Lightning beat Canadiens 1-0 in OT, send series to seventh game: Takeaway

The Tampa Bay Lightning forced their Eastern Conference First Round series into a seventh game with a 1-0 overtime win over the Montreal Canadiens in Game 6 at the Bell Center on Friday night.

The Atlantic Division rivals were held scoreless through more than 69 minutes of action before Gage Goncalves hit a loose puck past Jacob Dobbs for the game’s only goal. Brandon Hagel crossed a checker at the right point and fed Dominic James in the bottom right circle. James threw the puck on net, where Goncalves got a shot at it.

Dobbs got a slice of the shot, but Goncalves got to the loose puck and put it into the net at 9:03 for the win.

The goals came after each goaltender made game-saving stops in OT. Seconds after Lightning star Nikita Kucherov was called for tripping 5:30 into overtime, Tampa Bay’s Andrei Vasilevskiy blocked Game 1 hero Juraj Slafkovsky’s one-timer from the right circle. The Lightning killed off the remaining penalties, and Kucherov almost won it by coming out of the box, getting the puck in the Montreal zone and forcing Dobbs to make a spectacular stop to keep the game scoreless.

Vasilevskiy, who allowed a soft goal in Montreal’s 3–2 win in Game 5 that proved to be the winner, bounced back with a flawless, 30-save effort. Dobbs finished with 32 saves as the teams played their fourth overtime game and sixth one-goal game in the series that has become a classic.

The series returns to Benchmark International Arena in Tampa for Game 7 on Sunday. But playing at home may not be to Bolt’s advantage; The home team has lost four out of six matches in this series.

NHL: Stanley Cup Playoffs-Tampa Bay Lightning at Montreal Canadiens
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To say that the scoreless first period was played at a fast pace would be an understatement. With the Lightning in “win or go home” mode and the Canadiens eager to end the series in front of their home fans, both teams were excited. The Canadiens had 26 hits in the opening 20 minutes; The Lightning, not known as a physical team, had 15.

Cole Caufield, Montreal’s 51-goal scorer during the regular season, almost opened the scoring less than three minutes into the game; He beat Vasilevskiy but hit the post. That happened when Tampa Bay’s Yanni Gourde picked up a foul play from Dobbs and took a shot to the back of the net, but couldn’t connect on the wraparound, causing the puck to slip through the crease.

Vasilevskiy faced tougher chances as the period progressed, robbing Jake Evans from close range twice and denying Ivan Demidov from the right circle on a 2-on-1.

NHL: Stanley Cup Playoffs-Tampa Bay Lightning at Montreal Canadiens
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The Canadiens got their first power play of the game when Jake Guentzel was called for an unnecessary high-sticking penalty with 11 seconds remaining, but nothing was generated.

The pace was a little less frenetic in the second period, but the result was the same – no goals. This was largely due to some late heroics from Vasilevskiy, who lived up to his status as a Vezina Trophy finalist – especially after Charles-Edouard was called for slashing at 16:54. He denied Caufield again from 20 feet, then robbed Demidov from the right circle after a perfect setup and denied him again on the rebound.

The Canadiens continued to control the game after the power play ended and Vasilevskiy kept the game scoreless for 40 minutes on a last-second effort by Philippe Denault.

Montreal controlled the first five minutes of the third period, but the game changed after Montreal defenseman Caden Guhle was called for slashing Guentzel at 5:11 to break up a solo scoring chance. Tampa Bay did not score but applied a lot of pressure and dominated the game for most of the rest of the period.

The Lightning got a late power-play opportunity when Demidov was called for goaltender interference with 3:17 left after fouling Vasilevsky.

Tampa Bay controlled the puck for almost the entire power play, but couldn’t get past Dobbs, who made big saves on Kucherov, Radish and the point, then denied Brandon Hagel’s tip-in attempt shortly after the penalty ended.

