Boston's Cam Neely Could Be Next On The Hot Seat The Boston Bruins [https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/boston-bruins/] fell to the Winnipeg Jets by a 6-2 final score [https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/boston-bruins/latest-news/3-takeaways-from-bruins-brutal-6-2-loss-to-jets] on Jan. 30. What made this loss more frustrating for the Bruins was that it was a close game before the team completely collapsed in the third period. After Elias Lindholm [https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/boston-bruins/latest-news/bruins-important-forward-has-massive-opportunity] tied the game up at 2-2 just 11 seconds into the third period, Jets star Mark Scheifele scored only 24 seconds later. This was the first of four straight third-period goals the Bruins allowed during the period. It was a tough period for Bruins goalie Joonas Korpisalo, as he allowed three goals on just five shots. The Jets' fourth goal of the period from Kyle Connor was an empty-netter. Joonas Korpisalo [https://thehockeynews.com/.image/c_fit,h_600,w_600/MjEyNTA1ODA5OTAzNDI5MTI5/usatsi_25304338.jpg] Joonas Korpisalo Following the game, Korpisalo was honest [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=chnUdEYHB54&t=693s] with reporters about how he felt his performance went against Winnipeg. "First couple of periods, pretty good," Korpisalo said. "We had that five-minute lapse where they scored three goals. Obviously, I gotta be better, too. All of us [do]. So, I think that lapse there, we lost the game again. Can't happen. Especially against these teams. These games are huge." After this loss, Korpisalo now has a 9-5-2 record, a 2.84 goals-against average, and a .894 save percentage. The 30-year-old goaltender will now look to bounce back in his next start from here.