Outdoor: | yes |
Game Name: | 2016 NHL Winter Classic |
Visitor: | Montreal Canadiens |
Home: | Boston Bruins |
Visitor Total: | 5 |
Home Total: | 1 |
Visitor Per1: | 1 |
Visitor Per2: | 2 |
Visitor Per3: | 2 |
Home Per1: | 0 |
Home Per2: | 0 |
Home Per3: | 1 |
Attendance: | 67,246 |
Date: | January 1, 2016 |
Arena: | Gillette Stadium |
City: | Foxborough, Massachusetts |
Previous: | 2015 |
Next: | 2017 |
The 2016 NHL Winter Classic (officially the 2016 Bridgestone NHL Winter Classic)[1] was an outdoor ice hockey game played in the National Hockey League (NHL) on January 1, 2016, at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts. The eighth edition of the Winter Classic, it matched the Montreal Canadiens against the Boston Bruins; the Canadiens won, 5–1, a significant event in one of the NHL's best-known rivalries. A Bruins and Canadiens alumni game was also played on December 31, 2015.[2] The Boston Pride women's professional hockey team played before the alumni game against Les Canadiennes of the Canadian Women's Hockey League to a 1–1 tie in the first ever 2016 Outdoor Women's Classic (officially the Outdoor Women's Classic presented by Scotiabank).[3]
The Bruins made their second appearance in the Winter Classic, as they played against the Philadelphia Flyers in the 2010 NHL Winter Classic held in Boston's Fenway Park; Massachusetts became the first market to serve as repeat host of the Winter Classic. Early reports dating back to December 2014 by TSN's Bob McKenzie indicated that Boston was the league's first choice in hosting the game.[4]
To accommodate the event, Gillette Stadium's primary tenant, the New England Patriots, played the last two games of their 2015 season on the road. The Bruins introduced a new third jersey for the game and it featured the team's original logo, as virtually a re-creation of their inaugural 1924–25 NHL season brown/gold sweaters worn while playing their home games in Matthews Arena, which opened in 1910, now on the campus of Northeastern University. (Matthews also was the first arena for the Boston Celtics and the WHA New England Whalers, who are now the Carolina Hurricanes.)
This was the first Winter Classic appearance and third outdoor game for the Canadiens; the team previously played 2003 NHL Heritage Classic against the hosting Edmonton Oilers and the 2011 NHL Heritage Classic against the hosting Calgary Flames.[5] [6] The team also played in a new third jersey and used a logo from the 1920s.
The two teams are long-time rivals. As of the end of the 2014–15 NHL season, the two teams have played each other 729 times during the regular season, 177 times during the playoffs, including nine game sevens. The two teams also held a special alumni game between the two teams, on December 31 at Gillette Stadium.[7]
In the most lopsided score in the Winter Classic, four Montreal players combined to score five goals en route to a 5–1 victory against Boston. In his first game since suffering a hand injury on November 22, Canadiens forward Brendan Gallagher recorded a goal and an assist. Goalie Mike Condon made 27 saves for Montreal. Adam McQuaid scored the Bruins' only goal; this goal was originally credited to Matt Beleskey, but would be changed days later after official review by the NHL.[8]
Scoring summary | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Period | Team | Goal | Assist(s) | Time | Score | |||||
1st | align=center | MTL | align=center | David Desharnais (8) | align=center | Dale Weise (9) and Alexei Emelin (3) | align=center | 01:14 | align=center | 1–0 MTL |
2nd | align=center | MTL | align=center | Paul Byron (6) | align=center | Brian Flynn (6) and Mark Barberio (1) | align=center | 02:00 | align=center | 2–0 MTL |
align=center | MTL | align=center | Brendan Gallagher (10) | align=center | Max Pacioretty (15) and Tomas Plekanec (21) | align=center | 17:20 | align=center | 3–0 MTL | |
3rd | align=center | BOS | align=center | Matt Beleskey (1) | align=center | Adam McQuaid (17) and Jimmy Hayes (11) | align=center | 03:56 | align=center | 3–1 MTL |
align=center | MTL | align=center | Max Pacioretty (16) | align=center | Brendan Gallagher (11) and Tomas Plekanec (22) | align=center | 08:49 | align=center | 4–1 MTL | |
align=center | MTL | align=center | Paul Byron (7) | align=center | P. K. Subban (26) and Nathan Beaulieu (10) | align=center | 18:28 | align=center | 5–1 MTL |
Number in parentheses represents the player's total in goals or assists to that point of the season
Penalty summary | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Period | Team | Player | Penalty | Time | PIM | |||||
1st | align=center | BOS | align=center | Max Talbot | align=center | Hi-sticking | align=center | 05:20 | align=center | 2:00 |
align=center | MTL | align=center | David Desharnais | align=center | Roughing (double minor) | align=center | 08:42 | align=center | 4:00 | |
align=center | BOS | align=center | Torey Krug | align=center | Roughing (double minor) | align=center | 08:42 | align=center | 4:00 | |
align=center | BOS | align=center | Adam McQuaid | align=center | Delay of game | align=center | 18:27 | align=center | 2:00 | |
2nd | align=center | BOS | align=center | Kevan Miller | align=center | Cross-checking | align=center | 02:51 | align=center | 2:00 |