Tampa Bay finished regulation with a 28–27 edge in shots on goal and an 81–58 differential in attempts.

Key takeaways after the Lightning survive by defeating the Canadiens 1-0 in Game 6

Vasilevsky stepped forward

NHL: Stanley Cup Playoffs-Tampa Bay Lightning at Montreal Canadiens
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The Lightning were swept in Game 5, but were even at 2–2 before Vasilevskiy was defeated by a blocked shot 99 out of 100. He more than atoned for it in Game 6, earning the 70th playoff win and eighth shutout of his career.

The “Big Cat” was everywhere, leaving Montreal shooters (and team executives) shaking their heads.

“He was excellent tonight,” D’Astas told Scripps Sports. “Because of them we’re going back to Tampa. It was fun to see.”

Hegel said having Vasilevskiy in goal allows him and his teammates to play with more freedom.

“You can go out and play your game and not have to worry about what’s behind you,” he said. “It seemed as if Vasi would never allow another goal.”

Goncalves an unlikely hero

On a team with stars like Kucherov, Vasilevskiy and Hegel, it’s easy to lose sight of players like Goncalves, who is a bottom-six forward and does a lot of attacking work. He was scoreless in the series before getting an assist in Game 5 and had not scored a goal since March 17.

But he missed the game-winner by tipping defenseman Caden Guhle and refused to leave the game after Dobbs blocked his first-time attempt.

“I talked to him before the game about what he needs to do in this game, be where he needs to be,” Cooper said. “It was only fair that such a goal was needed to win. It was a brilliant game by both teams.”

win or go home, take 2

NHL: Stanley Cup Playoffs-Tampa Bay Lightning at Montreal Canadiens
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The Lightning probably could have flown home even without the plane – such is the feeling of a season-saving overtime win. But as Cooper said, “We haven’t won anything yet.”

Both teams have had success in Game 7. The Lightning have won seven of 10, including four of five played at home. This is their first Game 7 since the first round in 2022, when they defeated the Toronto Maple Leafs 2–1.

Montreal is 15-9 in Game 7s, including a 7-6 mark on the road. The Canadiens’ last Game 7 came when they defeated Toronto 3–1 in the second round in 2021. Ironically, Corey Perry scored the game-winning goal – the same Corey Perry who would be trying to help the Lightning end his former team’s season.

Hegel said, “These are the moments you live for.”

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Lightning rally to beat Canadiens 3-2 in Game 4, even series: Takeaway

The Tampa Bay Lightning provided a stern test on Sunday night, coming back from two goals down to defeat the Montreal Canadiens 3-2 at the Bell Center and even their Eastern Conference First Round series at two-up.

Brandon Hagel’s second goal of the game with 4:53 remaining in regulation capped the comeback. Hagel was battling for position in front of Montreal goaltender Jacob Dobbs when Nikita Kucherov fired the puck on net from the right board near the top of the circle.

The shot hit him and hit the net, giving the Lightning their first lead of the night.

Hegel tied the game at 2-2 at 1:40 of the third period, winning inside position in front of the net and converting a cross-crease pass from Kucherov into a power-play goal.

Jake Guentzel’s goal in the final minute of the second period put Tampa Bay on the board, after which Montreal took a 2–0 lead on goals by Zachary Bolduc and Cole Caufield.

Andrei Vasilevskiy made 16 saves for his 69th career playoff win. Dobbs stopped 17 shots.

Teams get two days off before Game 5 at Benchmark International Arena on Wednesday night. The Lightning will try to win consecutive playoff games for the first time since the 2022 Eastern Conference Finals, when they lost the first two games to the New York Rangers before winning the next four.

NHL: Stanley Cup Playoffs-Tampa Bay Lightning at Montreal Canadiens
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The Lightning had an early chance to take the lead when Montreal was called for fouling just 2:04 after an early face-off. They controlled the puck in the offensive zone for most of the two minutes, but Dobbs blocked a rocket from Darren Raddish and Canadiens defenseman Caden Guhle got his stick on Braden Point’s open shot from the slot.

