streaking David Pastrnak not only negated the potential icing but got possession of the puck. With the puck still on edge, the dynamic winger fired a bad-angle attempt between the faceoff circle and the goal line. The seeing eye shot beat Joey Daccord over the goaltender’s left shoulder.

Neither team scored the rest of the period. The Bruins and Kraken headed into the first period intermission knotted at 1-1.

Second Period

After a promising start to the frame for the Bruins, the Kraken rushed up the ice and drew a delayed penalty on Jonathan Aspirot. During that sequence, rookie Berkly Catton scored his first NHL goal from an absurd angle. The young forward’s attempt from the far edge of the right faceoff circle got past Swayman, who was sliding from right to left.

Later in the period, Pastrnak made a nice play, reaching to gain control of the puck as he entered Seattle’s zone. He dropped a pass to Charlie McAvoy, who drew two Kraken near him as he drifted through the right faceoff circle. The Bruins defenseman then slid a perfect feed over to Pastrnak on the left wing, who promptly blasted home the equalizer. His second score of the game was the forward’s 19th of the season.

After Pastrnak tied the game, Swayman then came through with multiple key stops in the period. Just passed the halfway point in the contest, Boston’s netminder robbed Matty Beniers of a goal from the slot.

But under two minutes left in the period, the Bruins went through a disastrous sequence. Mason Lohrei could not win a puck battle behind the Bruins’ net, which led to Ben Meyers ripping the go-ahead goal from the slot. Swayman did not have much time to react with Meyers being in such a prime scoring area.

Soon after Seattle took the lead, Steeves was assessed a slashing penalty. While it was a questionable call considering how the game had been played and officiated up to that point, Boston again found themselves shorthanded. However, it looked like the Bruins were going to be down just one going into the final frame.

But Jared McCann rifled a blast from the right point that beat the buzzer. The puck crossed the goal line with less than a second on the clock. The Bruins and Kraken were tied with 1:40 left in the period. After that abysmal sequence, Boston was trailing 4-2 heading into the second intermission.

Third Period

Boston pushed early in the frame, especially on a power play, but Daccord stayed strong between the pipes, and the Bruins’ deficit remained two goals at the halfway point of the period. That was until the Kraken executed a nifty rush up the ice that ended with Kaapo Kakko burying his third goal of the year after a nice pass from Frederick Gaudreau. Later on, Catton potted a power play goal for good measure after a slick forehand, backhand maneuver.

Despite the score, the Bruins kept grinding away. After Daccord could not freeze a puck with a scrum of Bruin and Kraken players battling in front of the net, Lohrei snapped home his third goal of the campaign. Seattle led Boston 6-3 with under five minutes left in the contest.

With under three minutes remaining in the game, the Bruins went to the power play. Casey Mittelstadt made a nice touch pass to Viktor Arvidsson, who buried his eighth goal of the season to cut the Kraken’s lead to two. But Kakko put the finishing touches on Seattle’s win with an empty net goal. The final score Tuesday night was 7-4 in favor of the home team.

Overall, Boston fought hard, especially considering they were at the end of a five-game, 11-day road trip. But there were too many sloppy sequences, especially the atrocious end to the middle frame, for the Bruins to come away with the road victory.

The Bruins will return to Boston and take on the Calgary Flames Thursday night. If you want to see the Bruins in person at TD Garden or on the road, consider using this official StubHub Ticket-affiliated link here for the most competitive concert and sporting event tickets in the North American region.