Less than 48 hours after a less-than-convincing performance against the Carolina Hurricanes, the Montreal Canadiens had a much better showing against the defending Stanley Cup champions, the Florida Panthers.
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Tweaked Lineup
The big news of the day was Arber Xhekaj being scratched to make way for Michael Pezzeta, allowing Marting St-Louis to return to a 12-6 standard formation. Pezzetta slotted in on the fourth line while Emil Heineman was bumped up to play with Alex Newhook and Patrik Laine.
While returning to a more traditional formation was needed, the insertion of Pezzetta instead of Joshua Roy is interesting. Once again, the gritty winger saw very little ice time, spending 5:43 on the ice while St-Georges plays typically over 10 minutes. Perhaps the bench boss felt he needed a bit of sandpaper in the lineup since he had taken Xhekaj out.
If that’s the case, I maintain that trying the rugged defenseman up front might have been a viable option. Still, the Canadiens managed to pull off the win, so don’t expect Xhekaj back anytime soon. Coaches rarely change winning formulas.
The Power Play
Before the game, the Canadiens had failed to score in their previous 10 power plays, which was one reason they kept on losing. On Sunday, the power play finally clicked and accounted for two of the Habs’ four goals.
Interestingly, in the same game, we saw how dangerous it can be to have a power play that’s too predictable and how, at times, it doesn’t matter at all if the predictable play is executed to perfection.
Russ Cohen wrote earlier this week about Lane Hutson's need for more freedom on the man-advantage and the Canadiens' need to eliminate the slingshot play, where the puck is passed backward to Nick Suzuki, who skates it in the offensive zone. Well, today, they once again made that play, and the Panthers pounced, knowing exactly what the Canadiens would do. The captain regained the puck, and no harm was done, but that should have been seen as a stern warning.
At the other end of the ice, though, the Habs’ first goal was scored by Patrik Laine on what had become the Canadiens' patented top play on the power play. Suzuki and Lane Hutson set the table for the Finnish sniper, with the rookie sending him a picture-perfect pass. Even though Sergei Bobrovsky knew full well the Laine shot was coming, he was powerless to stop it as the play was executed perfectly.
Still, having been burned once, the Cats kept a closer eye on the Finn in the next man advantage, and birthday boy Juraj Slafkovsky scored a goal. It was a near perfect day for the special team at the office.
Mesmerizing Hutson
If the Canadiens skated away with the two points, it’s primarily due to how good their rookie defenseman is. The Habs scored four goals during the game and the only one that Hutson didn’t manufacture was Brendan Gallagher’s empty-netter tally.
On Suzuki’s goal, Florida was so mesmerized by the youngster that all five of the Panthers’ skaters had their eyes on him instead of covering the other Canadiens’ players. The Cats all had a front-row seat to admire the cross zone pass Hutson sent right in front of the blue paint at the perfect speed to allow Suzuki to unleash a one-timer that gave Bobrosvky no chance, even though it came from a very tight angle.
With those three points, Hutson takes back the rookie scoring lead, which he shared with Matvei Michkov. Michkov has been on a tear since coach John Tortorella was fired. Hutson now has a three-point lead and nine games left to play, just like Michkov and Macklin Celebrini, who has 53 points, three behind Michkov.
Hutson’s 59 points are the most by a rookie defenseman since Nicklas Lidstrom got 60 in 80 games played in 1991-92. It’s hard to imagine how the young man won’t blow past that number before the end of the season. His 54 assists are the third-highest total by a rookie defenseman in a season. Chris Chelios had 55 in 1984-85, and Larry Murphy had 60 in 1980-81. It’s quite conceivable that he could overtake them both.
Since the beginning of 2025, Hutson has been the second-most prolific defenseman with 33 points, behind only Cale Makar, who has 38. It’s also worth mentioning that he made a couple of key defensive plays on Sunday. While he is minus-14 on the season, Celebrini is minus-31 in 13 fewer games.
Suzuki also got three points on Sunday which brings him to 77 points and ties his career-high. With nine games left to play, the captain is well on his way to becoming a point-per-game player. If everything goes according to plan, the center will become the first player to get over 80 points in Montreal since Alex Kovalev in 2007-08.
The Canadiens somehow survived their disastrous road trip and will return to Montreal in the second wild card spot against all odds. On Tuesday, they will host the Panthers for the fourth and final duel of the season between the two sides, and given how Sunday’s game ended, there could be some rough stuff.
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