USA TODAY US Edition

From brink of eliminatio­n to hottest team in NHL

- Mike Brehm

The Canadiens are on a seven-game winning streak and have reached the semifinals.

The Canadiens were one of the busiest teams during the NHL’s 2020 offseason and the key theme was acquiring former Stanley Cup winners.

Tyler Toffoli was brought in for a topsix forward role. Joel Edmundson bolstered the defense. Corey Perry was added for the taxi squad and eventually the fourth line. Goalie Jake Allen provided solid backup for Carey Price during a compressed season.

But it took time to come together. Montreal had to make a coaching change. The Canadiens had to take a break because of COVID-19 protocol. They had no fans in their arena until Game 6 of the first round of the playoffs. They were the last to clinch a playoff spot. They were on the verge of eliminatio­n, down 3-1 in the first round to the Maple Leafs, whom they finished 18 points behind in the regular season.

Now they’re the first team to reach the semifinals after rallying past Toronto and sweeping the Jets for a sevengame winning streak in which they have never trailed, a span of nearly 438 minutes.

How the Canadiens reached the third round for the first time since 2014:

Price playing strong

Considerin­g Price’s strong play, it’s easy to forget he struggled early in the season.

His save percentage was .898 in January and .880 in February. About a week after the Canadiens replaced head coach Claude Julien with Dominique Ducharme, they fired longtime goalie coach Stephane Waite and promoted Sean Burke to director of goaltendin­g in early March.

The moves worked as Price had a 1.87 goals-against average and .931 save percentage in March before he suffered a concussion in April that kept him out until the playoffs.

Price upset the Penguins last season in the qualifying round and has been a force again this postseason with a 1.97 goals-against average and .935 save percentage.

“With the goaltendin­g that they have, any breakdowns, he’s putting out those fires,” Jets captain Blake Wheeler said. “We just couldn’t get the first goal, and that plays into their hands.”

Good mix of players

Rookie Cole Caufield didn’t make the postseason lineup until the third game.

But the 2021 Hobey Baker Award winner kept Montreal alive in Game 5 by picking off a pass and starting a 2-on-0 break that led to Nick Suzuki’s overtime goal.

Caufield assisted on Suzuki’s powerplay goal in Game 3 against the Jets and set up Toffoli’s series-clinching overtime goal in Game 4.

“He’s just a great player,” Toffoli said. “Every time the puck is on his stick, something good happens.”

Caufield and fellow 20-year-old Jesperi Kotkaniemi (four goals) give the Canadiens impressive youngsters to go with their veterans. The Canadiens can roll four lines and get contributi­ons from everyone.

“We’ve got a tight group and we’ve been playing our best hockey when everyone’s doing his own role,” said shutdown center Phillip Danault.

GM Marc Bergevin’s moves pay off

Toffoli had 28 goals in the regular season and has four goals and 10 points in the playoffs.

Perry is part of an effective line with trade deadline acquisitio­n Eric Staal. Those two and Joel Armia have combined for eight goals and 20 points.

“That line has been one of the best lines in the playoffs, heavy and grinding and big for us,” captain Shea Weber said.

Edmundson has played about 22 minutes per game, and defenseman Erik Gustafsson, picked up at the trade deadline, scored the opening goal Monday night.

“We’re all playing our best hockey at the right time and we just have to keep going,” Toffoli said.

 ?? JEAN-YVES AHERN/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? The Canadiens are headed to the NHL playoff semifinals after completing a sweep of the Jets on Monday.
JEAN-YVES AHERN/USA TODAY SPORTS The Canadiens are headed to the NHL playoff semifinals after completing a sweep of the Jets on Monday.

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