Home Featured RECAP | Canadiens – Avalanche: Habs Searching for Offence

RECAP | Canadiens – Avalanche: Habs Searching for Offence

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RECAP | Canadiens – Avalanche: Habs Searching for Offence
(Photo by David Zalubowski/AP Photo)
FINAL | Game 35, Away Game 16 | Wednesday December 19, 2018
Pepsi Center, Denver, CO.

CANADIENS

Montreal

1-2

AVALANCHE

Colorado

(Photo by David Zalubowski/AP Photo)

 

Canadiens Lineup

Forward lines  

Jonathan Drouin – Max Domi – Andrew Shaw

Tomas Tatar – Phillip Danault – Brendan Gallagher

Paul Byron – Jesperi Kotkaniemi – Artturi Lehkonen

Kenny Agostino – Michael Chaput – Charles Hudon

Defense pairings

Jordie Benn – Shea Weber

Mike Reilly – Jeff Petry

David Schlemko – Victor Mete

Goaltenders

Carey Price – Antti Niemi 

Scratches

Matthew Peca, Nicolas Deslauriers, Brett Kulak

Injuries

Joel Armia

Game Report

It was the opening game of the six-game road trip that is a crucial test for the Canadiens. The silver lining is that the schedule is broken by a return to Montreal for a Christmas break.

Also on the calendar is the traditional holiday roster freeze that spans from midnight tonight until December 28th at 12:01 am. So if you were hoping for a top-pairing left-handed defenceman for Christmas, prepare to be disappointed.

Against the Avalanche, Jordie Benn was next up in the defence-partner-for-Shea-Weber carousel. Weber casts a wide shadow and has the ability to make players around him look good. But every superhero has a limit to their powers.

And in the case of Jordie Benn, it is a bridge too far.

That’s not to say Benn is a bad defenceman. He knows his limitations. But it is simply unrealistic for Claude Julien to put him in that situation.

Needless to say, that Benn was unable to adequately cope against one of the most offensively potent lines in hockey tonight. He wasn’t able to handle the speed and skill of the likes of Nathan MacKinnon, Mikko Rantanen and Gabriel Landeskog.

Good coaches put their players in a position to succeed. And good coaches demand accountability from every player on their roster.

Jonathan Drouin is one of those players who, through the eyes of Julien, has a permanent ‘Get Out of Jail Free’ card stuffed in his sock. Drouin was nothing more than a spectator passing up two opportunities to intervene on the Landeskog goal.

It’s important to note that Drouin, one of the players who is counted on for offence, has not scored a goal in December against a team not named the Senators. In fact, Drouin is without a high-danger scoring chance for this week’s games against the Bruins and Avalanche.

While the Canadiens ran up an enormous advantage in 5-on-5 shot attempts, 65-38, the statistic is a little misleading. Colorado had three times the number of high-danger scoring chances. In fact, the Habs had just four high-danger scoring chances all game and none in the third period.

Obviously, that made it a much more difficult night for Carey Price than Philipp Grubauer.

But more importantly, Canadiens top-6 forwards aren’t creating enough grade A scoring chances nor finishing the rare ones they do get. Montreal has not scored an even strength goal in six periods.. and counting.

The Canadiens caught the Avalanche reeling, having lost four of their five past games. Unfortunately, without an effective offence and some inept work on defence, the Habs  allowed Colorado to out work them on their way to turning their fortunes around.

Plus / Minus

▲  Carey Price, Shea Weber, Victor Mete, Jesperi Kotkaniemi

▼  Jonathan Drouin, Max Domi, Phillip Danault, Michael Chaput, Jordie Benn, Mike Reilly, Charles Hudon, David Schlemko

The Numbers

 Game Statistics 
CANADIENS   AVALANCHE
36 Shots 26
45 Face-off % 55
1-for-4 Power Play 0-for-4
8 Penalty Minutes 8
17 Hits 21
81 Corsi For 40
 Scoring Summary
 FINAL 1 2 3 OT SO T
 Canadiens (17-13-5) 1 0 0 1
 Avalanche (19-10-6) 0 1 1 2
Scorers Goalies
  • MTL: Gallagher (15)-PPG
  • COL: Rantanen (16), Landeskog (23)
  • MTL: Price (L) 13-10-4
  • COL: Grubauer (W) 14-9-4

Stars of the Game

 NHL Official Three Stars
NHL3stars
  1. Philipp Grubauer  COL
  2. Gabriel Landeskog  COL
  3. Mikko Rantanen  COL

Watch

 Video Highlights 
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What Did They Say?

 Post-game Quotes
Claude Julien  
  • “We don’t really know what’s good and what’s not. We see the same thing, one game it counts and one game it doesn’t. It’s tough to figure out, but all I know is their player hit our goaltender first, and if he didn’t hit him, I can guarantee that Carey would have seen the puck. It’s tough, but that’s the situation we’re in right now in the NHL.”
  • “We could have done a little bit better as far as scoring opportunities and getting on the inside and maybe finding ways to jump on some of those loose pucks. I think overall as a team, if we could have done a little bit more of that it might have helped ourselves.”
  • On the power-play: “[Getting a power-play goal] was good. But there was some other power plays there where we got back to struggling again. So continuing to be a frustrating part, but a work in progress and we just got to stick with it. We have no other choice.”
Brendan Gallagher
  • “We’ve got to find ways to win games. We’re in a 1-1 game on the road going into the third period, you can’t give up a goal that quick. It’s just what hockey’s all about. There’s important shifts, and we got behind. It was a pretty even game all around, and they just found a way to outwork us for one more goal. That was the difference in the game.”
Carey Price
  • “I disagree with the call. You get your abilities impeded when you make the move towards the puck, I think it’s pretty clear. They had a different opinion on the contact, but that’s what it is.”

Quotes courtesy of NHL.com

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