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    Friday, April 26, 2024

    NHL roundup

    Montreal's Artturi Lehkonen celebrates his go-ahead goal as Pittsburgh goaltender Tristan Jarry, Kris Letang (58) and Zach Aston-Reese react during the third period of Friday's Stanley Cup playoff series in Toronto. Montreal won, 2-0, to win the series in four games. (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press/AP Photo)

    Canadiens 2, Penguins 0

    The Pittsburgh Penguins entered their qualifying round matchup against Montreal healthy but wary. Optimistic but guarded. While they'd shown plenty of grit during a regular season that featured extended absences by high-profile names on their star-laden roster, in a short series facing a goaltender like Carey Price, they took nothing for granted.

    In the end, they ended up taking nothing at all.

    Artturi Lehkonen flipped a shot past Tristan Jarry with 4:11 remaining to lift Canadiens to a stunning victory on Friday to clinch Montreal's first playoff berth in three years.

    Paul Byron took advantage of a Pittsburgh turnover, darted behind the Penguins net and then slipped a pass to Lehkonen in front. The 25-year-old Lehkonen found enough space between four Pittsburgh players — all of whom had their eyes on Byron — to slip the puck into the open net.

    The Penguins mustered little down the stretch and Shea Weber added an empty-net goal in the final seconds as the 12th-seeded Canadiens captured the best-of-five qualifying round over fifth-seeded Pittsburgh in four games.

    “Everybody was kind of counting us off, so of course it feels good to get to win this series," Lehkonen said. “But it was one series and now we’ve got to enjoy this for a moment and then move on.”

    Carey Price stopped 22 shots to collect his sixth career playoff shutout. Montreal will advance to the first round of the playoffs against either Tampa Bay or Philadelphia.

    Three years removed from becoming the first team in a generation to win consecutive Stanley Cups, the Penguins are now just 1-9 in their last 10 playoff games dating to the second round of the 2018 postseason.

    “Listen, it’s a three out of five,” said Pittsburgh captain Sidney Crosby, held scoreless on his 33rd birthday. "Anything can happen. We did some good things. We didn’t do enough. Give them credit. They played really well. Got some big plays throughout the four games.”

    Jarry made 20 saves in his first career playoff start, including a stellar glove save to thwart a breakaway by Montreal's Brendan Gallagher early in the third period. Pittsburgh's high-powered lineup, however, did little to provide Jarry with any support.

    After taking a 3-1 lead in the middle of Game 3, the Penguins didn't put another puck past Price over the final 94:26 of the series.

    “We know he’s a great goalie,” Crosby said of Price. “I don’t think it was a matter of trying to play around him. He did what we expected him to do. He gave his team a chance to win and unfortunately we didn’t do a good job of putting pucks in the net or when we got a lead like last game, building on it.”

    His team badly outplayed in the final minutes of a 4-3 loss in Game 3, Pittsburgh coach Mike Sullivan turned to Jarry in search of a spark.

    The 25-year-old was an unlikely All-Star in February thanks to a stellar first half that helped Pittsburgh stay afloat despite a series of injuries, Crosby chief among them.

    Yet, Jarry had struggled before the shutdown created by the COVID-19 pandemic, losing each of his last four starts. He tried to keep sharp while back home in western Canada, using his two English Mastiffs as training partners during the extended layoff.

    While Jarry was sharp in his first start in five months, for long stretches there was little jump from the Penguins against the last team to enter the expanded 24-team tournament.

    The Canadiens, who were in the process of playing out the string before the “pause” and the ensuing fallout put them in postseason position, were only too happy to slow the game down. Still, they generated most of the quality scoring chances and Lehkonen's winner came at the end of another sloppy sequence by the Penguins.

    Now Pittsburgh heads into another extended offseason. Last summer they jettisoned veteran forward Phil Kessel and preached the need for more defensive responsibility by their talented forwards. They got it during the regular season. Not so much in the playoffs against a team they were expected to breeze past. Crosby, Evgeni Malkin and defenseman Kris Letang are all well into their 30s. Still, they are confident the window on them being Cup contenders has not closed.

