BUFFALO SABRES’ Paul Gaustad (28) and Boston Bruins' Milan Lucic (17) fight during the first period of an NHL hockey game at the First Niagara Center in Buffalo, N.Y., on Wednesday.

BUFFALO SABRES’ Paul Gaustad (28) and Boston Bruins’ Milan Lucic (17) fight during the first period of an NHL hockey game at the First Niagara Center in Buffalo, N.Y., on Wednesday.

BUFFALO, N. Y. ( AP) — Milan Lucic answered the call, and the Boston Bruins picked up yet another win.

In the first meeting between Boston and the Buffalo Sabres since Lucic bowled over Sabres goalie Ryan Miller 11 days ago, Lucic engaged in a fight with Paul Gaustad just 83 seconds in.

Benoit Pouliot scored the deciding goal in the fifth round of the shootout, and the Bruins rallied from two different two-goal deficits for their 10th straight win, a 4-3 victory over Buffalo on Wednesday night.

It is the Bruins’ first 10- game winning streak since Dec. 12, 2008, to Jan. 1, 2009.

The Sabres didn’t go after Lucic when he steamrolled Miller — who sustained a concussion on the play and is still sidelined — but Gaustad and Lucic didn’t take long to square off, with Lucic landing several rights to Gaustad’s head and body.

“I still to this day still say it was a collision (with Miller), but when you do something like that you always prepare to step up and fight for yourself,” Lucic said.

“There wasn’t much of a conversation, it was just straight to the point. It was actually probably good on both ends just to get it out of the way off the start, then just move on.”

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With a faceoff in the right circle in the Boston end, Lucic skated onto the ice for the first time to stand next to the inner hash mark. Sabres coach Lindy Ruff delayed putting a forward line out there for several seconds before eventually sending Gaustad out.

A normal center, Gaustad lined up as a winger right next to Lucic, and they both dropped their gloves and took off their helmets immediately after the puck was dropped.

“It was an unfortunate incident in Boston, and I give credit to Milan for fighting,” Gaustad said. “It’s something where guys don’t have to, and he did.”

The game had plenty of buildup after the Lucic-Miller incident, and there was a charged-up and playoff-type atmosphere in the sellout crowd.

The two teams didn’t disappoint, especially in the first period when they combined for 36 penalty minutes and 28 shots on goal.

With 8:27 to go in the first, Gaustad was involved in a scrum that started in the right corner in the Bruins zone when Boston’s Brad Marchand originally hit Nathan Gerbe along the boards.

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Gaustad moved in and shoved Marchand before Adam McQuaid began crosschecking Gaustad to the ice. All 10 players joined in the pile, with Boston captain Zdeno Chara and Buffalo defenseman Robyn Regehr ultimately drifting away to fight.

McQuaid was given a double minor, and Buffalo’s Christian Ehrhoff cashed in with a slap shot from the right point to stake the Sabres to a 1-0 lead at 11:56 of the first.

The goal snapped Tim Thomas’ road shutout run at 234:05, and his overall shutout streak was stopped at 145 minutes.

With 84 seconds left in the second period, Buffalo’s Drew Stafford bumped into Thomas. Boston defenseman Andrew Ference immediately grabbed Stafford and the two began to wrestle.

“That meant a lot to me,” said Thomas, who finished with 31 saves.

Tyler Seguin had a goal and assist, and Marchand and Chara both scored for Boston (13-7-0), which trailed 2-0 and 3-1.

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“We just needed to take a few deep inhales and exhales and needed to calm down,” Chara said. “Going into the third we played our game.”

T. J. Brennan scored his first NHL goal in his first game, and Thomas Vanek also scored for the Sabres (12- 8- 1), who lost their second straight.

Jhonas Enroth finished with 36 saves in making his fifth straight start since Miller was injured.

Chara tied the game at 3-3 3:35 into the third period with a power- play goal before Pouliot’s wrist shot beat Enroth to give the Bruins the extra point.

“I was happy not to miss it,” Pouliot said. “Everyone was shooting low, so I shot high and it went in.”

Down by a pair of goals after the first period, the Bruins cut the lead in half when Seguin one-timed a shot in from the left point on the power play to make it 2-1 just 3 1/2 minutes into the second.

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Brennan pushed the Sabres edge to 3-1 with just under 9 minutes left in the second period, whipping a shot in from the right circle.

Marchand made it 3-2 with 4 minutes remaining in the middle period, lifting a wrist shot in from a tight angle to the left of Enroth.

Vanek upped Buffalo’s lead to 2-0 with a power-play goal with 4:38 left in the first, wristing a shot from the slot past Thomas.

Notes — Sabres center Jochen Hecht played in his first game of the season after missing the first 20 with a concussion. He replaced right wing Patrick Kaleta in the lineup. … The Sabres played their first game without defenseman Tyler Myers, who is out for at least a month with a broken wrist. … Boston’s overall shutout run produced by Thomas and Tuukka Rask was snapped at 174:07. … Seguin scored his 12th goal of the season, surpassing the 11 he scored last season as a rookie.


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