Lineup scratches: Manny Malhotra, Mike Weaver, Sergei Gonchar, Nathan Beaulieu (upper-body), P.A. Parenteau, Joey MacDonald
Injured reserve:
Game Report
With a chance to close out the Senators in Ottawa on Wednesday night, the Canadiens came up with a lacklustre effort. While Michel Therrien preaches to his troops to play a patient game, it is the Stanley Cup playoffs and the Habs needed better than listless effort they showed. It was one of the most undemanding shutouts of Craig Anderson’s career.
Perhaps the Canadiens were still in spa mode.
For some, what was even more disturbing than the ‘ho-hum’ approach that the Habs displayed during the game was the ‘oh well’ attitude afterwards. Coach Therrien seemed awfully confident that Bell Centre fans would deliver the team a series win on Friday but failed to acknowledge that there is another team involved. And they now have more than just hope.
The Senators altered their game plan coming into Game 4. Dave Cameron was pleased with the physical effort of his team in the first three games but realized that in sometimes chasing a hit, they were vulnerable to the quick strike Canadiens offense. So the Ottawa coach dialed back the forecheck; just 12 hits by the Sens in the first period compared with 27 in Game 3. This should have presented an opportunity for Therrien to counter with a breakout adjustment but it didn’t happen.
The Sens played a cautious first period. A weak Montreal power-play handed the Senators momentum. And the Ottawa offense that showed sporadic signs of life early in the second period revved up to end the frame.
Ottawa pressed hard to begin the third period and were rewarded with about 11 minutes left. Following their goal, the Senators played with a confidence that we had yet to see in the series. The Canadiens showed no urgency even after going down a goal.
Once again, Carey Price outplayed his Ottawa counterpart, in this game, by a wide margin.
Where were the Canadiens top-6 forwards? Where was the power-play (now 1-for-16 in the series)? Where were the coaching adjustments? And where was the focus, intensity and urgency?
Against Craig Anderson, a 33-year-old goaltender with a 14-13-8 regular season record, the Canadiens have scored just two goals. Both by Dale Weise. That’s not complimentary to the goaltending of Anderson but just how anemic the Canadiens have played.
Greg Pateryn didn’t play the third period and just 7:48 in the game but had five hits. Dale Weise had six hits. Add up the hits by Devante Smith-Pelly PLUS the entire fourth line (Brandon Prust, Torrey Mitchell and Brian Flynn) and it equals ONE. No energy from the energy players.
The Canadiens employed the ‘let Carey Price take care of it’ strategy and it didn’t work. Hopefully Michel Therrien will put some effort into the game plan for Game 5.
▲ Carey Price, Alexei Emelin, Dale Weise, Tomas Plekanec, Lars Eller
▼ Brandon Prust, Devante Smith-Pelly, David Desharnais, Brendan Gallagher, Torrey Mitchell, Jacob de la Rose, Tom Gilbert, Alex Galchenyuk, Brian Flynn |