Montreal did not get a shot on goal until Caufield tested Vasilevskiy at 6:20. But after Bolt took consecutive penalties, the Canadiens got six shots in a span of 3:48 – Max Crozier was called for high-sticking at 7:22 and Yanni Gourde was called for cross-checking at 9:10. Vasilevskiy was up to the challenge, blocking a shot by Game 3 hero Lane Hutson and denying Game 1 hero Juraj Slafkowski on a rebound.

The final nine minutes of the period contained hit penalties by the Canadiens (who finished the period with a 23–10 lead), but few testing shots on either goaltender. Montreal finished the period with a 9–6 lead in shots on goal, but the Lightning held them to just three at 5-on-5 and none at all in the final 8:04 of the period.

The first half of the second period was much the same. Tampa Bay did nothing on the early power play after Josh Anderson was sent off for boarding 41 seconds into the period and neither team produced much offense.

But the game changed shortly after intermission when the Canadiens finally opened the scoring.

Bolduc took a pass at the Tampa Bay blue line and cut to the net, with Reddish trying to stop him. As Bolduc approached the net, Vasilevskiy made a poke-check, but it hit the Canadiens forward and bounced into the net at 10:06, giving Montreal a 1–0 lead.

Guentzel took a bad slashing penalty at 12:24 for hitting Dobbs after a save, and the Canadiens took advantage of it at 13:29 thanks to smart play from their top line. Nick Suzuki controlled the puck in the left corner and Caufield, a 51-goal scorer during the regular season, went to the front of the net before deflecting a perfect pass past the helpless Vasilevskiy for the 2-0 lead.

But the Lightning appeared to get a jolt of energy when Crozier, playing his first game of the series, leveled Slafkowski at center ice with a brutal but clean hit just before the 18-minute mark.

Guentzel then responded with a power-play goal to put the Lightning on the board with 54 seconds remaining. With the teams playing 4-on-4, he moved the puck around the net, passed it to JJ Moser at the right point, raced in front of the net and converted a sensational pass by Moser for his first goal of the season, cutting the deficit to 2–1.

The Lightning didn’t produce much on the power play in the first two periods, but they were nearly flawless after Oliver Kapanen was called for high-sticking 51 seconds into the third. Tampa Bay worked the puck around the offensive zone before a Kucherov-to-Hagel combination tied the game.

Kucherov’s play on the winning goal surprised the Canadians. He caught a quick glimpse of Hegel heading to the front of the net and fired the puck on the goal, where he caught a piece of Hegel and headed it into the net for the win.

Key Takeaways After Lightning Even Series By Beating Canadiens 3-2

Hegel continues to score

NHL: Stanley Cup Playoffs-Tampa Bay Lightning at Montreal Canadiens
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Lightning has scored 11 goals in this series. Hegel has six of them, as his pair in the third period evened the best-of-7 series. Needless to say, Hegel leads all NHL players in postseason goals – no one else has more than four.

He also helped the Bolts make some history.

Hagel promoted the 10th multi-goal comeback playoff win in Lightning history, and their fourth on the road. It was his first appearance since defeating the New York Rangers 3–2 in Game 3 of the 2022 Eastern Finals. It was also the fourth consecutive comeback win in this series; Montreal and Tampa Bay are the first set of teams to combine to start a series with four consecutive wins since the St. Louis Blues and Winnipeg Jets played five such games in the 2019 Western Conference First Round.

Crozier’s hit might have changed the series

The Lightning looked like they were headed home in an attempt to avoid a fourth consecutive one-upmanship in the Stanley Cup playoffs when Caufield’s goal gave the Canadiens their first two-goal lead of the series. The Bell Center crowd was roaring, the Canadians were flying and Bolt looked a little surprised.

