Carolina 3, Montreal 2 (OT). Hurricanes take a 2-1 series lead on Svechnikov's overtime winner after a Hutson turnover deep in the neutral zone.
Montreal threw their bodies in front of everything last night. Thirty-three blocked shots is a number that sounds heroic until you look at the other side of the ledger. Thirteen shots produced in 76 minutes of hockey. The Canadiens managed just two shots on goal in the final 24 minutes of the game, including overtime. They weren't just outplayed. They were erased.
The trap Carolina set was simple and suffocating. Pin Montreal in their own zone with the forecheck, and when they finally managed to break free, make them dump it in anyway. The Hurricanes angled them off every exit, forced the chip, then won the race every time. Montreal couldn't hold a board battle and Carolina was moving the puck too quickly for the Habs forecheck to even get set. The cycle kept repeating: zone entry, pressure, turnover, repeat. By the third period Montreal managed just one shot on goal. Outshot 32-12 across 60 minutes of hockey, they were clinging to a tie they had no real right to.
The exception was two minutes of hockey that looked nothing like the rest of the game. Early in the second period, on the power play, Caufield and Hutson went to work, just the two of them, 200 feet of ice, and a Carolina penalty kill that had no answer. They moved the puck back and forth with speed and precision, Dobes picking up the assist as the play developed, before Hutson finished it to tie the game at 2-2. It was a reminder of exactly how dangerous Montreal can be when they have space and time. Carolina spent the rest of the night making sure they got neither.
Andersen entering this series: .950 SV%. Game 1: .762. Game 2: .833. Game 3: .846.
The saving grace for Montreal, if you can call it that, is Frederik Andersen. The best goalie of these playoffs has not been himself in this series. A .950 save percentage coming in, and he has posted .762, .833, and .846 across three games. That is not a slump. That is a pattern. The data is telling a clear story: when Montreal does generate shots, Andersen gives them goals. Three or more every time. The problem is they cannot create chances consistently enough for it to matter.
Still, Montreal had a chance. Just like they clawed through Tampa Bay in Game 7, they were one moment away from stealing this one. Overtime started with some life from the Habs, a brief flicker that suggested maybe, somehow, they could find a way through. Then Carolina got their legs back and the ice tilted again.
Late in overtime, Hutson made the kind of decision that only looks like a mistake in hindsight, except it was obviously a mistake in real time too. An 80-foot cross-ice pass aimed at Slafkovsky, through the middle of the ice, with Carolina's best line reading every inch of it. Svechnikov picked it off without breaking stride. That line went straight to work. Moments later Jarvis found Svechnikov at the point, Aho set a screen, and the puck was past Andersen before Montreal could react. The game ended exactly the way the previous 60 minutes had played out. Carolina in control, Montreal surviving on hope, and one mistake being all it took.
The takeaway
Montreal is down 2-1 and puck possession is rapidly becoming an existential problem. The Canadiens are doing a lot right: their defensive compete is real, Andersen gives them a puncher's chance every night, and they will block every shot that comes their way. But Carolina's structure is the kind of thing that drives opposing fans to madness because there is no obvious fix. You can't out-battle a team that takes the puck away 13 times a game. You can't outscore a goalie you rarely see. Montreal cannot win this series without controlling the puck, and right now Carolina is making that feel impossible. The Hurricanes are reminding the league of something it already knew: five years of this level is not a fluke. It is a program.
By the numbers
(OT)
Goal scorers
- 1st period. CAR: Gostisbehere (8:24, EV, assists: Jankowski, Robinson). MTL: Matheson (15:28, EV, assists: Demidov, Evans). CAR: Hall (16:22, EV, assists: Miller, Blake).
- 2nd period. MTL: Hutson (4:43, PP, assists: Caufield, Dobes).
- 3rd period. Scoreless.
- OT. CAR: Svechnikov (14:06, EV, assist: Jarvis).