Arab Times

Habs top Vegas, one win away from Final

Price makes 26 saves

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LAS VEGAS, June 23, (AP): Carey Price made 26 saves to lead Montreal to 4-1 victory over the Vegas Golden Knights, putting the Canadiens one win away from the Stanley Cup Final.

The Canadiens lead Vegas 3-2 in the their best-of-seven series, with Game 6 scheduled for historic Bell Centre in Montreal on Thursday.

Montreal’s 11th playoff victory is the franchise’s most in one postseason since the Canadiens won the Cup in 1993, also the last time a Canadianba­sed team won the title.

Jesperi Kotkaniemi, Eric Staal, Cole Caufield and Nick Suzuki scored for the Canadiens, who have made an NHL-record 34 Stanley Cup Final appearance­s.

Max Pacioretty scored for Vegas. Marc-Andre Fleury, the league’s active leader in playoff wins (90) and games played (162), made 22 stops in front of an announced crowd of

ICE HOCKEY

17,969 that were left stunned with the Golden Knights now on the brink of eliminatio­n.

Outside of Pacioretty’s third-period goal, the storyline remained the same with Vegas struggling to find its offense against Montreal’s suffocatin­g tactics, in limiting space and dominating the neutral zone.

The Golden Knights, who have scored 11 goals in the series, have gotten just four from their forwards.

Montreal, meanwhile, had no trouble scoring with its forwards, who produced all four goals.

Kotkaniemi was the beneficiar­y of strong defensive play in Vegas’ offensive zone, as Montreal defensemen Jeff Petry and Jon Merrill create a turnover to push the puck in transition. At the other end, it was Josh Anderson streaking past Vegas defenseman Zach Whitecloud and pulling Fleury to his far right with a backhand that was stuffed. But the rebound floated to the left, where Kotkaniemi beat Vegas blueliner Nick Holden and backhanded the puck into a wide-open net to give Montreal a 1-0 lead.

Suzuki, who was dealt to Montreal in the trade that sent Pacioretty to Vegas, set the Canadiens up for a two-goal lead in the second period with a perfectly timed backcheck on Jonathan Marchessau­lt to the right of Price. At the other end, Suzuki’s patience paid off, as he waited until the precise moment to feed Staal between the hashmarks for a wrist shot that beat Fleury top shelf.

With the confidence level headed in opposite directions by the midway point of the second period, and the Canadiens feeding off momentum on a power play, another Vegas turnover ended up in transition with Corey Perry darting in on a would-be breakaway before shuffling the puck cross-ice to Caufield, who one-timed a snap shot up top to extend Montreal’s lead to 3-0.

Pacioretty got Vegas on the board after he whiffed on an initial shot near the top of the circle, then followed up with a wrist shot over Price’s blocker to cut the deficit to two, at 3-1.

It was all the Golden Knights would get, as Price stopped the final nine shots he saw, and Suzuki - who never got to suit up for one regularsea­son game with the Golden Knights - made an empty-net goal to provide the final margin

Meanwhile, Lou Lamoriello of the New York Islanders has won the Jim Gregory general manager of the year award for the second straight year.

The league announced Tuesday night that Lamoriello finished ahead of fellow finalists Marc Bergevin of the Montreal Canadiens and Bill Zito of the Florida Panthers. Colorado’s Joe Sakic was fourth and Vegas’ Kelly McCrimmon fifth in voting by GMs, league executives and media members after the second round of the playoffs.

Lamoriello’s Islanders are in the semifinals of the Stanley Cup Playoffs for the second straight year, bolstered by the trade-deadline acquisitio­ns of forwards Kyle Palmieri and Travis Zajac. Palmieri, who had two goals and two assists in 17 games after his trade from New Jersey, has seven goals and two assists in 17 postseason games.

The 78-year-old Lamoriello, in his third season in charge of the Islanders following three years with the Toronto Maple Leafs, is the first two-time winner of the award that was first handed out in 2010.

New York has made the playoffs each year under Lamoriello and coach Barry Trotz, and won at least one series each time after totaling one series win in the previous 25 years.

The Islanders, pursuing their first title since winning four in a row in the early 1980s, trail the Tampa Bay 3-2 heading into Game 6 of the semifinals at home on Wednesday night. If they go on to win the Cup, it’ll be a fourth title for Lamoriello, who won three times with New Jersey.

 ??  ?? Montreal Canadiens left wing Artturi Lehkonen (62) shoots against Vegas Golden Knights goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury (29) as defenseman Alex Pietrangel­o (7) defends during the second period in Game 5 of an NHL hockey Stanley Cup semifinal playoff series, on June 22, in Las Vegas. (AP)
Montreal Canadiens left wing Artturi Lehkonen (62) shoots against Vegas Golden Knights goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury (29) as defenseman Alex Pietrangel­o (7) defends during the second period in Game 5 of an NHL hockey Stanley Cup semifinal playoff series, on June 22, in Las Vegas. (AP)
 ??  ?? Lamoriello
Lamoriello

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