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Canadiens vs Leafs Recap: Better Off Leaving New Gear, Truculence at Home

Saturday April 13th, 2013

Game Recap: Habs burnt by goaltending and forgetting what brought them to the dance.

MONTREAL CANADIENS
26-10-5
55 POINTS
2nd in the East
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS
23-13-5
51 POINTS
5th in the East
 

1

5

 FINAL 1 2 3 OT T
 Canadiens 1 0 0 1
 Maple Leafs 4 1 0 5

Top Scorers:

 CANADIENS MAPLE LEAFS
  • Davis Drewiske 1G
  • Brendan Gallagher 1A
  • David Desharnais 1A
  • Jay McClement 1G 1A
  • Phil Kessel 1G 1A
  • James Van Riemsdyk 2A

Scoring Summary:

G Per Time Str Team Goal Scorer Assist Assist
1 1 1:59 PP TOR 42 T.BOZAK(12) 21 J.VAN RIEMSDYK(13) 81 P.KESSEL(27)
2 1 8:08 EV TOR 47 L.KOMAROV(3) 23 R.O’BYRNE(4) 11 J.MCCLEMENT(8)
3 1 10:25 EV TOR 11 J.MCCLEMENT(7) 41 N.KULEMIN(15)
4 1 13:08 EV MTL 44 D.DREWISKE(2) 11 B.GALLAGHER(11) 51 D.DESHARNAIS(15)
5 1 17:06 EV TOR 3 D.PHANEUF(8) 43 N.KADRI(24) 36 C.GUNNARSSON(13)
6 2 4:42 EV TOR 81 P.KESSEL(15) 21 J.VAN RIEMSDYK(14) 4 C.FRANSON(20)


Shots on Goal
:


 FINAL 1 2 3 OT T
 Canadiens 13 16 8 37
 Maple Leafs 5 14 9 28

Goaltending:

CANADIENS MAPLE LEAFS

Carey Price
LOSS

Record: 19-9-4
SA: 4
Sv%: .250

James Reimer
WIN

Record: 16-5-5
SA : 37
Sv%: .973

Lineup Notes:

What you need to know:

Kramer: Yeah, and you’re an anti-Carite.

Jerry: I am not an anti-Carite!

Kramer: You’re a rabid anti-Carite!

(from Seinfeld – with liberties taken)

A blowout. On a night when most Canadiens fans were feeling the sting of a bitter loss, in some quarters of the city, there was celebration. Donning their No. 39 and No. 41 jerseys, these so-called Habs supporters lifted their glasses, danced in the streets and flocked to social media to rejoice.

The target of their venom had given up two soft goals.

In one sense, I suppose it’s predictable. There’s plenty of pent-up frustration for those who were on the wrong side of a goaltender debate and now find one hero languishing as a third-stringer. And it’s been a long wait for the often-reported comeback of their other idol.  By the way, what channel is the Lausanne game on?

Well drink up my friends because the comet that streaked through the Air Canada Centre on Saturday night isn’t likely to come around again anytime soon.

(Photo by Graig Abel/NHLI via Getty Images)

However, there is something that is occurring with increased regularity and that is another notch in the loss column. Don’t look now but your Habs are just 7-6 in their last 13 games — not exactly peaking at the right time.  And while much of the injury attention has been given to the loss of Rene Bourque and Raphael Diaz, the Canadiens are a much different team without rugged defenseman Alexei Emelin.

Throughout the season Emelin had been solid in his own zone, made good decision with the puck and was able to instill fear in the minds of opposing forwards who entered the Canadiens zone.  Davis Drewiske picked up a meaningless goal in Saturday’s game, Nathan Beaulieu skated well in his 14:08 in ice-time but the player who could bring a consistent physical presence without crossing the line was missing.  When Francis Bouillon tried to amp up his physical game, he took a costly penalty that set the game headed in the wrong direction for the Habs.

Which brings us to the game plan.

In addition to poor goaltending, did the result have something to do with coach Michel Therrien wanting to establish a physical tone? Right off the opening faceoff, there was a change (albeit a temporary one) to the Tomas Plekanec line.

Brandon Prust is in the starting lineup where Rene Bourque usually is and that says a little bit about the truculence that they may want in their lineup.” — HNIC’s Jim Hughson

A short time later, Bouillon roughed up Matt Frattin behind the Canadiens net and then was penalized for some overzealous stick-work on Nazem Kadri. What message had the players been given in the pre-game chat?  The Maple Leafs scored 18 seconds later (on a goal Price had no chance to stop) and the Habs found themselves in an unfamiliar and uncomfortable position trailing early in the game.

For Toronto, they couldn’t have drawn it up any better.

“We wanted to set the tone. They kind of embarrassed us in our own building last time we played them.”  — Maple Leafs’ forward Tyler Bozak

You will recall the game on February 27th where the Canadiens waltzed into the ACC and played their game.  Montreal used their speed to dominate the Leafs winning the game 5-2. And yes, No. 31 was in goal for the win. Of note, Emelin scored his first goal of the season on that night.

Not this time.

It’s clear that the Leafs can hit; they dished out 47 in Saturday’s game. And they can fight, leading the league with 40 fighting majors. But they are slow and have questionable goaltending, two things that the Canadiens failed to exploit in the humbling loss.  For the record, Peter Budaj wasn’t particularly good last night either and most every shot was an adventure for his counterpart James Reimer.

A side note: Ryan O’Byrne, Toronto’s trade-deadline acquisition, had an assist, was plus-2 in 19:15 of ice-time, had three blocked shots and led his team with seven hits.  But the folks out celebrating Price’s bad game will correctly point out that O’Byrne had an own goal almost five years ago.  What they probably don’t remember is so did the current Canadiens GM in the 2000 Stanley Cup Playoffs.

The lunatic fringe can continue to slag the asset that other franchises would kill to have. But the rest of us should remember that Montreal will meet the Leafs one more time on the last day of the regular season and perhaps in the playoffs. They would be wise to do what they do best and not try to match Toronto blow-for-blow.

Plus

Minus

Injury/Roster Report:


 NHL Three Stars
  1.  Jay McClement
  2.  Tyler Bozak
  3.  James Reimer

 Post-game Chatter

Coach Michel Therrien:

(Photo by Graig Abel/NHLI via Getty Images)

Carey Price:

Brian Gionta:

Maple Leafs coach Randy Carlyle:

Maple Leafs forward Nazem Kadri:


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