They have won tonight and let tomorrow come.
That's partly because of their goaltending, with the tandem of Jaroslav Halak and Tuukka Rask making up for the youth and inexperience of their defense, and partly because the Bruins have found a touch of the secondary scoring that was nonexistent to start the season.
They're going to need both.
That's especially true given the unexpected early-season surges of teams like the Canadiens and Buffalo Sabres, teams that could put the Bruins in jeopardy of missing the Stanley Cup Playoffs if Boston can't at least tread water during the next four weeks. The Sabres took over the top spot in the Atlantic Division on Saturday after defeating the Detroit Red Wings for their ninth consecutive win.
The Bruins, meanwhile, own the first wild card into the Stanley Cup Playoffs from the Eastern Conference; they are three points ahead of the Canadiens.
"It's been a pretty close race so far," center David Krejci said. "But I feel like we still haven't played our best game in segments together, to kind of separate ourselves. Obviously, it's going to be a little bit harder with the injuries we've got, but I still believe that the lineup we have, any night we have a good chance to win. There should not be any excuses."
Even though excuses would be easy to make.
The Bruins are looking at a month without their big two. Chara sustained a left MCL injury on Nov. 14 in a game against the Colorado Avalanche, and is set to be re-evaluated approximately four weeks from the injury. Bergeron, meanwhile, sustained a rib and sternoclavicular injury on Nov. 16 in a game against the Dallas Stars, and will also be re-evaluated approximately four weeks from his injury.
Those are huge losses for a team with Stanley Cup aspirations.
And it's not just Chara and Bergeron. The Bruins defense is still without McAvoy, who has not played since Oct. 18. Brandon Carlo has missed the past six games. Kevan Miller missed 13 before returning for the last three. Urho Vaakanainen played two games as a rookie, but he's been out since Oct. 23. John Moore recently missed three games, and Torey Krug is only 12 games deep in his season.
"Like they say, when it rains, it pours," Krejci said.
Still, the Bruins are 3-0-1 since losing Chara and Bergeron. They have seen improvements from the second line, with Danton Heinen and Jake DeBrusk flanking Krejci, a crucial trio while Bergeron's spot is being taken by unproven rookie Jakob Forsbacka Karlsson.