Montreal 3 Philadelphia 1 (Bell Centre)
A Canadiens’ team record for fewest shots in a win was set tonight with 13. Is this what a Jacques Martin game looks like when played out according to plan?
We have been told that coach Martin prefers to use a puck possession strategy with an aggressive forecheck. He has even been quoted saying that a good offense is an effective defense. But after 30 games, I think it’s fair to say that coach Martin’s system does not match his words.
With a couple of day’s of practise, Martin was able to get his message across to his players. In the first period of Monday’s game, the Canadiens’ forwards came back to help out the defense. Habs were effective at getting in the way, chipping the puck out of their own zone, and limiting the Flyers to four shots in the first period.
But, this defense first philosophy left little time for offense. Max Pacioretty was credited with a shot on goal, and his was the only one by the Habs.
The last time both teams totalled five shots in a period in a Canadiens game was March 25, 1993 vs. Boston Bruins. And ’93 turned out well, didn’t it?
It was the also the second time this season the Habs managed only one shot in a period. The first was on October 3, in a 2-1 overtime win over Buffalo.
In addition to the one shot on goal by the Canadiens, they had three missed shots, and the Flyers blocked one shot. So the Habs only directed five shots towards a very shaky Brian Boucher in the Flyers goal. It seemed like the Canadiens’ players were so focused on the system that they forgot how to play hockey.
It was an odd game plan given that Philadelphia has been struggling offensively with only two goals in their last six games. The Flyers had only won two of their last ten games. But when given so much space, the Flyers forwards were aggressive with their defense jumping into the play.
In the second period, the Canadiens scored on their third shot of the game. Tomas Plekanec fed a nice pass to Andrei Kostitsyn who tied the score at one apiece.
The Habs took the lead when Max Lapierre led a two on one. Lapierre made a nice play to draw back the puck, let Braydon Coburn slide by and sent a pass to Mike Cammalleri who directed it past Boucher.
Georges Laraque got his 100th career assist on the play, and with an earlier fight was two-thirds of the way towards a Gordie Howe hat trick. Laraque has not scored a goal in 49 games with teh Canadiens.
Laraque may have won his meaningless, staged fight with Riley Cote in the first period, but was not heard from when a Cote hit put Paul Mara out of the game with an “upper body injury”. After the game, coach Martin refused to comment on Mara’s injury but said that the defenseman would not make the trip to Ottawa on Tuesday.
With Mara’s injury, Marc-Andre Bergeron was moved back to defense for the final two periods. It was Bergeron’s power-play goal from Roman Hamrlik that gave the Canadiens a two goal cushion in the third period.
Roman Hamrlik blocked as many shots as Boucher did in goal tonight. They each made ten saves.
Boucher was pulled from the Philadephia goal with 2:05 remaining. Josh Gorges penalty for tripping gave the Flyers a six-on-four advantage for the final 1:20 of the game. Yet, in that time, Philly didn’t manage a shot on goal.
The Canadiens blocked 27 shots in the game. Carey Price was solid in goal for those shots that did get through with a great save on a chance by Mike Richards in the second.
The Habs continued their domination over the Flyers having won the last 14 of 17 games between the two clubs.
It may have been a dull game but the Habs are unbeaten in their second century with two victories over Boston and Philadelphia, allowing only two goals total.
Tuesday night, the Canadiens travel to Ottawa to face the Senators, who sport one of the best home ice records in the league.
Rocket’s three stars
1. Roman Hamrlik
2. Tomas Plekanec
3. Max Pacioretty
Special mentions: Scott Hartnell, Hal Gill
(photo credit: CP)
I suspect this is just how Jacques Martin likes to win hockey games, though no doubt he would prefer to see a little more in terms of offense from his club.
Hockey is a weird game. The Canadiens played horrid games last week vs Buffalo and Toronto, yet managed to direct more pucks at both Ryan Miller and the Toronto tandem. I think we'd all agree that the Canadiens looked much better last night than they did against either the Sabres or Leafs. Despite the woeful lack of testing the opposing goaltender, the guys at the very least looked engaged and played a decent defensive game (turnovers aside).
Yes, I do agree that the Habs looked better last night. And there is something to be said for being patient and capitalizing on opportunities.
But I just question a strategy that is very passive, especially against a team like Philadelphia who has been struggling to score goals.
The Flyers were probably quite happy with their first period. They led by a goal and limited the opposition to one shot. Why do the Canadiens employ a system that only served to give a shaky team some confidence to build on?
The result could have been different if not for some poor goaltending by Boucher.
Well said. Like I've said before, Martin seems to be hell-bent on playing his style game-in-game-out no matter what, which I think is wrong.
He's lucky the Flyers' goaltending is horrid, otherwise we'd be saying things like "Habs are back to normal after big Centennial win".
I'm glad that for once, the Canadiens were not the magic 'tonic' that the other team needed to snap their slump.
What happens tonight in Ottawa is anyone's guess, but I hope the Canadiens manage at least twice as many shots at Elliott or Leclaire or whoever is in goal for the Sens.
OK, allow me to get a word in here amidst this "horrid goaltending" and "shaky team" business :) lol
Admittedly, the Flyers have had a string of horrible games recently – including their first meeting with the Habs this season. While our first period of play was more consistent with what our new coach is looking for, the Orange & Black fell back into lazy, sloppy, undisciplined habits in the last 40 minutes. Dan Carcillo, for one, needs to be contained – teams that take as many penalties as the Flyers have this season do NOT win games, divisions, conferences, or Cups.
Injuries seem to be plaguing almost every team in the league this year, and Philadelphia has its fair share…but that means our leading players need to LEAD (ahem, Carter? Richards? how 'bout some goals this year?)
It's interesting that you opened this article talking about Martin's "system" as this was a word the Philly commentators used over and over again during the MTL/PHL broadcast in reference to Lav's coaching philosophy. He doesn't have much time to implement new strategies with his team, as the Flyers schedule gets quite hectic in the upcoming weeks. In fact, the next time they'll have back-to-back days off for practice isn't until after Christmas – which means most of his coaching will be done on a white board behind the bench.
Boucher looked entirely uncomfortable in goal – not encouraging in the wake of the poor efforts put forth by Emery in recent games. However, we now know that part of the problem was an abdominal tear which Emery was trying to play through. He's out for 6 weeks with surgery – leaving Boucher in the #1 spot. Not exactly a confidence boost between the pipes, but we'll have to see how that plays out.
Needless to say, I don't believe this game reflected best efforts by either team – I certainly hope our next three meetings provide a little more entertainment, a few less penalties, and many more shots on goal! :D
Good comments! I agree that the Flyers team that we saw was a poor facsimile of the ones that Habs fans love to hate.
Where was the physical play? Andrei Kostisyn was delivering punishing hits to Mike Richards. Tomas Plekanec was owning Jeff Carter.
And the bruising Philly defense simply looked slow. We watched as they backed in terrified of the speed of Max Pacioretty.
No, this is not the Flyers that we expected.
Let's hope that Laviolette can restore some of the qualities that make the Flyers-Canadiens rivalry so bitter, yet so enjoyable!
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