Post Game 43: Canadiens spoil Drouin’s return

The Montreal Canadiens are the most unpredictable team in the NHL.

Or maybe they aren’t…

They always seem to save their best performances for the best teams. And with the Colorado Avalanche in town (second in goals per game), this game was no exception.

Montreal was impressive and went toe-to-toe with the Avalanche winning by a score of 4-3 Tuesday night at the Bell Centre.

The recipe for the Habs isn’t complicated… Get good goaltending, get contributions on special teams and have the first line involved. They checked all three boxes and were rewarded.

“All those guys, I feel are going through a process to becoming elite and they’re doing it the right way with a team-first approach,” said head coach Martin St Louis about his top line.

Pluses:

  • The top line had a great game. Both Cole Caufield and Juraj Slafkovsky scored powerplay goals while Nick Suzuki had a pair of assists. The Canadiens aren’t a deep team and need their top players going if they want any chance to win.
  • Jake Allen held the fort. Sometimes it isn’t about how many saves you make but when you make them. Montreal’s goaltender of the night came up with a pair of huge stops on Nathan Mackinnon with just four minutes remaining. Game changing.
  • Joel Armia with another goal putting him at seven on the season. He’s having a solid year and although the consistency of his effort level is questionable at best, he battle hard for a loose puck in traffic to score the winning goal. “What we want from Army is just that consistency and we’re getting that right now and I hope he keeps going,” said Martin St Louis.
  • Pairing Kaiden Guhle with Mike Matheson for the last two games was a great adjustment. David Savard appears to be lumbering right now and with two great skating teams in town, it was smart to have Guhle log big minutes. And he didn’t disappoint keeping Colorado’s top line in check at 5-on-5.
  • The powerplay has looked good with goals in back-to-back games. Caufield is starting to heat up and find his touch and the movement has been fluid once they settle down and set up.
  • It took 16-games but Rafael Harvey-Pinard finally scored his first goal of the season.
  • Montreal fans showed their great class. When Jonathan Drouin was put on the big screen with the welcome back message, the fans stood up and applauded him. Drouin spent six seasons with the Canadiens and it was a roller coaster ride, he was never ever to live up to the big expectations management placed on his shoulders when they traded a blue chip prospect to bolster their offense. But even after the hard times, the fans showed their appreciation for his time with the team. Of course, when the game got back underway, they booed him every time he touched the puck. Perfect.

Minuses:

  • The Canadiens allowed the first goal of the game… To add salt to the wound, Drouin picked up an assist on the Ross Colton goal.
  • Jake Evans took an embellishment penalty that led to 4-on-4 hockey. Colorado is a dangerous team with extra space and this led to the game tying goal by Devon Toews. It is Emmy season after all.
  • Jesse Ylonen left to concussion protocol, hopefully nothing serious.
  • The bench was cut down in the third period and Joshua Roy played under 10-minutes in his second NHL game. It was an understandable decision based on where the game was at, but disappointing nonetheless.

The Montreal Canadiens will play their next three games on the road starting with a clash against the New Jersey Devils on Wednesday night.

Post Game 19: That’s how you bounce back

The Montreal Canadiens started their California road trip with a solid bounce back effort against a team in similar spot to themselves by beating the Anaheim Ducks by a score of 4-3 on Wednesday night.

Following their miserable effort against the Boston Bruins on Saturday, head coach Martin St Louis had them grind it out with a couple days of tough, skating heavy practices. It seemed to pay off, Montreal had what was possibly their best first period of the season jumping out to a quick 2-0 lead and having an edge on the shot clock. The first period hasn’t exactly been kind to Montreal this season.

It helps that they once again got top tier goaltending from Sam Montembeault.

Pluses:

  • The quick start! Two first period goals 38- seconds apart from Alex Newhook and Kaiden Guhle… It’s a lot easier to win a game when you’re not chasing it.
  • Alex Newook is heating up and looked dangerous all night long. That’s three goals in his last two games.
  • Monteambeault made some ridiculous saves. This was especially the case in the third period when Anaheim played more desperately. His nicest was the glove save on Frank Vantrano taking away what look like a sure goal.
  • Jake Evans’ game might quietly go under the radar and it shouldn’t. Even though it was a secondary assist on the Guhle goal, he started the play. And then a 2-on-1 pass that was perfectly executed to Newhook for the game winner. Almost 60 per cent in the face off circle and did it all with limited minutes.
  • Jayden Struble just solid, especially being his NHL debut. It felt like nothing bad happened when he was on the ice. Credit to the coaching staff here as well because they did an excellent job on the road sheltering him and getting him favorable matchups.
  • A win in regulation! (That’s only the third this year)

Minuses:

  • That will be a game Johnathan Kovacevic wants to forget. He was fighting it and it was an adventure every time he was on the ice.
  • Nothing is happening for Cole Caufield. Another five shots on goal but nothing to show for it. One would hope that when he get his next goal, he’ll go on a scoring frenzy. But five goals on the season and just one at 5-on-5 is extremely disappointing.
  • Josh Anderson will never score again. Another chance in the third period where you’re left wondering.. “How did that NOT go in?!”

The Montreal Canadiens will continue their trip through California with an afternoon match-up against the LA Kings at 3:30pm on Friday.

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