About Last Night – So Close Yet So Far

By JD Lagrange – The Montreal Canadiens are on a road trip and last night, they were in Colorado to face the Stanley Cup champions. Even without Nathan MacKinnon, Gabriel Landeskog, Bowen Byram, Andrew Cogliano, Josh Manson and Darren Helm, the Avalanche’s points percentage is over .600 and they had won their last two games.

The Canadiens played an excellent first period but were dominated in just about all aspects in the last 40 minutes of play. If not for the play of Jake Allen who stopped 34 of the 36 shots that he’s faced (.944 Sv%), it would not have looked pretty for our beloved Habs. But because of him, the game went to overtime, when Mikko Rantanen scored the game winner for the Avs.

They were outshot 36-20 and blocked another 23 shots according to NHL scorekeeping officials.

Ice time

Here were the Canadiens leaders in ice time last night.

Forwards:

  1. 19:58 Kirby Dach
  2. 19:29 Josh Anderson
  3. 19:14 Nick Suzuki
  4. 18:27 Cole Caufield
  5. 15:05 Christian Dvorak

Defensemen:

  1. 25:23 Kaiden Guhle
  2. 22:54 Jordan Harris
  3. 21:04 Joel Edmundson
  4. 20:21 Johnathan Kovacevic

Notes:

  • Anthony Richard finished the night with a goal, a penalty and one hit in only 9:44 minutes of ice time.
  • Juraj Slafkovsky only played 2:07 minutes in the third period.

Faceoffs

The Canadiens greatly miss Sean Monahan. As a team last night, they had a 44% success rate in the faceoffs’ dots. Here’s the breakdown for the four centers:

  1. 60% Nick Suzuki
  2. 50% Christian Dvorak
  3. 45% Jake Evans
  4. 25% Jonathan Drouin

Drouin only took eight faceoffs all game.

Jonathan Drouin

Jonathan Drouin has been playing his best and most inspired hockey that we’ve seen in a long time since returning from injury on December 14th. He is involved and for the first time in a long time, he seems to want the puck on his stick. Granted, the points aren’t there but he is getting chances. He is shooting more and making plays. And Martin St-Louis is rewarding him, even trying him at center, an experience that hasn’t worked in the past.

While for some odd reason, it doesn’t show on the NHL’s official stats, Drouin was even used on the penalty kill and a few of us pointed it out on Twitter when it happened. Talk about a surprising move by St-Louis and the coaching staff… although they have been using Josh Anderson for a while now in that role.

But I don’t understand this infatuation for crapping on the guy by too many Habs’ fans. According to them, the guy can’t do anything right, even when playing well.

On that play in overtime last night, Drouin took the puck from end to end, beat the defenseman, cut to the net hard and… almost scored. He was tripped on the play and slid in the corner but the play he did was the right one. Had Cole Caufield or Nick Suzuki done that exact play, I would bet my house that they wouldn’t be blamed for it. Trying to score in overtime is what they are paid to do and he did that, on a beautiful play.

That’s just one example of the fans’ infatuation and borderline hater towards a player even they said supporting when he took time off for his mental health… which makes us question the sincerity of their supposed sympathy at the time. Actions do speak louder than words.

The Canadiens’ next game is set for Thursday as they will be visiting the red-hot Dallas Stars. They have changed the game time to 8:00 PM ET.

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About Last Night: Habs No Pushovers

By JD Lagrange – It was fast. It was furious. It was entertaining. You had lots of goals, you had a resounding fight, you had a penalty shot, you had saves. That’s what it’s all about. And Martin St-Louis’ team came out on top 6-2! To think that some fans would rather see the Habs lose games – or tank, as they say – instead of enjoying that kind of game is… mind boggling to say the least.

But let’s face it: it was one of those nights when everything goes your way for the Canadiens. Still, after a season where it seems like everything has been going against them, it sure was refreshing to see the puck bouncing for them, wasn’t it? I have retrained a few highlights from the game. Let’s dive right in, shall we?

Goal Caufield

He’s on fire! He fully took advantage of a turnover by that Coyotes in their own zone. Wrong guy to turn it over to, and he made them pay. It was already Caufield’s fourth goal of the season… in five games! He simply continues the same type of production since St-Louis took over as the Canadiens’ head coach on February 9th, 2022.

You got Jackeyed!

Arber Xhekaj was challenged by long time tough customer Zack Kassian. It turns out that it was a mistake. We have come to expect the AX-Man to win most of his fights but what came from this tilt was… shocking. Not only did he win the fight, he literally manhandled and rag-dolled the Coyotes’ tough guy. Kassian even missed some time, having to retreat to the dressing room to get fixed up.

Slick Nick… Datsyuk?

While killing a penalty, Nick Suzuki went on a breakaway and was hooked. The referee awarded the Canadiens’ captain a penalty shot. We know that Suzuki is shifty and creative, but what was coming was… Pavel Datsyuk-like! He came across right to left and flipped the puck over the glove of a surprised Connor Ingram.

Juraj on the board!

Yes, it has come! Juraj Slafkovsky scored his first NHL goal on a turnover in the Coyotes’ zone. After being stood out at the blue line by 6-foot 5-inches defenseman Josh Brown, Xhekaj (him again) went deep into the Coyotes zone to avenge his buddy Slaf by throwing a body check on Brown… which resulted in the turnover. Slafkovsky turned, skated to the net and beat the goaltender glove side for his first NHL goal. The crowd went absolutely wild and gave the 18 year-old an ovation that he will not soon forget. There’s charisma and then, there’s Caufield and Slafkovsky.

First for Gallagher

Brendan Gallagher is having an amazing start to this season, but the puck just wasn’t going in… until last night. Gally scored his first goal of the season, rewarding him for the hard work and sound play that he’s been displaying. He could have had two but just missed the net from his own zone when the Coyotes had pulled the goalie.

Others…

Six different players participated in the scoring last night. Josh Anderson (2), Cole Caufield (4), Brendan Gallagher (1), Juraj Slafkovsky (1), Nick Suzuki (3) and Sean Monahan (2) in an empty net were the Canadiens’ goals’ scorers.

Kaiden Guhle (22:19) was once again the most utilized player by Martin St-Louis last night.

Surprisingly, Jordan Harris (21:31) was second in ice time. He finished the night with a +4 rating, 4 shots, 1 hit and 4 blocked shots.

Jake Allen stopped 25 of the 27 shots he faced, for a .926 saves percentage. So far this season, the 32 year-old has a 2.02 goals against average and a .938 saves percentage.

The Canadiens went 0/1 on the power play and didn’t allow a goal in three occasions while short-handed. This allowed St-Louis to rest some of his top players as Suzuki played a season-low 14:56 and Caufield only 13:13. Mike Hoffman was the player with the least ice time at 12:08. Xhekaj played a career high 17:40 in which time he had 3 hits and 3 shots on goal, finishing with a +1 differential.

The Canadiens’ next game is on Saturday at 7:00 PM ET as the Dallas Stars will visit the Bell Centre.

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