Bruins-Canadiens: Depth Delivers Fifth Straight Win

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Montreal 3 Boston 2 (Bell Centre)

posted by Rocket
All Habs

The Canadiens have relied on one line for their scoring for most of the season. Depending on injuries, it’s either been Plekanec-Cammalleri-A. Kostitsyn or Gomez-Gionta-Pouliot who provided most of the production.

As long as teams keyed on defending the hot line, and didn’t take too many penalties to test a potent power-play, they had a good chance of beating the Canadiens.

But then something happened on Tuesday March 2. It was a road game against the Bruins, and was the Canadiens’ first action following the Olympic break. Carey Price kept his team in the game for two periods until the Habs erupted for four goals in the third.

The production came from the third and fourth lines who combined for nine points. Finally, there was an appearance of secondary scoring.

Since then, Dominic Moore, Travis Moen, and Sergei Kostitsyn have developed into one of the best third lines the Canadiens have had in some time. According to the center, the best is yet to come.

“To be honest, we aren’t there yet,” said Moore when asked about the chemistry on the line. “We’re still learning each others games. We will definitely get better.”

Following an excellent Olympic tournament, Sergei Kostitsyn is one player that is playing much better now that he has a defined role. He scored twice tonight and was the first star for the second consecutive game. Moore was the game’s third star with two assists.

Moore had high praise for his linemate, “Sergei is looking like he is getting his confidence. He has patience with the puck, and shows poise. He has all the tools.”

Glen Metropolit and Mathieu Darche have also contributed valuable minutes for coach Jacques Martin. Tonight, Maxim Lapierre was matched with the pair in his first game since his four-game suspension. Lapierre had an energetic first period and the lion’s share of his six hits.

Lapierre was less noticeable for the remainder of the game. His line-up spot should offer an option for coach Martin once power-play specialist Marc-Andre Bergeron is healthy enough to return. It would also maintain the chemistry that seems to be working well for the rest of the players on the third and fourth lines.

Given Jaroslav Halak’s poor performance against last-place Edmonton, the assumption was that Carey Price would be in goal tonight. Price’s 3-0-0 record vs. the Bruins this season along with a 0.97 goals against average and a .971 save percentage seemed to assure his selection.

But coach Martin surprised most by going back to Halak as his starting goaltender. While Halak didn’t have much work, only 11 shots total for the first two periods, it was a nice bounce-back game for him.

“As fans we should also be happy to see the team is finally winning some games without needing the goaltending to be through the roof,” wrote colleague kyleroussel, after the Tampa Bay game. “The goaltending ranged from good to great in the wins, but never did I feel that goaltending stole the victory.”

The same could be said for tonight’s game. Neither goaltender was front-and-center. Tuukka Rask was most noticeable for his puck-handling blunder that resulted in the winning goal. Halak stood out when he made a great save on Marco Sturm with less than five minutes left.

“I saw the guy coming backdoor and I just tried to push as hard as I could,” Halak said. “I did, it hit me, and it stayed out.”

Coach Martin was very pleased that the Canadiens played such a “strong defensive game,” evidenced by the low Bruins’ shot totals over the first two periods. Ryan O’Byrne and Jaroslav Spacek were both solid in their own zone.

O’Byrne’s defensive partner Andrei Markov had a momentary lapse in coverage which cost the Canadiens’ a goal by Blake Wheeler. Apart from that miscue Markov had a superb game with a goal and an assist. The Habs are now 21-9-3 this season when Markov is in the lineup.

“I hope my best games are in the future,” said Markov, when asked about his performance. Let’s hope that the same holds true for the Canadiens.

The Canadiens are once again tied for sixth place with Philadelphia with the Flyers holding three games in hand.

The Habs play next on Tuesday night in New York against the Rangers.

Rocket’s three stars

1. Sergei Kostitsyn
2. Andrei Markov
3. Blake Wheeler

special mention: Dominic Moore, Andrei Kostitsyn

Player quotes from wire services were used in this report.

(photo credit: AP)

5 COMMENTS

  1. In the playoffs I find it's usually those 3rd/4th line guys that give you the wins. Or at the very least give you some consistency. Max Talbot ain't Crosby (though the makeup of their salary cap has weird lines mixing guys like Crosby with guys who would be 3rd/4th liners on other teams). Travis Moen scored the winning goal for his Cup. Our best players last playoffs were Metro, Higgins, Dandy, Kostopoulos. Even the year before that TK/Begin/Smolinsky were a constant factor.

    Hopefully they can stick together. I'd hate to see the inclusion of MAB mux up that chemistry somehow… You can't drop Darche, and you can't drop Metro…I dunno if you can drop Lappy either, really. Unless someone on D gets switched for him (sigh).

  2. It`s best to sit Mab, he really brings nothing to the team now anyway. Teams started to rush him on the pp and he just made bad passes and more often then not, turned the puck over.
    Laps should stay on the 4th line. He is good on the pk and gives Pleks a break from having to play so many minutes.
    It`s good to that Martin has finally given Jaro the starters role on the team. It took a long time for Jaro to get it but he has it now, watch him run with it.
    Anyone see the hit or push I should say that Ovi through today? I bet he gets nothing for it while Laps got 4 games for a lesser push, watch.

  3. @Number31 – this will ring a little hollow, but I echo your sentiments regarding the 3rd and 4th lines delivering wins in the playoffs. I've coached softball or a long time now, and have been fortunate to have teams win 5 championchips in 9 years. In each of those years (except for one), it is the improvement of the weaker players that is the absolute key to success. We are seeing this now from the Canadiens bottom 6 and this is a great sign.

    The disappearance of Lapierre gives Martin the option of inserting Bergeron in to the lineup or PP duty. While the Canadiens are certainly improving, they won't get far without a successful powerplay in the playoffs. As scary as MAB is as a defenseman, he is the key to the Habs PP.

    While this win streak can't last forever, I have a newfound confidence in this team's ability to get the job done. A lot of this is because they are winning games with average goaltending; the Capitals and Blackhawks have done it all year. While I'm not suggesting the Habs are on equal footing with either of those clubs, sharing some of those traits can only help.

  4. When Cammalleri returns, Pyatt will likely be sent down. Which leaves open the question of what to do when MAB is healthy.

    Anon2, I agree with you that for quite some time before MAB was injured, he was ineffective on the power-play. Opponents figured out that MAB makes poor decisions when pressured.

    However,with some coaching input, MAB is still a much better option than the alternatives.

    At this point, I'm not sure what Lapierre offers to the lineup. As for penalty-kill duty, its clear that was a failed experiment. Lapierre was a disaster on the PK with his frenetic play which often left him out of position.

    The three best penalty killers on the team are Plekanec, Sergei Kostistyn, and Moen. Martin can also use Gionta, Gomez and Moore before Laps.

    With the abundance of centers in the system, many who have passed him on the depth chart, I think that Lapierre's days are numbered.

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