Lethbridge Herald

O, Canadiens

HABS ELIMINATED FROM NHL PLAYOFFS AFTER LOSS TO RANGERS

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The most painful of truths are the ones that are selfrealiz­ed.

And so, it fell to Claude Julien to be candid during a moment of raw disappoint­ment.

“We weren’t good enough,” Julien said after his Montreal Canadiens lost 3-1 to the New York Rangers in Game 6 of the Eastern Conference quarterfin­als Saturday.

The Canadiens dropped the best-of-seven series 4-2. The Rangers will meet the winner of the Boston-Ottawa series. The Senators lead that series 3-2 with Game 6 set for Sunday at TD Garden.

“We needed more,” said Julien, who added the Canadiens “had offence. We just lacked finish.”

Mats Zuccarello scored two goals in an 11:05 span in the second period and Derek Stepan added an empty-netter with 17.8 seconds left. Henrik Lundqvist made 27 saves.

Alexei Emelin scored Montreal’s lone goal. Carey Price made 20 saves.

Trailing 1-0 at the start of the second period, it only took 2:26 for New York to draw even on Zuccarello’s power-play goal. Zuccarello’s shot from the left face-off dot appeared to sneak through Price’s body. After the puck went in, Price first turned to look in the net, and then looked at his glove.

Zuccarello’s two goals marked his first career multigoal game in the Stanley Cup playoffs.

The goal was the second of the series for Zuccarello, and New York’s first on 15 power plays over the course of the six games.

“It’s not every day you beat Carey Price,” Zuccarello said. “It (was) a nice power-play goal.

“That was big for us.”

Zuccarello put New York ahead for good at 13:31 with his second of the game. The right winger out-positioned Jordie Benn alongside Price at the near post, and redirected a Kevin Hayes centring feed.

“It was a really good play by (J.T. Miller and Hayes),” Zuccarello said. “I was the lucky one to finish off the rush.”

Lundqvist made the slim lead hold up. His most important save came late in regulation when he made a pad stop on Tomas Plekanec with a little more than minute remaining.

“It was a desperatio­n save,” said Lundqvist, who finished the series with a 1.70 goalsagain­st average, .947 save percentage and a shutout.

The most galling aspect of the series for Montreal was that it led 2-1 after the first three games, and had a lead in Game 6.

Montreal led 1-0 at the first intermissi­on on the strength of Emelin’s first career goal in the Stanley Cup playoffs. The 30-year old defenceman controlled Alexander Radulov’s diving pass at the top of the circle, then took a couple strides before whipping a shot that beat Lundqvist high to the glove side. But that was all the Canadiens would get.

“It’s a bitter disappoint­ment,” Price said. “We couldn’t catch a break all series.

“We thought we could have gone further.”

The Canadiens entered 2016-17 with a healthy Price, and added Shea Weber and Radulov in the off-season. Montreal ended up winning the Atlantic Division, but made a coaching change in February, replacing Michel Therrien with Claude Julien following a stretch in which the Canadiens lost 25-of-43 games.

 ?? Associated Press photo ?? New York Rangers goalie Henrik Lundqvist reacts after the Rangers won Game 6 of a first-round NHL hockey Stanley Cup playoff series against the Montreal Canadiens, Saturday at Madison Square Garden in New York.
Associated Press photo New York Rangers goalie Henrik Lundqvist reacts after the Rangers won Game 6 of a first-round NHL hockey Stanley Cup playoff series against the Montreal Canadiens, Saturday at Madison Square Garden in New York.

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