Price, Habs blank flat Penguins
Canadiens goalie now has 8 shutouts
The Associated Press
Posted: Mar 12, 2011 5:03 PM ET
Last Updated: Mar 12, 2011 7:01 PM ET
Related
Related Links
Pacioretty Injury
- Pacioretty could return for playoffs
- Capitals coach not impressed with Habs fans' rally
- Kids will enter safer NHL: Cammalleri
- Habs chairman reassures players about rink safety
- Don Cherry calls for redesign of stanchions
- Sedin, Thornton blast NHL for Chara decision
- Pacioretty injury part of game: Bettman
- Via Rail, Charest condemn NHL decision
- Chara avoids suspension for Pacioretty hit
- Habs' Pacioretty in hospital with broken vertebra
- WATCH: Chara's hit
The Montreal Canadiens didn't take long to establish they were more ready to play than Pittsburgh.
Tomas Plekanec and Travis Moen scored in the opening minutes of the first and second periods, and Carey Price made 26 saves to blank the flat Penguins 3-0 on Saturday.
It was Price's eighth shutout this season and 12th of his career, and he has allowed a total of seven goals in starting each of the past six games with a .965 save percentage.
"It was an Exhibit-A road game," Price said. "We cleaned up rebounds, anything I left out there, and played excellent all-around defence. You could tell our guys came to the rink with a focus today, and everybody executed. I think we're a tough team to play against when we get an early lead."
Montreal is 21-2-3 when leading after the first period and 27-6-5 when scoring first.
The Canadiens (38-24-7), two points behind fifth-place Boston in the Eastern Conference, have won six of their past seven.
A five-game winning streak had been broken with a 4-1 defeat Thursday at St. Louis, and the team also was coping with the loss earlier in the week of winger Max Pacioretty, who sustained a severe concussion and fractured vertebra from a hard hit by Boston's Zdeno Chara.
This was the game, some players said, that put the Canadiens back on track.
"We felt it was important for us to come out strong right away," Montreal winger Mike Cammalleri said. "After our last game and everything else that happened, we really wanted to get it going."
Pittsburgh coach Dan Bylsma saw the opposite in this team.
"We weren't really able to get into it, and that was obvious from the way we executed," Bylsma said. "You could see that when they got a faceoff goal right away. They didn't have to work very hard to get that."
The first of Montreal's quick strikes came 46 seconds into the game on Plekanec's 21st goal, good for second on the team. Plekanec cleanly beat Pittsburgh's Jordan Staal on the faceoff, then slipped around Staal and backhanded a pass from Cammalleri behind goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury. It looked like a set play, but Cammalleri wasn't saying.
"We might want to use it again," he said, grinning.
The Canadiens struck even earlier in the second period, just 24 seconds in, on Moen's one-timer. The play began with Scott Gomez intercepting a breakout pass by Pittsburgh defenceman Kris Letang, and Brian Gionta fed Moen atop the right circle.
It was Moen's first goal since Dec. 10, ending a 38-game drought.
"It's just a great pass," Moen said of Gionta's assist. "I opened up, closed my eyes and put it on net."
Cammalleri made it 3-0 at 6:51, going down to one knee to redirect Jeff Halpern's sharp pass by Fleury.
That was three goals in 12 shots, and Bylsma replaced Fleury with Brent Johnson, who would stop all eight shots he faced.
"It was just to try to alter the course of the game," Bylsma said of his move.
Montreal took three of four games from Pittsburgh in the season series, including both at the Consol Energy Center.
The Penguins (39-22-8), missing injured stars Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin, had won two in a row for the first time since early February coming in and had displayed quality defence and a relentless work ethic for more than a month before all the lapses and lethargic play Saturday.
"We just came out flat," winger James Neal said. "They got a quick goal on us, and then we could find that jump. Giving up early-period goals takes the air out of your tires, I guess. It takes the crowd out of it."
Michalek was on the ice for Montreal's first and third goals.
"At the beginning of the first two periods, we didn't play well, and they took advantage," Michalek said. "We just didn't have our game."
Cammalleri had a goal and assist, and there was nothing new about that. He torched Pittsburgh for seven goals in the Canadiens' seven-game playoff victory last spring, and his career regular-season totals against Pittsburgh are four goals and four assists in 10 games.
"Just lucky, I guess," Cammalleri said. "I have a lot of respect for those guys, and it just happens that I have some goals against them."
Share Tools
Latest Montreal News Headlines
- Court freezes assets in widening SNC-Lavalin probe
- The RCMP are moving to freeze millions of dollars in bank accounts and real estate holdings in Montreal and Florida in their expanding probe into Canadian engineering firm SNC-Lavalin. more »
- Via terror plot suspects due in court today
- Two suspects charged in an alleged plot to bomb a Via Rail train are scheduled to appear in a Toronto court Thursday morning. more »
- Taking a look at graffiti tagging hotspots in Montreal
- Behind the scenes in Montreal, tensions are mounting as residents and graffiti artists stake their claim over the city. more »
- Anti-corruption raids at borough offices in CDN-NDG
- For the second time this year, officials with Quebec's anti-corruption unit have raided the offices of a Montreal borough. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Mike Duffy's primary home not P.E.I., unedited Senate report says
- A copy of the original report by an internal Senate committee on Senator Mike Duffy's expense claims, obtained by CBC News, makes it clear the committee believes Duffy's primary residence is in Ottawa, and not in P.E.I. more »
- Neil Macdonald: Harper no Obama when it comes to dealing with scandals
- Beset by three so-called scandals at the moment, Barack Obama has been meeting his accusers and the press head on, Neil Macdonald writes. The same cannot be said for how Stephen Harper operates. more »
- Needed: New approaches to defuse 'suicide contagion' among teens
- Mental health experts say we need to find new ways to refer to and discuss suicide, particularly now that a large medical study has confirmed that teens are more susceptible to the idea if they know a schoolmate who died that way. more »
- 2nd suspect in Tim Bosma case now in court for murder charge
- A second man arrested in the death of Tim Bosma, a Hamilton husband and father who disappeared after taking two men on a test drive of his pickup truck, has arrived in court to face a charge of first-degree murder. more »
Most Viewed/Commented
- 1.3 million Montrealers face boil water advisory
- Woman injured after falling on Montreal metro tracks
- 23-year-old woman dies while surfing near LaSalle
- Taking a look at graffiti tagging hotspots in Montreal
- Court freezes assets in widening SNC-Lavalin probe
- Anti-corruption raids at borough offices in CDN-NDG
- How Quebec Cree avoided the fate of Attawapiskat
- Quebec private daycare owners hold 1-day walkout
- CBC board member linked to allegations before corruption inquiry