Then Crozier, who hadn’t played for the Lightning in the postseason since 2024, stepped up — literally.

The 26-year-old, who played 35 games for Tampa Bay this season, finishing with a goal and 10 points, caught Slafkowski near the red line as he received a pass and flattened him with a clean but devastating hit.

The Canadian barked at Crozier but did not attempt to retaliate for the attack, which caused a fire under the lightning. The jolt of energy was palpable, and became more intense after Guentzel’s goal made the score 2–1 less than 90 seconds later.

“He makes a big play and comes back to the bench,” defenseman Ryan McDonagh said on the Scripps Sports postgame show.

the resident comes again

NHL: Stanley Cup Playoffs-Tampa Bay Lightning at Montreal Canadiens
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The Lightning trust Vasilevskiy to deliver when it matters most. he did the same in game 4

The “Big Cat” did not face many shots – Montreal attempted 48 but managed only 18. Following the Lightning playoff loss he improved to 16–0 with 16 saves in his last 16 games.

His biggest stop may have been the one he made on Ivan Demidov over the middle, though Montreal’s star rookie found a dead spot in defensive coverage and was alone in the slot.

This was a game the Lightning had to win – and Vasilevskiy made sure they did.

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Sirens draw even with Sceptres after ‘courageous’ comeback: Takeaway

Newark – The New York Sirens have made a habit of comebacks in the third period. Their latest performance came on Wednesday night at the Prudential Centre, where they came back from down 2-0 to defeat the Toronto Raptors 3-2.

New York scored three times in the final 10:30 – including twice in a span of 1:10 – capped by defender Maja Nylen Persson’s power-play equalizer and rookie Casey O’Brien’s game-winner at 16:03 of the third.

Already without Kristina Kaltunkova, Taylor Girard and Savannah Norcross, all on long-term injured reserve (LTIR), the shorthanded Sirens faced another hurdle on Wednesday. Captain Micah Zandi-Hart watched New York’s home finale from the sidelines after receiving a one-game suspension for an illegal check against Minnesota Frost on Sunday.

Nevertheless, amid a tight race for the PWHL’s final playoff spot, the Sirens prevailed in a hard-fought victory and tied Toronto.

“It was a gutsy win from our group,” Sirens coach Greg Fargo said after the game. “It wasn’t a perfect game, but they found a way. As far as I’m concerned, they deserve those three points.”

Sceptres could move up to fourth with a regulation win, and looked poised to do so midway through the third. Instead, they dropped to sixth in the standings with three games remaining. New York and Toronto are deadlocked on 34 points, although the Sirens own the tiebreaker with more total wins (9-2-3-13).

Thanks to some more heroics late in the game, New York is two points behind the Ottawa Charge, and can move into a playoff position on Saturday with a regulation win at TD Place.

“I think a win gives a lot of energy to the group. It’s something we can build on,” Nylen Persson said after the 3-2 win. “It’s in our hands, and we have to make the most of it.”

Goalie Kayleigh Osborn held on to New York’s third-period lead, stopping 24 of 26 shots — including several highlight-reel saves — for her 10th win of the season.

Osborne weathered some first-period flurries from Toronto, but her best work came in the second period, robbing Trench forward Emma Gentry on the end of a Jaime Bourbonnais interference penalty.

A long point shot from Sceptres defender Kali Flanagan from the left side of the goal went to Gentry, who fired into an open net. But Osborne dived wide of the left post and wide of the paddle to deny the Grade-A chance.

“I just saw she was going to shoot at an open net, so do everything you can at that point to hope the puck doesn’t go in,” Osborn explained. “At that time, it was a diving save and a diving effort, and it worked in my favor.”

Osborne came up big again in the third, separating from Renata Fast.

Fargo praised him after the game, saying, “I thought Kayleigh played a great game. She really held us in the first two periods.” “He did a great job of not only making saves, but controlling the game. Made some key saves on the end of the power play, several breakaways, a paddle save. I mean, without him, we’re not in that fight for very long.”

