Waterloo Region Record

Coach Julien in a bind after homestand hell

Is it time for a bag skate? ‘They have the day off’

- Bill Beacon

MONTREAL — It would have been a fine time for an old-fashioned bag skate — that exhausting skating drill.

But Montreal Canadiens coach Claude Julien didn’t have that option even if that was what he wanted.

After closing a six-game homestand with what the coach called an “embarrassi­ng” 5-4 loss to lowly Arizona followed by a 6-0 thrashing from the rival Toronto Maple Leafs, the oldschool reaction would be to hold a punishing, no-sticks skate to drive home the message that such performanc­es are unacceptab­le.

But the league’s collective bargaining agreement says teams have to designate four days off each month and Sunday had been marked down for a rest, so Julien will have to find other ways to get his struggling team going.

“At the end of the day, we have to find a way to be a better hockey club,” Julien said after the latest loss. “The CBA (collective bargaining agreement) says four days off a month, they got (Sunday) off. There was a time where you could react. You can’t anymore. They have the day off. I’ve got to continue to find ways. The punishing skate on Monday would do what for us on Tuesday and Wednesday? That’s where we are now in this league. We need to evolve with the game. Maybe, back in the day, there was a time where we could do that. It’s a lot harder today than it was back then.”

The Canadiens (8-11-2) play in Dallas on Tuesday night and visit their former teammate P.K. Subban and the Predators in Nashville on Wednesday before returning home to face Buffalo on Saturday night.

It was crucial for Montreal to take advantage of the homestand to get back into the National Hockey League’s Eastern Conference playoff picture. Instead, they went 2-3-1.

After a 2-7-1 start to the season, they had been making up ground, going 4-1-0 in their next five games.

They opened the homestand with three games against teams that had played the night before and got a 3-2 win over Vegas, a 3-0 loss to Minnesota and an overtime win over Buffalo.

Then came an overtime loss to Columbus, the Arizona debacle in which they blew a 2-0 firstperio­d lead to give the Coyotes their first regulation time win of the season, and the Toronto blowout.

They did it without star goalie Carey Price, who has missed eight games with a lower body injury. Backup Al Montoya suffered a concussion in a 5-4 win in Winnipeg on Nov. 4, but then American Hockey League call-up Charlie Lindgren was lights out in posting his first shutout in Chicago. Lindgren went 3-1-1 in five games with only seven goals against before surrenderi­ng five in each of the last two outings.

Against Toronto, he was lifted in the third period in favour of newly acquired Antti Niemi, who gave up one goal on four shots — an unstoppabl­e rocket to the top corner by Auston Matthews.

There has been no word on when Price will return.

“It’s not Charlie’s fault, not at all,” said centre Phillip Danault. “He can’t do it all.

“We have to find a way to score the game’s first goal. We were good in the first period. If we had scored a goal, it would have changed the game completely. We got caught. It’s unacceptab­le. Especially here at home.”

Lindgren is trying to keep a positive attitude, even if the skaters in front of him have not been making it easy.

Against Toronto, the Canadiens dominated the opening period but couldn’t get the puck past Frederik Andersen, who made 33 saves for his second consecutiv­e shutout.

Then Ron Hainsey and Nazem Kadri scored 37 seconds apart in the second period and Connor Brown got one 25 seconds into the third to put the game away.

“Mentally I’m doing all right,” said Lindgren.

“This is an exciting time for me,” he added.

“I just want to help these guys out, that’s the bottom line. We have to get wins here. It’s my job to help them out. I love these guys in the locker-room. They’re already like family. We’ll be better.” They’ll need to be. U.S. Thanksgivi­ng is on Thursday and historical­ly few teams not in playoff position by then make it to the post-season.

 ?? PHOTOS BY GRAHAM HUGHES, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Maple Leafs’ Connor Brown celebrates with teammate Patrick Marleau after scoring against Canadiens goaltender Charlie Lindgren during third-period action in Montreal on Saturday. The Leafs won, 6-0.
PHOTOS BY GRAHAM HUGHES, THE CANADIAN PRESS Maple Leafs’ Connor Brown celebrates with teammate Patrick Marleau after scoring against Canadiens goaltender Charlie Lindgren during third-period action in Montreal on Saturday. The Leafs won, 6-0.
 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Montreal goalie Charlie Lindgren makes a save Saturday night. Lindgren was lifted in the third period against the Leafs.
GRAHAM HUGHES, THE CANADIAN PRESS Montreal goalie Charlie Lindgren makes a save Saturday night. Lindgren was lifted in the third period against the Leafs.
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