New York Post

BAD HAB-ITS

Rangers head back to Montreal with tensions still high from 2014

- By BRETT CYRGALIS

It is the history of personal relationsh­ips, of previous games between these two clubs, and of the places where history will be written anew that make this RangersCan­adiens first-round matchup more intriguing than just what might happen on the ice.

Like the first question that Chris Kreider received Monday afternoon, predictabl­y asking if the “controvers­y” of injuring Montreal netminder Carey Price in the 2014 Eastern Conference final is dead and gone — even though it’s clearly not, as all will find out when Kreider is mercilessl­y booed in Game 1 on Wednesday night at the Bell Centre.

“One hundred percent,” Kreider said. “Long time ago, I’m just focused on this series and Game 1.”

When asked then by a Montreal reporter if he has changed his game, or if that previous rash of goaltender collisions were just accidents, Kreider went the sarcastic route and, whether intentiona­lly or not, painted an even larger bull’s-eye on his back.

“We’ve got a really good skating coach here, so working on my edges, really learning how to stop, I guess,” he said with a deadpan delivery. “My game hasn’t changed. For me to be effective, I have to get to the crease. That’s where I’m going to score goals.”

Just as it was three years ago, Rangers coach Alain Vigneault is again good friends with his Montreal counterpar­t, now Claude Julien. The two played together in the CHL in the early 1980s, and Vigneault said he had “a couple stories I could share, but I can’t — not openly anyway.” More recently in 2011, Vigneault was the coach of the Canucks when he lost Game 7 of the Stanley Cup final to Julien and his Bruins.

“I’ve always had a real good relationsh­ip with Claude. If I’m being very frank, obviously losing Game 7 put a little damper, or a little bit of time [in our relationsh­ip],” Vigneault said. “That’s a tough thing to get over. But it’s over, and I’ve got a tremendous amount of respect for him as a person, first. He’s a great coach, and I know that he’s going to prepare his team well.

“But I feel at the end of the day, he owes me one.”

Three years ago, Vigneault had a mini-feud with Michel Therrien, who was fired by Montreal on Feb. 14 and replaced by Julien — for the second time in the team’s history, believe it or not. Therrien first threw a fit over Kreider running into Price, naming him a repeat offender and calling for a suspension that never came. In the midst of Brandon Prust getting suspended for a headshot to former teammate Derek Stepan in Game 3 and Dan Carcillo getting a 10-game suspension for abuse of an official, Therrien threw out Vigneault’s assistant coaches trying to watch a Canadiens’ practice at the Garden, which Therrien said had been part of an ambiguous “gentleman’s agreement.”

Asked if he’s going to let Julien or his assistants watch morning skates this time, Vigneault actually had a bit of news, saying that Montreal general manager Marc Bergevin reached out to his New York counterpar­t, Jeff Gorton, and they made an actual, clear agreement.

“We can’t watch each others

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