Toronto scored against Osborn at 14:03 of the second, just 40 seconds into New York’s second power play. Speed ​​snatched the puck from O’Brien and passed it to Daryl Watts, who raced down the ice and clipped the top shelf for the jailbreak goal.

Former Sirens defender Ella Shelton made it 2–0 at 8:51 of the third minute, moments after New York failed to convert another power play, a sharp-angle shot slipping past Osborne. Shelton ended a 19-game goal drought with his first goal since December 23 – the longest of his PWHL career.

Fargo considered a timeout, but held out, and the siren rewarded them 39 seconds later when Denisa Krisova scored her first goal since joining New York via trade on March 30. Krysova cleared a loose puck in the slot and fired a backhander past Sceptres goaltender Regan Kirk at 10:30, prompting an immediate reaction after Shelton’s potentially back-breaking score.

Nylen Person tied the score at 2–2 at 14:53 of the third following a delay-of-game penalty on Kirk, giving New York its fifth power play of the game. A Sirens defender intercepted a long rebound from O’Brien at the right circle and put it back into the net, ending New York’s 0-of-20 power-play drought.

“For me, every time I’m put on the ice, I want to make the most of it,” said Nylen Person, who scored the memorable shootout winner at Madison Square Garden against the Seattle Torrents on April 4.

O’Brien’s winner came at 16:03, when the 2025 No. 3 overall pick deflected a long shot past rookie defender Nicole Valario off a faceoff.

With the two-point outing on Wednesday, O’Brien became the second rookie in PWHL history to reach 20 points, joining linemate Sarah Fillier, who posted 29 points (13 goals, 16 assists) en route to Rookie of the Year honors last season. O’Brien’s 21 points (seven goals, 14 assists) matched Fillier for the team lead and tied for seventh leaguewide.

Sceptres coach Troy Ryan lamented his team’s third-round collapse.

Ryan said after the game, “I think we felt it in the room. It’s tough to lose.” “Just uncharacteristic decisions. You’re not going to win by making decisions like that at this time of year.”

The Sirens scored three unanswered goals for the second consecutive game at the Prudential Center, before a weekend-record crowd of 6,237 in the final home game of the regular season. The Prudential Center in New York averaged 4,015 fans this season, a 45 percent increase from 2024-25.

Key takeaways after Siren’s full comeback in decisive game against Toronto

The New York Sirens raise their sticks to salute the fans at the Prudential Center after a 3–2 comeback win against the Toronto Raptors.
Courtesy of PWHL

Sirens maintain control of playoff destiny

With games at a premium, New York could not afford to leave the Prudential Center empty-handed against Toronto. The comeback win gives the Sirens control over their playoff destiny, but it also greatly impacts their next two games.

The Sirens will visit Ottawa on Saturday and Toronto next Tuesday before concluding the 2025-26 season in Boston against the Fleet on April 25. Regulation wins against the Charge and Scepters would be good for New York’s playoff hopes, but that’s easier said than done. The Sirens have not won three consecutive games since January 6.

If they are to overtake Ottawa and Toronto for the final playoff spot, the Sirens will need two more strong performances from Osborne, who entered the game with a 1–5–0 record and an .874 save percentage over his last six games.

“Personally, I don’t look at stats,” Osborne said after the game. “I don’t think it tells the whole story of any goaltender on any team. I don’t think it’s really a factor.”

Osborn didn’t play like a goalie burdened by her second-half struggles on Wednesday, but she’ll have to beat two red-hot goalies in Kirk and Ottawa’s Gwyneth Phillips. Even in the loss, Kirk blanked New York in the first 50:30 before allowing three tough goals in their first loss since March 8.

Ryan explained, “That’s how goals are scored – directing them to the net, getting the body there, getting the stick on it.” “I don’t think it’s some of the things we did poorly. I think [the Sirens] Deserves some credit for the actual completion of the goal.”

