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    PA Stats Inc
    Dec 14, 2008, 02:39

    MONTREAL (Ticker) -- Sergei Kostitsyn provided Guy Carbonneau

    another game to coach at the Bell Centre.

    The Belarussian snapped a tie with 22 seconds remaining in the

    third period as the Montreal Canadiens recorded four goals in

    the session en route to a 5-4 triumph over the Washington

    Capitals on Saturday.

    Tomas Plekanec scored twice and Robert Lang and Andrei Kostitsyn

    netted power-play goals 43 seconds apart in the third for

    Montreal, which won its fourth straight and improved to 9-1-1 in

    its last 11 games.

    "Games (like this) are fun to play, and everyone was in it. Our

    guys did a great job," Plekanec said. "We came back when they

    scored, and that was great for us. We got on a roll and kept at

    it."

    Alexander Semin netted a pair of goals, Tomas Fleischmann and

    Michael Nylander also tallied and defenseman Mike Green notched

    two assists for Washington, which dropped its second in a row

    after posting a 12-1-0 mark in its previous 13 contests.

    "We deserved to get at least a point tonight," reigning Hart

    Trophy winner Alex Ovechkin said. "We had a lot of chances, but

    they're a good team and they have a good system when it comes to

    the power play. But it all came down to luck.

    "It's tough to lose in the last 20 seconds. We were shorthanded

    when they scored two goals in the third, but we came back. We

    fought and we didn't give up. It's hockey, but they had more

    luck than us."

    With the win, Carbonneau will serve as the assistant to Boston's

    Claude Julien for the Eastern Conference in the 57th All-Star

    Game, which will be played here on January 25.

    "For me, it's something new. It will be a bit strange behind

    the bench (with Julien) during the game, but it will be fun,"

    Carbonneau said. "It's always a privilege when you have a

    chance to be around superstars and people who make this league

    great.

    "The best part is that they usually have different minds,

    different stories - why you do this, why you do that, how they

    prepare themselves. We're going to be five (Canadiens) at the

    All-Star Game. It's going to be a great experience because of

    that."

    Carbonneau's gain came at the expense of Washington coach Bruce

    Boudreau, who would have been named the assistant had his team

    emerged victorious.

    "You could see the players on both teams, everybody on both

    teams the way they celebrated (each goal)," Boudreau said.

    "They were well aware of what was going to happen for their

    coach if they were successful, and their (team) was."

    In the waning moments of the game, Capitals defenseman Milan

    Jurcina could not locate the puck in his skates, and Sergei

    Kostitsyn alertly gained possession and wristed a shot that slid

    under the right pad of goaltender Brent Johnson for his eighth

    goal of the season.

    After netting just one goal in his previous 16 games, Plekanec

    snapped a 3-3 tie at 4:31 of the third period with his ninth

    tally of the season.

    The goal capped a scoring frenzy as the teams combined to tally

    four times in a span of 2:35. But Nylander evened the contest

    nearly eight minutes later, netting his fourth of the campaign

    during a power play.

    With Montreal trailing, 2-1, Lang and Andrei Kostitsyn scored

    man-advantage goals 43 seconds apart to give the Canadiens a

    brief edge. But Fleischmann notched his 13th of the season just

    96 seconds later to tie it at 3-3.

    "They kind of got momentum after (the two power-play goals) and

    started playing better than they were (earlier)," Green said.

    "They kind of didn't take their foot off the gas after that, and

    we kind of had a hard time scoring goals."

    Semin sandwiched tallies around Plekanec's first goal, which

    came with his team shorthanded at 9:20 of the first period.

    Plekanec received a lead pass from All-Star defenseman Mike

    Komisarek in the neutral zone before skating in and wristing a

    shot past Johnson.

    After opening the scoring at 7:59 of the first session by

    deflecting Green's blast from just inside the blue line past

    goaltender Jaroslav Halak, Semin restored Washington's lead with

    6:56 remaining in the second, stripping the puck from defenseman

    Patrice Brisebois at the blue line before beating Halak with a

    wrist shot.

    "Everyone is pushing in the same direction and everyone is

    staying with the game plan - we work hard," Brisebois said.

    "The leaders are doing their job, the rookies are playing well

    and our goalie Jaro is playing good.

    "We have confidence, we have a good team and we know we have

    skills."