Game 69, Away Game 34 | Saturday March 14, 2015 Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, NY. |
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CANADIENS |
3-1 |
ISLANDERS |
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Lineup scratches: Brian Flynn, Manny Malhotra, Mike Weaver, Sergei Gonchar Injured reserve: Alexei Emelin (upper-body) Game Notes:With the Canadiens near the top of the standings, who deserves the credit? Lately, it seems to be fashionable to liberally spread around the praise. It has been often repeated that ‘you don’t get to first place without a great coach.’ Or can you? After the game in Long Island, many of the locals talked about a complete team effort. And, they say goaltending has been good too. Is the fact that Carey Price carries this team being underplayed? For fans, it’s scary to think about so much resting on one player (and the memory of Chris Kreider ending his 2014 playoffs hasn’t faded.) And for the media, it’s almost impossible to imagine that Price can play at such an extraordinary level for such a sustained period of time. Have we all run out of superlatives for Price? Are we beginning to take his play for granted? For perspective, let’s look at the game from the other side. Here’s how Brett Cyrgalis from the New York Post summed up the match:
Shaking their heads. Like Matt Martin who was robbed by an acrobatic behind-the-back save. Or in the case of Frans Neilsen who was stopped on a breakaway chance, you look at your stick. Isles coach Jack Capuano talked about the Canadiens “MVP goalie” who made three or four game-changing saves. The Islanders are a very good hockey team, one of seven in the league with 90 points or more. But they could not beat Price until a six-on-four opportunity with just over two minutes left in the game. Good defense, you say? No, a sensational Carey Price. Price’s brilliant goaltending requires a handful of good performances from the skaters (someone has to score) and a whole lot of barnacles stuck to the side of this division-leading ship. Carey Price is leaving NHL teams bewildered. They do all the right things but still can’t beat Price and the Canadiens. Shot attempts were 72-45 for the Isles. New York outhit Montreal 36-22. And they were superior in the faceoff circle 54-46 per cent. The supporting cast for Price on this night included Lars Eller (who was arguably the Canadiens best forward) and Tomas Plekanec, each had six shots on goal. Plekanec had a goal while Eller had a goal and an assist. Max Pacioretty had a shorthanded goal on four shots. Plus / Minus ▲ Carey Price, Lars Eller, Max Pacioretty, Tomas Plekanec, Andrei Markov, Jeff Petry, Andrei Markov, Tom Gilbert, P.K. Subban ▼ P.A. Parenteau, Devante Smith-Pelly, Dale Weise, Nathan Beaulieu, David Desharnais |
Statistics | ||
CANADIENS | ISLANDERS | |
30 | Shots | 36 |
0 for 4 | Power Play | 1 for 5 |
46% | Face-offs | 54% |
10 | Penalty Mins | 8 |
22 | Hits | 36 |
36 | Fenwick For | 48 |
45 | Corsi For | 72 |
Scoring | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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NHL Three Stars | ||
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Video Highlights |
Post-game Press Conference | |
Coach Michel Therrien
Max Pacioretty
Lars Eller
Carey Price
Islanders forward Matt Martin
Islanders coach Jack Capuano
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Social Media @All_Habs |
#Habs RT @NHLonNBCSports: In the middle of beating the Islanders, but first… let me take a selfie.#NHLonNBC pic.twitter.com/TTycdg6qGr
— All Habs (Canadiens) (@AllHabs) March 15, 2015
Watching the game with my son. Been waiting a lifetime to say that. #GoHabsGo @CanadiensMTL @All_Habs @Habs_Retweet pic.twitter.com/d87XHtZSQA
— Joe Bruzzese (@joe_bruzzese) March 15, 2015
#PriceForHart RT @GregBalloch: Net cam view of Carey Price's crazy stop. #Habs pic.twitter.com/B7mqSbEEPF
— All Habs (Canadiens) (@AllHabs) March 15, 2015
To look back at the full lineups for tonight’s game, check the Game Day preview.
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