Points will again be important in New York’s final meeting with the Charge on Saturday, especially with Ottawa holding a double-digit lead in the fourth. If Phillips’ 42-save shutout against Toronto last Saturday was any indication, those points won’t come easy.

Sirens showed ‘great resilience’ amid Zandi-Hart suspension

New York Sirens defender Maja Nylen Persson raises her stick for a poke check against Toronto Sceptres forward Clara Van Wieren.
Maja Nylen Persson and Clara Van Wieren – Courtesy of PWHL

There’s never an ideal time for your captain to miss a game, but Wednesday’s game against Toronto was about as unfair as it gets.

“We had to work really hard for this game tonight,” Fargo said. “The guys fought hard. The way our D-core stepped up and played – I think we showed a lot of resiliency tonight.”

Zandy-Hart’s one-game suspension snapped his streak of 75 consecutive games played – dating back to January 20, 2024 – and left New York with only six active defensemen against the Cubs. Fargo deployed primarily a five-defender rotation, as rookie Delle Ross logged just 3:36 in an extremely limited role on Wednesday.

Alison Simpson, Lauren Bernard, and Bourbonnais all moved into the top pairing with Nylen Person, a spot usually filled by Zandi-Hart.

“Such a good player and our captain,” Nylen Person said of Zandi-Hart. “But other players have to step up and get bigger roles, and I think everyone did a great job of that today. That’s what we need in this situation. I’m proud of our D-core.”

The Sirens’ blue line will be back at full strength Saturday against Ottawa, where Fargo believes Wednesday’s resiliency can lead to another strong effort.

“Getting Micah back and keeping that momentum going, I think it’s something we can build on.”

Sirens still need more from power play: ‘It has to be better’

New York Sirens rookie forward Casey O'Brien fights for the puck against the Toronto Raptors.
Casey O’Brien – Courtesy of the PWHL

New York’s power play came at a crucial time, when Nylen Person scored the equalizer with a laser from the right point. Still, that doesn’t erase all the upside from another long slide.

Fargo candidly admitted, “It was a source of frustration.” “As we know, it’s not clicking.”

At one point Wednesday, in a desperate search for a new look on the netfront, Fargo turned to 5-foot-11 rookie forward Kira Judikis — who was making her PWHL debut. It failed to deliver, and if the offensive stoppage wasn’t bad enough, New York’s top unit handed Watts a momentum-changing jailbreak goal.

The Sirens made the most of their fifth and final power play, thanks to the aggressive puck pursuit of Nylen Person, giving Fargo hopes of giving a boost to a sagging group.

“The goal we had tonight, the way it happened — just the significance of it and the timing of it — you hope something like this can carry it forward,” Fargo said. “We know our power play – if we’re going to push here – it better be. But I think scoring that goal at a key moment in our season, hopefully, can be something we can build on in these last three games.”

With their two top goal scorers in Kaltunkova and Girard sidelined, the Sirens cannot afford to miss golden scoring opportunities. They also can’t count on getting five power plays every game.

No deadline for Kaltunkova’s return

New York Sirens forward Kristina Kaltunkova picks up the puck against Minnesota Frost.
Kristina Kaltounkova – Courtesy of PWHL

Kaltunkova became eligible to be activated from LTIR on Tuesday, but there is no sign the New York novice event is close to a return.

Fargo declined to give a timeline for Kaltunkova’s injury after the game, and the 2025 No. 1 overall pick has not resumed skating after being on the shelf with a lower-body injury.

The Czech native made a name for himself in the PWHL by scoring a league-leading 11 goals before the Olympic break. His scoring touch was greatly missed, especially after the side ruled Girard out for the remainder of the 2025–26 season with a knee injury.

It is highly unlikely that Kaltunkova will return before New York’s regular season finale against Boston on April 25, and her status for a potential postseason run is in question.

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