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April 24, 2024

Blog: Golden Knights fall to Canadiens in Game 5, one game from elimination

0622_sun_VGKCanadiens08

Steve Marcus

Montreal Canadiens players celebrate with goaltender Carey Price (31) after beating the Vegas Golden Knights, 4-1, in Game 5 in an NHL Stanley Cup playoff hockey semifinal at T-Mobile Arena Tuesday, June 22, 2021.

Updated Tuesday, June 22, 2021 | 8:47 p.m.

Golden Knights Lose Game 5 to Canadiens, 4-1

Vegas Golden Knights right wing Mark Stone (61) gets up from the ice after a fall in the second period during Game 5 in an NHL Stanley Cup playoff hockey semifinal at T-Mobile Arena Tuesday, June 22, 2021. Launch slideshow »

The Golden Knights are in trouble. That much is clear after a Game 5 loss to the Montreal Canadiens on home ice.

Vegas was blanked through two periods on Tuesday, and by the time the puck went in the Montreal net it was too big of a deficit to overcome. The Golden Knights lost 4-1 at T-Mobile Arena, falling to 3-2 in the series.

Game 6, an elimination game for the Golden Knights, is scheduled for 5 p.m. Thursday in Montreal.

The Golden Knights finally got on the board at the 4:09 mark of the third, a nifty Max Pacioretty wrister from the slot off a faceoff win from Nicolas Roy, but the Canadiens had already built a three-goal lead by that point. The crowd, which booed Vegas during a power play in the second period then again at the end of the frame, re-engaged as Vegas started its push to tie it.

But the Canadiens made sure they couldn't get out of their seats again. The Golden Knights had a few looks, notably a Reilly Smith chance from the doorstep that he shot into Carey Price, who didn't allow Vegas a second goal, much less the third needed to tie it. Once Nick Suzuki put the puck into an empty net with 1:06 to play, it was over.

The Canadiens opened the scoring off a Jesperi Kotkaniemi rebound that Josh Anderson created off a breakaway chance. They scored twice in the second, on an Eric Stall snap from the slot and on a Cole Caufield power-play tally, the rookie's third goal in the series.

Vegas is 2-3 all-time in elimination games, including a Game 7 victory against the Wild in the first round.

Check back to lasvegassun.com later for more coverage and read below for live updates from the game.

Golden Knights deficit against Canadiens grows in second period

The Golden Knights hoped the energy of coming back to T-Mobile Arena would give them a boost in the series. They're going to need a big third period, otherwise they'll be in serious trouble.

The Canadiens extended their lead in the second, scoring twice and putting the Golden Knights on their heels heading to the third period, with a 3-0 deficit at T-Mobile Arena.

Montreal used a nice blend of youth and experience to score twice in the second peruid. The first goal was set up by Nick Suzuki, 21, in the corner finding an open Eric Staal, 36, for the finish. The next one was on the power-play, where congestion at the blue line let Corey Perry, 36, enter the zone and feed Cole Caufield, 20, for his third goal of the series, tying all Vegas forwards.

The Golden Knights, in an effort to spark the goalless-this-series top-six, swapped the left wingers to start the second. The reuinted top line of Max Pacioretty, Chandler Stephenson and Mark Stone lasted one period, as Jonathan Marchessault took Pacioretty's place on the opening draw of the second, and Pacioretty shifted to playing with William Karlsson and Reilly Smith.

It didn't provide the jump the Golden Knights wanted, as they continued to flounder offensively. The power play squandered another chance, as T-Mobile Arena showered the home team with a round of boos as they left the ice.

Montreal led 17-15 in shots on goal after two periods.

Slow-moving first period has Golden Knights in early hole

The Golden Knights have conceded the first goal in 11 of their first 17 playoff games, and Montreal made it 12 of 18 on Tuesday. The Canadiens scored the only goal of the opening period in Game 5, and put the Golden Knights in an early 1-0 hole at T-Mobile Arena.

It was a slow-paced first period with not too many chances, but Montreal worked itself an early one and capitalized.

Nick Holden's aggressive pinch allowed Josh Anderson to sneak behind him and off Anderson went. He charged the net with Zach Whitecloud on his tail, getting off a backhand that Marc-Andre Fleury had to stretch to the far right of the crease to block. The rebound spat to the center of the ice, and Jesperi Kotkaniemi was there to whack it home at 8:45.

The good news is Vegas had went 6-5 when allowing the first goal entering the night. The bad news is Montreal is 9-2 when scoring first.

The Golden Knights had a power play just past the two-minute mark of the period, but did not score. It dropped them to 0-for-12 in the series, and 4-for-40 in the postseason, an even 10% success rate that ranked as the worst among the 16 teams to qualify for the playoffs.

