Zach Vanasse
Rabid Habs
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Habs Game Blog: Game 31 – Habs vs Caps
The stare that shook the world.

Seriously, have we moved on from this yet? At least the coach said the right thing:
“I’m responsible to make sure our team is ready to play. I’m responsible for that” – Michel Therrien
— ?rpon Basu (@ArponBasu) December 17, 2016
And Carey Price will start against the Caps.
Story, fini.
FIRST PERIOD LIVE GAME BLOG:
– Chris Terry gets a chance! Called up from the Caps, he’ll start tonight on the 4th line.
– Redmond out, Barberio in for the Habs tonight. After a couple of pretty good games to start his season, Redmond has visibly struggled, especially against faster and more structured opposition, and hasn’t done a very good job guarding the crease/slot. Like their situation at centre, Habs seem to be riding out a thin 3rd D line until Greg Pateryn recovers from his injury sometime in January.
– More interesting Habs shuffles, it appears that the season-long struggles has finally resulted in demotion:
Pacioretty/Danault/Radulov
Byron/Mitchell/Gallagher
Lehkonen/Plekanec/Flynn
Carr/McCarron/Terry
McCarron had a very strong debut last night, so don’t be surprised if Therrien shuffles him a few top 6 shifts, especially if the Habs are in need of quick offence.
– Barry Trotz, who’s one of the smartest hockey guys employed these days, said earlier today that Price was going to have a statement game tonight. Bold!!
– Price seems to be pretty “on” early in the game. But, it’s early.
– Another early observation, two very strong shifts to open the game for Gallagher. Talk about someone goal-starved? Galley would be on that poster stamp.
– One concerning trend for the Habs have been the number of times they’ve been pinned in their own zone, which has cost them goals and even games (the Boston overtime loss a few days ago is an example). Two main reason for this – being outskated/worked, and poor puck movement by a defence that’s really been struggling of late, in particular Shea Weber.
– Part of the being outskated narrative, McCarron called for a slash, which is mainly a penalty from not being able to catch your check. Habs really can’t afford to be sitting in the box – surely they’ve learned that lesson given how they were burned so badly less than 24 hours ago.
– Decent 1st PK by the Habs unit, leaning more on Markov and Petry than the usual Weber/Emelin pairing.
– Injury woes are really starting to hit this team hard – just one shot in more than half a period, Habs offence not even able to gain the Caps zone so far.
– Nearest scoring chance for the Habs through 13 minutes? Chris Terry, who beats Holtby skating down the off wing, but slips the puck about 2 inches wide of the right post.
– Puck is rolling quite a bit – an indicator that the ice is pretty bad. Makes it tough to set up scoring attempts.
– Lehkonen, who’s played some pretty fine hockey since his return from the injury list, wraps a goal in behind a surprised Holtby, giving the Habs a 1-0 lead.
– An “okay” period for the Habs, they were visibly outskated and out-possessed by the Caps, but did have some pretty good individual performances by Lehkonen, Terry, Radulov (as usual), and Price looks be very solid tonight (not surprising). Canadiens will have to do a better job exiting their zone in the 2nd and 3rd period, taking some of the pressure off Price, while improving the team’s overall possession bottom line.
SECOND PERIOD LIVE GAME BLOG:
– As we suspected, not a great period for the Habs possession-wise – they were doing most of the chasing. 4th line Carr/McCarron/Terry particularly struggled keeping pace, even though Terry was able to generate a couple of decent scoring chances. Still, Therrien may be forced to scale back their ice times if we don’t see improvements.


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