⌂ Home News Hurricanes Beat Canadiens in Overtime to Even Series 1-1

Hurricanes Beat Canadiens in Overtime to Even Series 1-1

Hurricanes Beat Canadiens in Overtime to Even Series 1-1
Carolina Hurricanes players celebrating overtime win against Montreal Canadiens
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The Canadiens spent nearly 30 minutes defending inside their own zone, according to data from SportLogiq.

Despite the territorial disadvantage, Montreal generated seven slot shots and outpaced Carolina on rush opportunities by a 6-2 margin.

"I think it was mostly them," said Canadiens defenceman Alex Carrier. Carrier noted that the Hurricanes played with high intensity and limited Montreal's operational space on the ice.

"We've just got to adjust a bit more," said Carrier.

Montreal defenseman Mike Matheson indicated that the team lacked proper space creation during the contest.

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"I felt we could've created space a little better and had a bit more time to execute," said Mike Matheson.

Matheson dismissed the idea that the overtime loss negatively impacted the confidence of the roster. "No," said Matheson.

Matheson maintained that the team executed multiple positive elements during the game despite the final outcome.

"I still feel like we did a lot of good things," Matheson added.

Canadiens captain Nick Suzuki pointed to issues moving the puck through the middle of the ice as a factor in the defeat.

"I thought we didn't possess it through the neutral zone as well," said Nick Suzuki.

Montreal head coach Martin St. Louis explained that minor mistakes in execution prevented his defensemen from transitioning cleanly into offensive sequences.

"We missed a bit of execution that didn't permit our defencemen to join the wave," added Martin St. Louis.

St. Louis expressed that the overall performance remained a close competition between both rosters. "Our lack of execution kept us from attacking as much," added Martin St. Louis.

St. Louis concluded by highlighting the narrow margins that decide postseason outcomes. "Overall, it was a battle out there.

I thought we competed," said St. Louis. St. Louis noted the thin boundary separating victories from defeats in the playoffs.

"It's a fine line between winning and losing," said St. Louis.

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The best-of-seven playoff series shifts to the Bell Centre in Montreal for Game 3 on Monday.

K
Editors Team
Author: Kenes Jatmika
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