The Golden Knights allowed just six shots on goal, but two of the game on the sequence that led to the goal. Vegas also only had shots itself.

Golden Knights riding comeback mentality into Game 5 with Canadiens

The Golden Knights would rather not trail in Game 5 against the Canadiens tonight, but if they do, at least they know they can come back.

Vegas has trailed in all three series of this postseason and has a winning record (6-5) these playoffs when allowing the first goal. The Golden Knights' ability to come back has been their calling card this postseason, and they've proven that even if they don't get out to an early lead in Game 5 at 6 p.m. today at T-Mobile Arena, it's far from over.

"We did a good job of battling back and tying this up, and now we just take care of tonight," forward Keegan Kolesar said. "This is a big game, and we'll worry just about this one right now."

The Golden Knights have allowed the first goal more times they've scored it themselves and have trailed at some point in 14 of their 17 games this postseason.

It's a contrast to the Canadiens, who seldom cough up a lead. They are 9-2 this postseason when they score the first goal, but one of those losses came in Game 4 in Montreal. The Canadiens controlled play through regulation on Sunday, but Vegas found the game-tying goal in the back half of the third period and won in overtime. Just another comeback win for the Golden Knights.

"I don't think too many guys are focused on the score or what the series is," defenseman Nick Holden said. "For the most part, I think it's just consistency in our game that is our biggest focus."

The Golden Knights could also enter Game 5 fully healthy for the first time this postseason. Forward Chandler Stephenson took part in morning skate after missing the last three games. Vegas has missed at least one of its regulars since the playoffs began, including Max Pacioretty, Tomas Nosek, Brayden McNabb, Mattias Janmark and Ryan Reaves, all of whom have missed multiple games at different points.

Stephenson's return would help stabilize a top line that has yet to score this postseason but has also prevented the Canadiens' top line of Phillip Danault, Brendan Gallagher and Artturi Lehkonen from scoring as well. Vegas Coach Pete DeBoer listed Stephenson, who is tied for fifth on the team with six assists this postseason, as a game-time decision.

"It slots us like you want it to be slotted, where we have depth and scoring in all four lines and we can create some mismatches," DeBoer said. "The games we had a full lineup like that, I feel that we're a different team. We'll make that decision at game time. His absence is missed, like Pacioretty's absence in the first round against Minnesota for six games was missed. We found a way to keep competing here, and we're in a good spot."

Marc-Andre Fleury is expected to return to the net for Game 5 following Robin Lehner's strong outing in Game 4 but not before the goalies had some fun with the assembled media at morning skate. Lehner made sure to tell rookie Logan Thompson, who has never started an NHL game, to go to the locker room first, as the first goalie to leave the ice is typically that night's starter.

Obviously the Golden Knights wouldn't turn to Thompson with Fleury and Lehner healthy and available, so the reveal came when Fleury left and Lehner remained to work with that night's scratches.

The extras were forward Ryan Reaves and Patrick Brown and defensemen Nicolas Hague and Dylan Coghlan. That's an indicator Reaves and Brown will be scratched and that the Golden Knights feel good about Stephenson's chances of playing today.

The Golden Knights have only ever played one Game 5 with the series 2-2 and defeated the Colorado Avalanche last round before winning the series in six games. They are 4-5 all-time in Game 5.

Stanley Cup Playoffs Round 3

Series: Tied 2-2

TV: NBC Sports Network (DirecTV 220, Cox 38, CenturyLink 640)

Radio: Fox Sports 1340 AM and 98.9 FM

Betting line: Golden Knights minus-240, Canadiens plus-210; over/under: 5 (minus-135, plus-115)

Golden Knights (10-7, West Division No. 2 seed)

Coach: Pete DeBoer (second season)

Points leader: William Karlsson (14)

Goals leader: Jonathan Marchessault (6)

Assists leader: William Karlsson (10)

Expected goalie: Marc-Andre Fleury (1.97 GAA, .921 save percentage)

Canadiens (10-5, North Division No. 4 seed)

Coach: Dominique Ducharme (first season)

Points leader: Tyler Toffoli (12)

Goals leaders: Joel Armia, Tyler Toffoli (5)

Assists leaders: Tyler Toffoli (7)

Expected goalie: Carey Price (2.09 GAA, .931 save percentage)

Golden Knights projected lineup

Forwards

Max Pacioretty—Chandler Stephenson—Mark Stone

Jonathan Marchessault—William Karlsson—Reilly Smith

Mattias Janmark—Nicolas Roy—Alex Tuch

William Carrier—Tomas Nosek—Keegan Kolesar

Defensemen

Alec Martinez—Alex Pietrangelo

Brayden McNabb—Shea Theodore

Nick Holden—Zach Whitecloud

Goalies

Marc-Andre Fleury, Robin Lehner

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