“Four goals in four minutes, that hurts“https://t.co/HNk2sKXFXN
– L’Antichambre (@Antichambre) February 16, 2024
There’s one word that’s important when it comes to rebuilding: consistency. After all, a club can be good on any given night, but you have to be good on two given nights and three given nights.
I don’t think that’s the right way to put it, but we understand each other.
All this to say that on Tuesday, after the Habs’ big win over the Ducks, we were thinking that Martin St-Louis’ men would have to build on this to try and keep playing well.
And did they? It did… for 20 minutes.
Soon, the chain came off for the Habs, who found a new way to lose a hockey game. Allowing seven goals(in a 7-4 loss) isn’t exactly ideal.
The first went well, but allowing four goals in 4:10 didn’t exactly give the Habs confidence.
After all, according to the head coach, the Rangers’ fifth goal (scored early in the third period to make it 5-2) also hurt his men.
“Le cinquième but a fait mal “: https://t.co/9XWSodnkR4
– TVA Sports (@TVASports) February 16, 2024
In other words, the Rangers’ first five goals hurt. I imagine the opponent’s sixth and seventh goals hurt too, but I don’t want to put words in the pilot’s mouth.
After all, as a veteran, he could have asked the referee to switch sticks, just to give his guys a few more seconds to breathe and cut the Rangers’ momentum.
But of course, it would have been simpler if Martin St-Louis had simply called a time-out after the third or fourth goal… but he didn’t.
But hey. That’s not all I’ll take away from this game, in which the Habs gave away seven goals for the second time in three duels. The consistency I mentioned at the outset is there…
1. Yesterday, Samuel Montembeault looked bad. He gave the Rangers seven goals… and we imagine some of them weren’t goals he’s proud to see again on Sports 30 this morning. The loss wasn’t all his fault, but he didn’t make the difference for the better.
He looked like Jake Allen from the second – and that’s not a compliment.
It’s the second time in a few weeks that he’s had such an outing against one of the NHL’s good teams. Before the break, he gave the Bruins eight goals.
Let’s hope for the Habs’ sake that this is his last bad outing of the season.
2. In 2009, if the Habs hadn’t drafted Louis Leblanc, it’s safe to assume that they would have gone for Chris Kreider. And if that’s the case, not only would the Habs not have seen Carey Price injured in 2014, but the club would have had a hell of a hockey player on hand.
Juraj Slafkovsky in his last 23 games:
10 goals and 11 assists for 21 points; a pace of 75 points over 82 games.
And beyond the points, a growing, fast-developing overall game… impressive kid! #CH #Habs #Canadiens
– Marc-Olivier Beaudoin (@MOBeaudoin1) February 16, 2024
Slaf picked up a point (at least one, actually) in his seventh straight game. In Canadiens history, that’s an under-20 record. It’s a nice touch.
With six points yesterday, the first trio (three points for Caufield, two points for Slaf and an assist for Nick Suzuki) looked good. A club that scores four times isn’t supposed to get washed out, let’s say.
But since the Habs don’t have a lot of reinforcements outside the first trio (apart from… Jake Evans, obviously), it looks like this.
4. We’re all starting to notice it more and more: Mike Matheson likes to pass to Nick Suzuki and Cole Caufield with an extra man… but not to Juraj Slafkovsky or Alex Newhook / Sean Monahan.
“I’d really like Matheson to pass the puck to Slafkovsky on the power play!” pic.twitter.com/AmrkCWXHNZ
– L’Antichambre (@Antichambre) February 16, 2024
But Sunday’s game and yesterday’s remind us that, despite everything, we’re still holding our breath when he gets tackled.
Overtime
The Habs returned to Montreal late last night and no practice is on the menu. It’s a full day off for Martin St-Louis’ men on this snowy Friday.