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Miller's Scores Late In 2nd As Bruins Beat Islanders

Boston Bruins center Patrice Bergeron (37) celebrates his goal with center Carl Soderberg (34), right wing Reilly Smith (18), left wing Loui Eriksson (21) and defenseman Dougie Hamilton (27) as New York Islanders right wing Cal Clutterbuck (15) skates away during Thursday night's game at Nassau Coliseum on Thursday, Jan. 29, 2015, in Uniondale, N.Y. (Kathy Kmonicek/AP)
Boston Bruins center Patrice Bergeron (37) celebrates his goal with center Carl Soderberg (34), right wing Reilly Smith (18), left wing Loui Eriksson (21) and defenseman Dougie Hamilton (27) as New York Islanders right wing Cal Clutterbuck (15) skates away during Thursday night's game at Nassau Coliseum on Thursday, Jan. 29, 2015, in Uniondale, N.Y. (Kathy Kmonicek/AP)

Kevan Miller helped the Boston Bruins get off to a winning start after the All-Star break.

Miller scored the go-ahead goal with 3.4 seconds left in the second period, leading the Bruins to a 5-2 victory over the New York Islanders on Thursday night.

Tuukka Rask stopped 43 shots, and Reilly Smith, Patrice Bergeron, Torey Krug and Zdeno Chara also scored for Boston, which won for the seventh time in 10 games. Smith and Milan Lucic also had two assists each.

"We definitely wanted a good start after the (All-Star) break," Rask said. "We had a good start and (that was) very key.

"We played our system (from) start to finish."

John Tavares and Michael Grabner scored for New York, while Jaroslav Halak stopped 28 shots. It was the Metropolitan Division-leading Islanders' fifth loss in 22 games (17-5-0) at home this season.

"I thought we didn't play a 60-minute game but we played well enough to win," New York coach Jack Capuano said.

Miller put the Bruins ahead for good when he intercepted Halak's clearing attempt at the right wing boards just inside the blue line, and fired a quick shot that found the back of the net to give Boston a 3-2 lead.

"(The puck) had eyes," Capuano said of Halak's attempted clear. "It's one of those things. I'm not going to blame the goaltender."

Krug's goal 1:45 into the third essentially decided a game that had seen wild momentum shifts. Chara added an empty-netter with 2:06 left.

Smith opened the scoring with 6:01 left in the first period by driving to the net and redirecting Milan Lucic's feed past Halak. Bergeron pushed the lead to 2-0 with a power-play goal 2:10 later.

Rask tried to make the lead stand. His toughest stop was a diving save on Michael Grabner's goalmouth backhand attempt 5:34 into the second. The Boston goalie was also the beneficiary of some good fortune as Brock Nelson had a wide open net 46 seconds later, but his shot hit the post.

"Our goaltender was very good," Julien said.

However, a misplay by Rask allowed the Islanders back into the game.

Rask couldn't control Tavares' dump-in from the neutral zone, and the New York captain lifted a backhander into the net 8:25 into the second to cut the deficit to 2-1. The goal was Tavares' 23rd of the season and his fourth in four games.

Grabner drew the Islanders even with 4:48 left in the second with his fifth of the season, setting the stage for Miller's tiebreaking score.

"I thought we responded well in the second," Tavares said. New York finished with a 45-33 advantage in shots on goal, and out-attempted Boston 74-60. "We had some opportunities to score."

Boston evened the season series against New York at 1-1. New York won the first game, 3-2 on Oct. 23 in Boston. The teams will end the season series Feb. 7 at Boston.

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