More from HighDanger News

All news →
May 30, 2026

Canes to the Cup Final, Vegas Awaits

Carolina dominates Montreal 6-1 in Game 5 and dominates the Eastern Conference Final 4-1. Vegas waits in the Stanley Cup Final. How the Hurricanes got here, the line matchups to watch, and the Andersen-Hart goalie battle.

May 29, 2026

Game 5 preview: Finishers vs Survivors

Carolina has swept back-to-back series. They finish the job when the time comes. Montreal has faced elimination twice this playoff and survived twice. One of those streaks ends tonight in Raleigh.

May 28, 2026

Game 4: Carolina Routs Montreal at Home, Up 3-1

Carolina 4, Montreal 0. The Hurricanes outshoot Montreal 43-18, score three times in three minutes of the first period, and add a late Svechnikov goal in the 3rd. Stankoven ends his career-long drought against Montreal. Series is 3-1, one win from the Stanley Cup Final.

May 27, 2026

Game 4 preview: The Rust Wore Off

Game 1 was rust. The eight periods since have been Carolina outshooting Montreal 93-47 and suffocating everything the Canadiens want to do. The only thing keeping this series close is a 21% Montreal shooting clip and Jakub Dobes refusing to break. Game 4 from the Bell Centre, series on the line for Montreal.

May 26, 2026

Game 3: One Bad Pass, Carolina Up 2-1

Carolina 3, Montreal 2 (OT). Svechnikov picks off a Hutson cross-ice pass in overtime and Carolina takes a 2-1 series lead. Montreal blocked 33 shots but mustered only 13 in 76 minutes of hockey. Andersen has not been himself this series, posting .762, .833, and .846 across three games, but Carolina's structure made it not matter.

May 25, 2026

Game 3: Series Up for Grabs, Who Wants It?

One game each and nobody knows anything. Game 1 felt like a statement from Montreal. Game 2 was Carolina locking it down with Ehlers in OT. Series shifts to the Bell Centre, where Montreal is 2-4 at home this postseason. Three keys before puck drop at 8 PM.

May 23, 2026

Game 2: Hurricanes Strike Back, Series Tied

Carolina answers with a defensive masterclass and a Nikolaj Ehlers overtime winner. The Hurricanes hold Montreal to 12 shots through 60, the Habs storm back to force OT, and Ehlers strikes twice to even the Eastern Conference Final.

May 21, 2026

Game 1: Montreal Weathers the Storm, Habs take Raleigh

Carolina came into Game 1 on a 12-day break and an 8-0 playoff record. Montreal came in off a Game 7 classic with three days to breathe. By the end of the first period it was 4-1 Habs in Raleigh, the Hurricanes streak was on its deathbed, and Andersen was getting lit up like a Christmas tree. Montreal goes up 1-0 in the Eastern Conference Final.

May 18, 2026

Legend Reborn, Ghost of the Forum: Game 7

Montreal advances on Alex Newhook's overtime winner and a Jakub Dobes performance Habs fans haven't seen since 1970-71. Buffalo's season ends with the gas tank empty, the Canadiens move on to face a rested Carolina Hurricanes team that hasn't lost a game these playoffs.

May 18, 2026

Game 7 preview: Win or Go Home, Montreal at Buffalo

A complete series breakdown, who's in net (and on a short leash), why playing in Buffalo actually favors Montreal, and a 4-2 prediction with the storyline Sabres fans dream about.

May 16, 2026

Game 6 breakdown: Shell Shocked to Dominant, Buffalo Flips the Script

Buffalo blew the doors off in Periods 2 and 3, Dahlin and Thompson both finished with four-point nights, Jack Quinn buried two, and a cold-off-the-bench UPL stopped all 17 shots he faced. Series tied 3-3, Game 7 in Buffalo.

May 16, 2026

Game 6 preview: The Bell Tolls Loudest at Home, Buffalo at Montreal

Montreal can punch their ticket to the Conference Finals tonight, Buffalo faces elimination for the first time this postseason. Lyon likely takes over for Luukkonen, Caufield and Demidov are heating up, and the Sabres need Tuch and Thompson to be significantly better to force Game 7.

May 14, 2026

Game 5 breakdown: The Demigod delivers, Montreal takes a 3-2 series lead

Demidov ends a 12-game playoff drought with his first career playoff goal, Dobes shuts the door after a rough opening, and Montreal scores four unanswered to flip a 3-2 deficit into a 6-3 win. Game 6 goes Saturday in the Bell Centre with a Conference Final spot on the line.

May 14, 2026

Game 5 preview: Desperation vs. Determination, Montreal at Buffalo

Series tied 2-2 heading back to KeyBank Center. Buffalo found its desperation in Game 4 with 27 blocks and 3 goals on 22 shots, and Montreal's young stars are still hunting their moment. Game 5 has everything on the line.

May 12, 2026

Game 4: Zamboni door magic, Buffalo silences the Bell Centre

A Tage Thompson dump-in off the Zamboni door caroms straight back of the net. Buffalo steals Game 4 in Montreal 3-2, evens the series 2-2, and grabs home ice back. Luukkonen comes up huge, Benson buries the dagger, and we have a best-of-3.

May 12, 2026

Game 4 preview: Blood in the water, Buffalo at Montreal

After Montreal's 6-2 punch in Game 3, Buffalo turns to Luukkonen and adds Luke Schenn on defense. Montreal has nothing to change. If the Bell Centre repeats, the series goes to 3-1.

