Los Angeles Kings 1-2 Boston Bruins (OT) - Bruins Steal Defensive Duel in LA | IHM News

Los Angeles Kings 1-2 Boston Bruins (OT) – Bruins Steal Defensive Duel in LA | IHM News

November 22, 2025 – Author: IHM News

Los Angeles Kings 1-2 Boston Bruins (OT)

Morgan Geekie’s overtime winner capped a grinding road effort for Boston, who survived a third-period shorthanded equaliser and heavy Kings shot volume to take two points out of LA.

In Los Angeles, two teams that usually lean on pace and offence played a tense, low-scoring chess match instead. The Boston Bruins edged the Kings 1-2 in overtime, weathering long stretches of pressure and a pronounced shot deficit but winning the special-teams and goaltending battle when it mattered. Boston finally broke through in the third period on a power-play strike from Morgan Geekie, only to see Joel Armia answer with a shorthanded goal that flipped the momentum and ignited the home crowd. Overtime reset the board, and the Bruins’ structure reasserted itself-Geekie struck again in the extra frame to silence Crypto.com Arena and bank a classic “road patience” win.

Game Flow

The opening twenty minutes were all about discipline and defensive layers. Los Angeles pushed the tempo early and generated the better looks off the rush, but Boston’s box-plus-one defensive-zone structure kept most pucks to the outside. Both teams traded minor penalties as they tried to establish inside positioning, yet neither power play found enough clean seam passes to break the deadlock. After one period it was still 0-0, with the Kings slightly ahead on the shot clock but unable to solve the Bruins’ shot-blocking lanes.

The second period settled into an even tighter pattern. LA continued to drive volume from the points and cycle game, while Boston focused on quick exits and short changes to avoid extended defensive-zone shifts. The Bruins’ penalty kill stayed sharp, denying controlled entries and forcing the Kings to repeatedly dump pucks in. Physicality ramped up around the net fronts, but both goaltenders tracked the puck cleanly and rebound control remained strong. Through forty minutes the game still had a playoff feel: lots of traffic, lots of contact, and no scoring.

The breakthrough finally arrived early in the third. On a Bruins power play, they tilted the ice with a high umbrella set, moving the puck through the half-wall and bumper to stretch LA’s penalty killers. Morgan Geekie found a soft pocket in the right-side slot, took a feed from below the goal line and ripped home the 0-1 marker to give Boston the first lead of the night. Instead of folding, the Kings responded with an aggressive kill of their own later in the period-Joel Armia jumped on a loose puck while short-handed, attacked with speed and finished a transition chance to tie the game 1-1 and reignite the building.

Overtime brought more open ice but the same underlying themes. The Kings tried to leverage their extra-skill forwards in 3-on-3, rotating high in the offensive zone and chasing mismatches. Boston stayed patient, protecting the middle of the ice and waiting for a turnover. When LA mismanaged a puck at the offensive blue line, the Bruins transitioned quickly, created a short 2-on-1 look and once again found Geekie, who buried the game-winner to seal a disciplined 1-2 road victory.

Behind the scenes, Boston’s blue line quietly did heavy lifting. Despite being outshot, the Bruins limited true high-danger slot touches and trusted their goaltender to handle perimeter volume. The Kings’ defensive core, meanwhile, paid the price in blocked shots and heavy minutes, but could not convert their territorial advantage into enough quality to beat an in-form Boston netminder twice at 5-on-5.

Numbers Box

  • Final score: Los Angeles Kings 1, Boston Bruins 2 (OT)
  • Shots on goal: Kings 32, Bruins 26
  • Shots off target: Kings 19, Bruins 21
  • Shooting percentage: Kings 3.13% (1/32), Bruins 7.69% (2/26)
  • Blocked shots: Kings 23, Bruins 12
  • Goalkeeper saves: Kings 24, Bruins 31
  • Save percentage (SV%): Kings 92.31%, Bruins 96.88%
  • Penalties: Kings 2, Bruins 6
  • Penalty minutes (PIM): Kings 4, Bruins 20
  • Special teams highlights: Geekie power-play goal; Armia shorthanded equaliser; Geekie overtime winner at 3-on-3.

Team Notes

For Los Angeles, this loss will sting because the process looked right for long stretches. Outshooting and out-blocking Boston while controlling most of the 5-on-5 possession usually leads to points, but the Kings lacked a finishing touch from their top-six forwards. Their late push and Armia’s shorthanded strike are positive signs, yet the power play’s inability to break through in a low-event game will be a focus in video review.

Boston, on the other hand, will be thrilled with how their defensive identity travelled. They accepted playing without the puck, trusted their structure in the defensive zone and leveraged special teams plus elite goaltending to squeeze out a result. Geekie’s two-goal night underlines the value of depth scoring, especially in games where the usual headliners are bottled up.

Coach Mark comment

From a coaching angle, this is a textbook example of how a road team can win without dominating the shot clock. Boston stayed inside the dots, protected the slot and refused to chase hits or stretch plays through the neutral zone. When they finally earned their looks on special teams, they executed with pace and purpose, while the Kings were just one more clean touch away from turning pressure into goals.

Questions & Answers | IHM Performance Metrics

Why did Boston win despite being outshot?

The Bruins controlled the middle of the ice and quality, not volume. Their defensive box stayed tight, they limited seam passes and allowed their goalie to see most pucks from distance, which pushed Los Angeles into a low-conversion shot profile.

What was the key tactical swing in the third period?

Boston’s power-play structure finally stretched LA’s penalty kill and created the first Geekie goal from the slot. Even though the Kings replied shorthanded, that stretch showed the Bruins could dictate tempo when given set possession.

How did the Kings’ penalty kill shape influence the game?

For most of the night, LA’s pressure-focused kill (aggressive on the half-walls, with a rotating high forward) disrupted Boston’s entries. But on the decisive third-period power play, they overcommitted to the puck side, leaving a soft pocket for Geekie to exploit.

Which performance metric best explains the Kings’ frustration?

Shot volume combined with a very low shooting percentage is the story. Generating 32 shots but scoring only once suggests too many attempts came from the outside or under heavy pressure, rather than from clean slot looks.

What should both teams carry forward from this matchup?

Los Angeles can build on their ability to drive play and win the territorial battle, but they need sharper execution on the power play. Boston should be confident that their defensive template and depth scoring can win tight, playoff-style games away from home.

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