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The Montreal Canadiens (1-0-1) and Edmonton Oilers (1-2-0) close out a
two-game series with a 9 p.m. ET Monday game at Rogers Place.
Canadiens @ Oilers: Game preview, start time, Tale of the Tape, and how to watch
After a five-goal game on Saturday, the Canadiens look to keep the offence rolling on the first western road trip of the year.
Montreal Canadiens @ Edmonton Oilers
How to watch
Start time: 9:00 PM EST / 6:00 PM PST
In the Canadiens region: TSN2 (English), RDS (French)
In the Oilers region: Sportsnet West
Streaming: NHL.tv/NHL Live, RDS Direct, Sportsnet Now, TSN Direct
After
the opening game versus the Toronto Maple Leafs that the Montreal
Canadiens lost 5-4 in overtime, any worries about how the new players
would help the offence seemed to be answered. Instead, the only concern
was how quickly the defence could tighten up after some difficult
shifts.
The Edmonton Oilers would be another good test for that
defence, but it was hard to get a proper read with how well Carey Price
was playing in net. Despite facing 33 scoring chances on the night (the
team averaged 25 against per game a year ago), Price only allowed one
puck to get past him. It was a performance reminiscent of some of his
best international play, racing into good position to give opponents
little net to shoot at.
It’s also true that the defence didn’t
need to be airtight, because the offence was clicking right from the
start, and the game was effectively over midway through the second
period.
Tale of the Tape
Canadiens Statistic Oilers
1-0-1 Record 1-2-0
47.2% (23rd) Corsi-for pct. 46.4% (26th)
4.50 (4th) Goals per game 3.00 (14th)
3.00 (14th) Goals against per game 4.00 (22nd)
60.0% (1st) PP% 18.2% (14th)
71.4% (20th) PK% 88.9% (12th)
1-0-0 Head-to-head 0-1-0
It
may take a bit of getting used to having the Habs capitalize on so many
of their chances. For the past few years they’d often been all over
opponents but lacked the ability to put them away. Now with any of four
lines capable of carrying the offensive load, these four- and five-goal
outings could become commonplace, especially versus a group of clubs not
exactly know for their lockdown abilities.
On Saturday, two
goals from new breakaway specialist Tomas Tatar, another two from very
early Norris Trophy candidate Jeff Petry, and a pleasantly surprising
short-handed goal from Jake Evans proved more than enough offence in a
5-1 win. This after a power-play goal from Nick Suzuki and the first
two-goal game of the year from Josh Anderson in the opening contest. The
only members of the forward corps who haven’t gotten involved in the
scoring are those on the third line consisting of Joel Armia, Jesperi
Kotkaniemi, and Tyler Toffoli, and they were at the top of list for
expected goals for on Saturday, hinting that their breakout is also
imminent.
The Oilers are obviously no slouches when it comes to
offence; Connor McDavid does have a hat trick already this season, and
that’s only good enough to tie him for the team lead in points with Leon
Draisaitl. The dynamic duo was limited to just one secondary assist in
the first game, but that shouldn’t be expected in the second.
The
biggest question for tonight’s game is which of Montreal’s goalies
those offensive stars will be trying to score against. Jake Allen’s
acquisition was made to ensure Price wouldn’t get overworked this
season, and the starter did expend a lot of energy on Saturday. There’s
also a back-to-back on the schedule for Wednesday and Thursday this
week, and Allen will undoubtedly get one of those games as it is.
Perhaps that will be seen as enough rest for Price in the early going?
Or will the brass fully commit to more of a tandem and give Price just
four of the first six games rather than five? Claude Julien isn’t
divulging his plan for the netminders just yet.
Dave Tippett
doesn’t have the luxury of choice. For whatever reason, the Oilers
decided to start the new season with the same tandem that allowed 16
goals through four games of the qualification round, a series that
prevented the second seed in the Pacific Division from even making the
playoffs, despite 15 goals of its own. Now, the team is without Mike
Smith, and has its third-string goalie, Anton Forsberg, bouncing around
the continent on a string of waiver moves. It’s entirely possible that
we will learn at noon today that the club has made a claim of its own to
add Aaron Dell off the waiver wire from the Maple Leafs, but that move
is not going to help them for a few days, and definitely not tonight.
It
will probably be up to Mikko Koskinen to try to find some of the laser
focus Price displayed at the opposite end of the ice last game. As has
been the case since McDavid joined the franchise, Edmonton’s only hope
will be to finish on top when the offensive barrage is called to a halt.
Canadiens at Oilers: Projected starting goalies
Carey Price (1-0-1, .913 SV%, 2.92 GAA) vs. Mikko Koskinen (1-2-0, .892 SV, 4.04 GAA)
Price
logged a clunker in his 2021 debut Wednesday against the Toronto Maple
Leafs but was tremendous in stopping 34 of 35 shots in a bounce-back
effort Saturday against these Oilers. The 33-year-old has been marvelous
on the road the last couple of years. Price was iffy late in the
regular season last year but rebounded nicely to log a .936 save
percentage in 10 playoff games.
Koskinen registered a solid .917
SV% last season but then struggled in the Stanley Cup Playoffs with an
.889 SV% in four games. He doesn’t have a good career line at home, and
he has struggled in 5-on-5 play through the early going of 2021.
Money line (ML)
The
Oilers look to be undervalued after dropping the opener in this series
5-1. Look for the home side to be in better form before heading on the
road after this one.
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