Lineup
Forward lines and defense pairings:
[one_half]Pacioretty- Plekanec – Gallagher
Galchenyuk – Eller – Andrighetto
De la Rose – Danault – Byron
Mitchell – McCarron – Smith-Pelly[/one_half]
[one_half_last]Markov- Subban
Emelin – Pateryn
Bartley – Barberio
[/one_half_last]
Goaltenders:
Condon
Scrivens
Scratches: Morgan Ellis, Lucas Lessio
Injured reserve: Carey Price, Daniel Carr, Brian Flynn, Jeff Petry, David Desharnais, Tom Gilbert
Game Report
This game had all of the makings of an IceCaps vs Marlies marchup. With the rebuild in full motion in Toronto the lineup was heavily influenced by the farm team. On the Canadiens side, eight players in the lineup had spent time in the AHL this season with two more as healthy scratches in the press box.
Consequently, it was a sloppily-played game filled with turnovers and broken plays. A yes, a few little gems too.
It didn’t start well. A bad pinch by Alexei Emelin, poor coverage by Paul Byron and a rebound kicked to the slot by Mike Condon led to an early goal for the Leafs. Yes, another early game goal allowed by Condon.
But with youth comes resiliency. Enter Michael McCarron who in his limited icetime had five shots on goal, four hits and his first NHL point. It was also a special night for Greg Pateryn who had his first point in the big league.
The line that thoroughly dominated on every shift was Lars Eller with Alex Galchenyuk and Sven Andrighetto. While trade rumours continue to swirl about two-thirds of this line, it is exciting for fans to think about the long-term potential of such a dynamic group of players.
After napping for the first 40 minutes, the first line came to life in the third with Max Pacioretty picking up two goals.
The Canadiens head out on a western road trip starting in San Jose on trade deadline Monday.
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▲ Greg Pateryn, Michael McCarron, Lars Eller, Andrei Markov, Alex Galchenyuk, Brendan Gallagher, Jacob De la Rose, Torrey Mitchell,
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