Lethbridge Herald

Shaw scores OT winner as Habs top Leafs

- THE CANADIAN PRESS — TORONTO

“Desperate” hockey helped the teetering Montreal Canadiens score a big two points on Saturday night.

Andrew Shaw scored the overtime winner and Carey Price was stellar with 32 saves as the Canadiens beat the Maple Leafs for the 14th consecutiv­e time, a 3-2 triumph at the Air Canada Centre. The victory offered the sputtering Habs some much-needed cushioning in an increasing­ly tight Atlantic Division.

Montreal now has 74 points, four up on Ottawa (70) and five up on Toronto (69). The Leafs could have pulled within two points had they emerged in regulation.

“I thought we played very desperate hockey tonight and responded well from our previous game,” said Price, who stopped an Auston Matthews breakaway and hat-trick attempt moments before Shaw’s game winner.

It was just the third win in the last 11 games (3-7-1) for the Canadiens and second under new head coach Claude Julien (2-2-0).

“This is the stretch of the year that gets tough,” said Shaw, his ninth goal this year also his first game-winning marker in the bleu, blanc et rouge. “There’s tight games and the teams with character and the teams with heart that are going to find the ways to win.”

Looking for their first win over Montreal since Jan. 18, 2014, the Leafs got on the board first on a strange goal midway through the opening frame.

Matthews drove into the Canadiens zone with speed, pulled up and fired a shot that pinged off the outstretch­ed stick and then arm of Alexei Emelin before bouncing off the ice and in between the pads of Price. It was the 19-year-old’s team-leading 29th goal and 53rd point of the season.

The goal was also Matthews’ 11th to open a game this year — tops among NHL players — and 10th point (five goals, five assists) over the last 10 games.

Matthews had two chances to score earlier in the period, but was denied both times by Price.

Struggling to score these days, Montreal nearly evened it up at one with 55 seconds left in the first, Max Pacioretty’s redirectio­n attempt creeping through the pads of Frederik Andersen before striking the post.

Pacioretty celebrated for a moment, thinking the puck had crossed the line.

The Canadiens entered the night with only 13 goals in their previous 10 games.

Pacioretty finally evened it up at one seven-plus minutes into the second on a Canadiens power play, just the third marker on the man advantage this month for Montreal.

Toronto looked to be in fine position moments before the goal, but Zach Hyman held onto the puck in the neutral zone for one extra second and had it swiped by Pacioretty. The Habs struck back quickly with Alex Galchenyuk feeding the team’s captain for the one-timer and game-tying marker — his 29th goal this season.

“Those are the types of efforts that we’re going to continuous­ly need for the rest of the season,” Price said.

Galchenyuk got the Habs the lead in the final five minutes of the period when he beat Leafs centre Nazem Kadri for positionin­g around the net and deposited a Nikita Nesterov pass.

Price was sharp in a middle period which saw Toronto outshoot Montreal 12-5. He turned aside two good chances from Connor Brown and Matthews on a Leafs power play — stopping all eight of their shots with the man advantage.

“He was our best player tonight,” Shaw said of Price, who earned his 259th career win to pass Ken Dryden for sole possession of third place in Canadiens history.

The Leafs were playing without Mitch Marner and Tyler Bozak (hand), the former missing his fifth straight game with an apparent right shoulder injury.

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