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Penguins Edge Bruins in Shootout

Pittsburgh goaltender Dany Sabourin's strong season-debut spoiled the Bruins' home opener.

Evgeni Malkin scored in the second extra round of the shootout to lift the Penguins to a 2-1 win over Boston last night.

Playing in front of a sellout crowd of 17, 565 that often broke into chants of "Let's Go Bruins", they came out strong in the first, outshooting the defending Eastern Conference champion Penguins, 16-10.

"He got brought into it, I guess, pretty quickly," said Pittsburgh's Sidney Crosby, who played with what he called an "upper respiratory" illness. "First period we had a lot of penalties, but he played well. He was the difference for us."

Phil Kessel scored on Boston's first shootout attempt before Petr Sykora tied it on the Penguins' second shot.

Malkin beat goaltender Tim Thomas with a forehand shot inside the left post, and Sabourin stopped Boston's Marc Savard's wrist shot, ending the contest.

"If it wasn't for him (Sabourin) tonight, early on, we would have been down by two or three," Penguins defenseman Brooks Orpik said.

It was the Penguins' fourth overtime game (3-1) in their seven contests this season.

Kessel also scored a power-play goal in regulation for the Bruins. Miroslav Satan had the Penguins' score.

Sabourin had 35 saves and Thomas 31.

Like many times last season, the postgame questions focused around Boston's lack of scoring.

"It's an easy topic to talk about, guys, because we lost," Boston coach Claude Julien said. "We can go on about this if you want, but I think it was a hard-fought game with solid goaltending at both ends. As far as I'm concerned we were the better team."

The Penguins went ahead 1-0 when Satan scored on the rebound of Malkin's shot 18:51 into the opening period. Malkin broke down the right wing and fired a backhander on Thomas, before Satan flipped the rebound in from the left side of the crease.

Satan, signed as a free agent on July 3, has a team-leading four goals.

"The first period, I think they had 16 shots, that got me right in the game right away," Sabourin said. "I didn't have to wait."

Boston tied it 1-all on Kessel's power-play goal 13:53 into the second when he unloaded a wrister over Sabourin's glove from the top of the right circle.

The Bruins nearly took the lead in the closing seconds of the second when Patrice Bergeron's rebound of his own shot caromed off Sabourin and trickled past the side of the net with 2.8 seconds to play.

The teams played 3-on-3 for the final 1:35 of the extra period after Savard was whistled for hooking and Jordan Staal was sent off for slashing 17 seconds later.

With the local sports landscape crowded by the Red Sox recent AL championship series loss against Tampa Bay on Sunday night, the Patriots' Monday night matchup against Denver about 35 miles southwest of the city and the defending NBA champion Celtics season-opener a week away, the Bruins were looking to earn some of the fans' interest with a good start this season.

"I was more, I guess, nervous about getting back out there and playing in front of our fans more than anything else," Bergeron said of his first game since missing most of last season after suffering a severe concussion.

Bruins owner Jeremy Jacobs met the media before the game and discussed the dwindling interest in the team the past few seasons when crowds were commonly about two-thirds full: "If this team wins, people are going to come back," he said.

This program aired on October 21, 2008. The audio for this program is not available.

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