RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) 鈥 The Montreal Canadiens have shown neither fear nor hesitation when in the NHL playoffs.
That approach carried a young, skilled team through to reach the Eastern Conference Final.
Then it had them get the jump on a Carolina Hurricanes team coming off a long layoff after sweeping through the first two postseason rounds to open the third round.
Montreal is 7-2 on the road in the postseason entering Saturday night’s Game 2, defying the gravity that typically comes with playing in front of hostile crowds and facing against an opponent’s preferred matchups.
鈥淚 don’t know, it’s a good question,鈥 Canadiens forward Josh Anderson said Friday when asked to explain the team’s road success. 鈥淢aybe less thinking and you want to calm the storm a little bit. I think on the road our starts have been pretty good and we鈥檙e well organized. We just play the right way and I think we play to our identity. … I think we always find a way to try to gain the momentum back.鈥
The Canadiens went 3-1 on the road in their series as the upstart against both Tampa Bay and Buffalo, then beat Carolina 6-2 for the Hurricanes’ first postseason loss after their .
Along the way, the Canadiens have scored first in five of nine road games, led at the first intermission in six, never trailed in four and led entering the third period in the past four straight.
They’ve also proven capable of handling adversity in those tests, from surviving with only nine shots on goal to scoring four unanswered goals into a 6-3 win.
Or, in Thursday’s case, it was seizing it from the opening minutes against the Eastern Conference’s top seed. Montreal regrouped from giving up a goal just 33 seconds into the game by scoring four times by midway through the opening period.
Afterward, coach Martin St. Louis pointed to confidence coming from a regular season where the Canadiens tied for second in the league with 56 road points.
鈥淵ou鈥檝e got to trust that the guys can just, like I always say, play the game that鈥檚 in front of them, understanding who鈥檚 on the other side, who鈥檚 on the ice while that鈥檚 happening,鈥 St. Louis said Thursday night. 鈥淵oung players, they love to have these offensive touches. And I think sometimes it鈥檚 just not what the game鈥檚 giving you right now. You鈥檝e got to defend.鈥
That approach worked perfectly Thursday. The Canadiens jumped on the Hurricanes (11 days) in more than a century. They confidently moved the puck out of trouble against Carolina鈥檚 aggressive pressure and capitalized on Hurricanes breakdowns with a quick succession of clean breakouts and breakaway chances.
And that spry start came even after the Hurricanes scored just 33 seconds into the game, signaling a fast start that turned out to be merely a mirage.
鈥淥ne team looked like an Eastern Conference Final team,鈥 Hurricanes forward Taylor Hall said Friday, 鈥渁nd the other didn鈥檛.鈥
That left coach Rod Brind’Amour saying after Thursday’s game he figured the only thing the team could do was toss the result as a one-off considering how out of character the Hurricanes looked in repeatedly giving up so many high-danger chances.
鈥淥bviously they’re battle-tested right now. But we feel that a lot of that was self-inflicted,” Hall said.
The Hurricanes are in the postseason for the eighth straight year and this is their third trip to the Eastern Conference Final in four seasons. But they’re now 1-13 in those games during this run under Brind’Amour to create what has become an imposing obstacle for a team that regularly ranks among the league’s best in the regular season.
The Hurricanes did a much better job in the second period of getting to their game of getting the puck into the offensive zone and staying there to pressure the Canadiens, all while minimizing the number of chances going the other way. But by then they were trying to recover from a 4-1 deficit.
鈥淵ou have to play to it, we didn’t play to it,鈥 Brind’Amour said of the team’s preferred style. “I’d like to see how the result is when you play your game, and that was not what we did last night.鈥
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