align=center | MTL | align=center | Lars Eller | align=center | Hooking | align=center | 06:43 | align=center | 2:00 | |
align=center | MTL | align=center | Nathan Beaulieu | align=center | Holding | align=center | 10:41 | align=center | 2:00 | |
align=center | MTL | align=center | Tomas Plekanec | align=center | Delay of game | align=center | 19:30 | align=center | 2:00 | |
3rd | align=center | BOS | align=center | Max Talbot | align=center | Holding | align=center | 09:24 | align=center | 2:00 |
align=center | MTL | align=center | Lars Eller | align=center | Roughing (double minor) | align=center | 18:18 | align=center | 4:00 | |
align=center | BOS | align=center | Jimmy Hayes | align=center | Roughing (double minor) | align=center | 18:18 | align=center | 2:00 |
Shots by period | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Team | 1 | 2 | 3 | Total | |||||
Montreal | align=center | 14 | align=center | 11 | align=center | 5 | align=center | 30 | |
Boston | align=center | 3 | align=center | 14 | align=center | 11 | align=center | 28 |
Power play opportunities | ||
---|---|---|
Team | Goals/Opportunities | |
Montreal | 0/4 | |
Boston | 0/3 |
Three star selections | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Team | Player | Statistics | ||
1st | MTL | 1 Goal, 1 Assist | ||
2nd | MTL | 27 Saves | ||
3rd | BOS | 5 Hits, +1 |
Montreal Canadiens | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Player | Position | |||
11 | align=left | Brendan Gallagher | RW | |
14 | align=left | Tomas Plekanec (A) | C | |
15 | align=left | Tomas Fleischmann | LW | |
17 | align=left | Torrey Mitchell | C | |
22 | align=left | Dale Weise | RW | |
26 | align=left | Jeff Petry | D | |
27 | align=left | Alex Galchenyuk | C | |
28 | align=left | Nathan Beaulieu | D | |
32 | align=left | Brian Flynn | C | |
39 | align=left | Mike Condon | G | |
40 | align=left | Ben Scrivens | G | |
41 | align=left | Paul Byron | LW | |
43 | align=left | Daniel Carr | LW | |
45 | align=left | Mark Barberio | D | |
51 | align=left | David Desharnais | C | |
67 | align=left | Max Pacioretty (C) | LW | |
74 | align=left | Alexei Emelin | D | |
76 | align=left | P.K. Subban (A) | D | |
79 | align=left | Andrei Markov | D | |
81 | align=left | Lars Eller | C | |
Head coach: Michel Therrien |
Boston Bruins | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Player | Position | |||
11 | align=left | Jimmy Hayes | RW | |
14 | align=left | Brett Connolly | RW | |
21 | align=left | Loui Eriksson (A) | LW | |
25 | align=left | Maxime Talbot | C | |
29 | align=left | Landon Ferraro | C | |
33 | align=left | Zdeno Chara (C) | D | |
36 | align=left | Zac Rinaldo | C | |
37 | align=left | Patrice Bergeron (A) | C | |
39 | align=left | Matt Beleskey | LW | |
40 | align=left | Tuukka Rask | G | |
44 | align=left | Dennis Seidenberg | D | |
45 | align=left | Joe Morrow | D | |
47 | align=left | Torey Krug | D | |
50 | align=left | Jonas Gustavsson | G | |
51 | align=left | Ryan Spooner | C | |
53 | align=left | Seth Griffith | C | |
54 | align=left | Adam McQuaid | D | |
72 | align=left | Frank Vatrano | C | |
76 | align=left | Alexander Khokhlachev | C | |
86 | align=left | Kevan Miller | D | |
Head coach: Claude Julien |
Ben Scrivens and Jonas Gustavsson dressed as the back-up goaltenders. Neither entered the game.
In the Alumni Game on New Year's Eve, the Bruins defeated the Canadiens 5–4 in a shootout. The Canadiens alumni included Guy Carbonneau, Larry Robinson and Jose Theodore with the coaches including Guy Lafleur and Jacques Demers, while the Bruins alumni included Cam Neely, Terry O'Reilly, Mark Recchi and Ray Bourque with the coaches including Derek Sanderson, Lyndon Byers, Mike Milbury and Don "Grapes" Cherry.
Bruins' former anthem singer Rene Rancourt performed O Canada and The Star-Spangled Banner at the alumni game.
The game was televised in the United States on NBC, with commentators Mike Emrick, Eddie Olczyk, and Pierre McGuire.[9]
In Canada, it was the second consecutive Winter Classic to be televised under the Rogers Media contract, but for the first time the English-language broadcast was shown on Sportsnet instead of on CBC Television and the Hockey Night in Canada banner.[10] Commentary was provided by Jim Hughson, Craig Simpson, and Glenn Healy.[11] For the second consecutive time, the game was broadcast in French on TVA Sports (with commentators Félix Séguin and Patrick Lalime, and reporter Renaud Lavoie) as part of TVA's sub-licensing agreement with Rogers.
The 2016 NHL Winter Classic had the lowest ratings of any Winter Classic in the United States to date, with an average of less than 3 million American viewers watching the game.[12]
Prior to the game, Boston-based pop rock band American Authors performed.
The Boston Pops performed Duel Of The Fates during the team introductions.
The national anthems were performed by Montreal-based rock band Simple Plan (O Canada sung in English and French) and The Voice season 9 winner Jordan Smith, accompanied by the Boston Pops (The Star-Spangled Banner).
Singer-songwriter Nate Ruess performed during the first intermission while Simple Plan performed during the second intermission.