May 10, 2026

Game 3: Bell Centre buries Buffalo, Montreal takes a 2-1 series lead

Tage Thompson's slump-buster opens the scoring inside a minute, but Montreal answers with five unanswered. Newhook, Bolduc and Slafkovsky bury chances, Dobes stands tall, and the Bell Centre erupts. Habs win 6-2 and pull ahead in the series.

May 10, 2026

Game 3 preview: Buffalo at Montreal, Round 2

Series tied 1-1 heading to the Bell Centre. Montreal's stars are in hibernation, Buffalo's powerplay is dead last among teams still alive, and Carolina is sitting at home waiting.

May 8, 2026

Game 2 breakdown: Montreal vs Buffalo, Round 2

Montreal flips the script with a 5-1 road win to even the series. Newhook scores twice, Lyon stops everything Montreal throws at him, and the Habs steal home-ice back.

May 6, 2026

Game 1 breakdown: Montreal vs Buffalo, Round 2

Round 2 opens at KeyBank Center. Buffalo grabs the series lead 4-2 behind Alex Lyon's goaltending and a Zack Benson/Josh Doan show on the top line.

May 5, 2026

2026 NHL Draft lottery breakdown, picks 1-10

A pick-by-pick projection of the top 10 of the 2026 NHL Draft. Best fits, possible trade-downs, and one steal hiding at the back end.

April 30, 2026

Why I started High Danger

I played hockey until I was 17, watched it ever since, and work with data for a living. This is what happens when those three things meet: a place where the argument finally has receipts.

News / May 21, 2026
HighDanger News

Game 1 preview: Cinderella Meets the Storm, Montreal at Carolina

We are now down to four teams left in the Stanley Cup Playoffs, and the focus turns to Montreal vs. Carolina. Montreal is coming off a huge Game 7 win against Buffalo on May 18th. Carolina has been resting for 12 days after sweeping the Flyers on May 9th.

Tale of the Tape

Tale of the TapePlayoffs · This Series
Montreal Canadiens
Montréal Canadiens
8-6-0
vs
Carolina Hurricanes
Carolina Hurricanes
8-0-0
57.1%
Win rate
100.0%
3.07
GF / GP
3.00
2.71
GA / GP
1.25
25.0%
PP %
13.5%
74.1%
PK %
95.0%
25.1
Shots For / GP
33.9
28.7
Shots Ag / GP
25.1
54.1%
Faceoff %
46.6%

The matchup on paper is a study in contrast. Carolina has won every game it has played, with a 100% win rate to Montreal's 57.1%. Carolina is allowing the fewest goals against per game of any team left in the playoffs at 1.25, more than a full goal better than Montreal at 2.71. The shot-volume gap is the other story: Carolina generates 33.9 shots for per game and surrenders only 25.1, while Montreal is on the inverse side of that ledger at 25.1 for and 28.7 against.

Where Montreal has the clear edge is on special teams and at the dot. The Habs power play is humming at 25.0%, almost double Carolina's 13.5%. The penalty kill gap goes the other way, with Carolina at 95.0% and Montreal at 74.1%. Faceoffs are a Montreal strength too, with the Canadiens winning 54.1% across the playoffs versus Carolina's 46.6%. If Montreal can stay out of the box and convert when Carolina takes a penalty, the series math tilts.

What got Montreal here

Looking back at the Montreal-Buffalo series, a few things stand out. Montreal won 54% of faceoffs across the seven games, translating to more puck possession, more offensive zone time, and less defensive stress. If Montreal can win the dot against Carolina, it will be a key factor in their success.

Montreal also got in front of more pucks than Buffalo, with 115 blocked shots compared to Buffalo's 93. In the playoffs, it is always the team willing to sacrifice the body that earns the powerplay opportunities that matter.

Montreal was also shooting lights out, putting 164 shots on net across seven games and scoring 27 goals for a 16.5% shooting percentage. Sustaining that rate against Carolina will not be easy, as Frederik Andersen has been statistically the best goalie remaining in the playoffs. Montreal's power play has also been a key contributor, operating at 23% and going 7-for-30, with clutch goals from Demidov, Caufield, and Slafkovský.

Why Carolina is a different problem

Carolina is a very different opponent than Buffalo. They have more playoff experience, reaching the Eastern Conference Final for the third time in four years. They play stronger down the middle, deploy a defensive structure that forces teams to the outside, and play a more physical brand of hockey.

In just four games against Philadelphia, Carolina totalled 132 hits, while Montreal totalled only 153 hits across all seven games against Buffalo. Carolina averaged 33 hits per game; Montreal averaged just 21. Over the course of a full series, that physicality adds up.

Carolina swept Philadelphia and controlled the series, though two of those wins came in overtime, games that could have shifted momentum had the Flyers found any offense. Carolina surrendered just 1.25 goals against per game in the second round. It is very hard to win a hockey game if you can only score once in 60 minutes. Montreal's offense is considerably more dangerous than Philadelphia's and will pose a much greater threat, but Carolina's blue line, anchored by Slavin, Miller, and Chatfield, is dominant and will not be easily beaten.

The shot map

Carolina also leads the playoffs in shots for at 33.9 per game, while Montreal ranks near the bottom at 25.1. Their defensive structure holds up on the other end too, as they rank second in shots against at just 25.0 per game, while Montreal sits in the middle of the pack at 28.7.

If Montreal can sustain a 16% shooting percentage, they will be in good shape. If they cannot, they will need to generate more volume against Andersen. If Carolina comes in, plays their structure, stays physical, and remains disciplined, they have a clear path to the Stanley Cup Final.