Canadiens @ Lightning: Self-Inflicted Wounds | HABS GAME 2 RECAP

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Ryan McDonagh, Nick Suzuki (Photo by Dave Sandford/NHLI via Getty Images)

Montreal Canadiens vs Tampa Bay Lightning Recap: Habs Line-up, Score, Statistics, Highlights, Post-game Interviews, NHL Three-Stars, Stanley Cup Playoff Series

FINAL | Stanley Cup Final, Game 2 | Monday June 30, 2021

Lightning lead series 2-0

Amalie Arena, Tampa, FL

CANADIENS

Montreal

1-3

Tampa Bay Lightning logo

LIGHTNING

Tampa Bay

Ryan McDonagh, Nick Suzuki (Photo by Dave Sandford/NHLI via Getty Images)

Canadiens Lineup

Forward lines

Tyler Toffoli – Nick Suzuki – Cole Caufield

Artturi Lehkonen – Phillip Danault – Brendan Gallagher

Paul Byron – Jesperi Kotkaniemi – Josh Anderson

Joel Armia – Eric Staal – Corey Perry

Defence pairings

Ben Chiarot – Shea Weber

Joel Edmundson – Jeff Petry

Erik Gustafsson – Jon Merrill

Goaltenders

Carey Price – Jake Allen

Scratches

Tomas Tatar, Michael Frolik, Charlie Lindgren, Brett Kulak, Alexander Romanov,  Jake Evans

Black Aces

Alex Belzile, Laurent Dauphin, Lukas Vejdemo, Jesse Ylonen, Cale Fleury, Otto Leskinen, Xavier Ouellet, Cayden Primeau, Michael McNiven

Injuries

Jonathan Drouin (undisclosed)

COVID protocol

Dominique Ducharme

Game Report

Here’s the shorthand version of the game summary that you might see on social media: The Canadiens got ‘Priced’ by the Tampa goalie after dominating play throughout game two. That’s far too simplistic to serve as a believable description for tonight’s game. As always, we will delve a lot deeper to unearth the true story.

Looking at the numbers the Canadiens held a lopsided advantage in shots on goal, taking 20 more shots than the Lightning. But what about the quality of Montreal’s opportunities? In that regard, high-danger scoring chances were rather even between the two teams, recorded as 7-6 for Montreal.

This type of game was reminiscent of the days of Claude Julien, shooting from anywhere and everywhere just hoping one would sneak in. And that’s just what happened for Nick Suzuki who rolled a backhander from the blueline that somehow eluded Andrei Vasilevskiy. But that’s where the Canadiens luck would end.

The stark truth is that the Canadiens have to do a much better job getting Grade-A chances on Vasilevskiy. He certainly isn’t going to be bothered by a high volume of low quality shots in this series. Canadiens skaters have just two goals over six periods in this series and that’s simply not going to cut it if they intend to make this a series.

Tampa coach Jon Cooper said that the Lightning played an unremarkable team game but got some remarkable individual performances. It’s fair to compliment Montreal’s team game but wonder where the remarkable individual performances were for the visitors in white? The Canadiens will need individuals, beyond their goaltender, to step up and deliver a productive performance.

As far as those remarkable individual performances by the Lightning? They were triggered by Canadiens mistakes. “I think these guys are very opportunistic,” said assistant coach Luke Richardson, “and very lethal offensively if you do make mistakes in certain areas, and obviously they showed that again tonight.” 

A tough shift by Jon Merrill where he made a mitt full of mistakes handed one of those opportunities for Anthony Cirelli scoring the opening goal. An unforced error by Ben Chiarot and a giveaway by Phillip Danault provided Blake Coleman the chance to score a highlight reel goal with just 0.3 seconds remaining in the second period. And miscommunication by Jeff Petry and Joel Edmundson gift-wrapped the insurance goal for Tampa.

The physical burden on the Canadiens top-4 defencemen has been enormous and tonight it showed with three of them committing costly mental mistakes. It’s simply unrealistic to expect to ice just four NHL-caliber defencemen against the Tampa Bay Lightning and not pay for it.

The Canadiens played a good hockey game tonight. But in the words of Corey Perry, “It wasn’t enough.” They will have to be even better at home and hope to create a few bounces too.

Up Next

Thursday is a travel day for the Canadiens. They will host the Tampa Bay Lightning for game 3 on Friday night at the Bell Centre with 3,500 fans in attendance.

Plus

▲  Carey Price, Shea Weber, Nick Suzuki, Jesperi Kotkaneimi, Artturi Lehkonen

Minus

▼  Erik Gustafsson, Jon Merrill, Tyler Toffoli, Joel Edmundson, Jeff Petry, Ben Chiarot, Phillip Danault, Eric Staal, Paul Byron

Game Preview

Check out the game preview here: Canadiens @ Lightning: Manage the Puck | HABS GAME 2 PREVIEW

The Numbers

Game Statistics
CANADIENS   LIGHTNING
43 Shots 23
53 Face-off % 47
1-for-3 Power Play 0-for-3
20 Penalty Minutes 20
36 Hits 57
53 Corsi For 37
Scoring Summary
FINAL 1 2 3 OT SO T
Canadiens (12-7) 0 1 0 1
Lightning (14-6) 0 2 1 3
Scorers Goalies
  • MTL: Suzuki (6)-PPG
  • TBL: Cirelli (5), Coleman (2), Palat (5)
  • MTL: Price (L) 12-7
  • TBL: Vasilevskiy (W) 14-6 

Stars of the Game

Official NHL Three Stars
NHL3stars
  1. Andrei Vasilevskiy  TBL
  2. Blake Coleman  TBL
  3. Anthony Cirelli  TBL

Watch

Video Highlights

What Did They Say?

Post-game Quotes

Luke Richardson

  • “We had chances. We just couldn’t get those secondary chances and put them home.”
  • “Unfortunately, it didn’t go our way. But, I was confident that the guys would bounce back, play our style of game and play it hard, and we did. We’re getting better. We just plan on getting better the next game and winning Game 3.”

Nick Suzuki

  • “We don’t want the series to get away from us. You’ve got to win your home games. We’re going back home to play two games there. We have a good opportunity to bring a 2-2 series back here, so we know what’s at stake and we’ll be ready to go.”

Shea Weber

  • “We were much better. We definitely put the pucks in areas where we could get it back and make them work a little bit more. I thought we generated a lot more because of it. They’re opportunistic, so it only takes a couple of mistakes for them to score. But, if we continue to do those things, we’re going to have success going forward.”

Corey Perry

  • “I thought we had a lot of great chances. We were skating, we were forechecking, and we had the puck a lot of the night. If we continue to do that, we’ll keep wearing them down.”
  • “I thought we played a heck of a hockey game tonight. But at the same time, it wasn’t enough, and we’ve got to find that extra gear.”

Quotes courtesy of NHL.com

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1 COMMENT

  1. salut-bien chers amis,
    merci pour le post-game/l’apres-match
    “to be the best,need to beat the best’,
    so far not good enough.tampa has been the better team.
    how was islanders so successful with tampa?
    study et try to replicate?
    back home for 2 at our arena-sacre
    le forum-bell/bell-forum
    a couple of wins et were right back inn the mixer eh!!!
    ps,gotta find a spot for jake evans.not at the loss of armia
    cheers
    guyCH10 soit avec-nous en prieres et pensees

Comments are closed.