    “I think these guys are still elite players,” Sullivan said. “I believe in this core. I just think they’re such character guys. They’re elite hockey players and I still think there’s elite play left in them.”

    Maple Leafs 4, Blue Jackets 3 (OT)

    Auston Matthews scored on a power play 13:10 into overtime and Toronto rallied from a three-goal deficit in the third period to beat Columbus, tying the best-of-five qualifying series at two wins apiece.

    The Leafs scored three times in 3:34 to knot the score late in a game that Columbus and goalie Elvis Merzlikins had largely controlled until then.

    This time, with Nick Foligno in the penalty box for tripping, Matthews beat Elvis Merzlikins from the right circle to push the series to a decisive Game 5 on Sunday.

    William Nylander, John Tavares and Zach Hyman scored in the third period to set up Matthews’ heroics. Frederik Andersen had 36 saves.

    Cam Atkinson, Vladislav Gavrikov and Boone Jenner scored for Columbus, and Merzlikins, who started his first playoff game, recorded 49 saves.

    Canucks 5, Wild 4 (OT)

    Christopher Tanev’s slap shot just 11 seconds into overtime gave Vancouver a victory over Minnesota and a win in the best-of-five Western Conference qualifying round series in four games.

    Tanev’s snipe from just in front of the blue line zipped through traffic and beat Stalock stick side to give the Canucks their first postseason series win since 2013. This is the first time in five years that Vancouver has reached the playoffs.

    Bo Horvat, left alone in front as he crashed the net, scored for Vancouver off a feed from Tanner Pearson with 5:46 left in regulation — the third tying goal of the game for the Canucks.

    Pearson, Brandon Sutter and Quinn Hughes also scored as Vancouver kept attacking a Wild defense missing stalwart Ryan Suter and wore down goalie Alex Stalock to erase leads of 1-0, 3-1 and 4-3.

    Luke Kunin, Eric Staal, Joel Eriksson Ek and Nico Sturm had the goals for the Wild, who squandered their two-goal advantage over a 3:05 span midway through the second period.

    Coyotes 4, Predators 3

    Brad Richardson scored on a rebound in overtime, Darcy Kuemper stopped 49 shots and Arizona advanced in the postseason for the first time in eight years.

    The Coyotes, the Western Conference’s No. 11 seed, took a 2-0 lead early in the second period. But they allowed Nashville to tie it before going ahead 3-2 on Jordan Oesterle’s goal early in the third. Nashville pulled goalie Juuse Saros late in the period and Filip Forsberg tied it with 32 seconds left.

    Richardson won it after he redirected Vinnie Hinostroz’s shot and punched in the rebound past Saros to help the Coyotes win the Stanley Cup qualifier series 3-1.

    Michael Grabner and Phil Kessel also scored for Arizona, which faces Colorado or Vegas in the next round after advancing in the postseason for the first time since reaching the 2012 Western Conference finals.

    Viktor Arvidsson scored for the third straight game before taking a shot to the ribs and leaving late in the second period. Matt Duchene also scored, and Saros stopped 30 shots for the Predators, who bowed out of the postseason as the West’s No. 6 seed.

    Blackhawks 3, Oilers 1

    Brandon Saad, Matthew Highmore and Dominik Kubalik scored and Chicago beat Edmonton, knocking the Oilers out of the postseason tournament.

    The Blackhawks won the best-of-five qualifying series 3-1. Chicago advances to the round of 16.

    Josh Archibald and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins scored for Edmonton.

    The Oilers had been expected to beat Chicago, given they were the fifth-seeded team in the Western Conference tournament and the Hawks were the bottom seed at 12.

    Corey Crawford made 41 saves for the win. Mikko Koskinen stopped 25 in the loss.

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