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Toronto Maple Leafs lose 3-1 to Boston Bruins in Game 4

Two men face each other on a hockey rink, raising their hands and cheering.

Brad Marchand became the Bruins’ all-time leading playoff goal-scorer and added an assist as Boston suffocated the Toronto Maple Leafs 3-1 on Saturday to take a 3-1 lead in the teams’ first-round playoff series.

James van Riemsdyk and David Pastrnak had the other goals for Boston, which can close out the best-of-seven series at home on Tuesday in Game 5. Jeremy Swayman made 25 saves.

Mitch Marner replied for Toronto. Ilya Samsonov stopped 14-of-17 shots in 40 minutes of action. Joseph Woll played the third and finished with five saves. Leafs star Auston Matthews, who missed practice Friday, played two periods, but didn’t come out for the third.

Game 6, if necessary, would be back in Toronto on Thursday.

Leafs winger William Nylander made his 2024 playoff debut after missing the first three games with an undisclosed injury.

Swayman, who also played Games 1 and 3, got the start over Linus Ullmark as the Bruins strayed from their crease rotation that had seen the goaltenders rotate starts since February.

Boston Bruins goaltender Jeremy Swayman, left, and goaltender Linus Ullmark celebrate after defeating the Toronto Maple Leafs. (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press)

Before the puck dropped, the Leafs paid tribute to late play-by-play man Bob Cole — the famed broadcaster was the voice of hockey for generations of Canadian fans — with a video montage of some of his memorable calls. Cole died Wednesday at age 90.

Toronto, which won a post-season series for the first time since 2004 last spring, was unable to connect on two first-period power plays — dropping to 1-for-13 in the series — with the crowd buzzing before the visitors pushed ahead.

Leafs tough guy Ryan Reaves had the puck in the defensive zone, but had it knocked off his stick by Bruins rookie defenceman Mason Lohrei. Van Riemsdyk, who played in Toronto from 2013 though 2018, jumped on the miscue and outwaited Samsonov to score his first goal of the series at 15:09.

WATCH | Hockey world honours long-time announcer Bob Cole:

Legendary NHL play-by-play announcer Bob Cole dead at 90

Bob Cole, one of Canada’s most recognizable sportscasters who hosted Hockey Night in Canada for five decades, has passed away at age 90.

Toronto winger Max Domi took a cross-checking penalty seven minutes into the second, and Boston’s red-hot power play took advantage when Marchand one-timed his second of the playoffs — and the 56th of his post-season career — at 8:20, surpassing Cam Neely for the top spot in franchise…

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