Games

Recap
 
Brisebois, Price lift Canadiens past Bruins
MONTREAL 1, BOSTON 0
 

By Mike Petraglia
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

BOSTON (Ticker) -- The National Hockey League's best power play
during the regular season finally showed up Tuesday night.

Defenseman Patrice Brisebois scored with 42 seconds remaining in
the second period and 20-year-old rookie Carey Price stopped
all 27 shots he faced to record his first career postseason
shutout as the Montreal Canadiens skated to a 1-0 triumph over
the Boston Bruins in Game Four of their Eastern Conference
quarterfinal series on Tuesday.

As a result, the Canadiens silenced an electric sellout crowd at
TD Banknorth Garden and took a commanding three-games-to-one
lead in the best-of-seven series, which they can close out when
they host Game Five on Thursday.

"They grind it out," Price said of the Bruins. "I thought we
did a really did good job of playing that style as well. We
have a lot talent in this room, and we have a lot of heart, too.
We battled hard."

"We knew tonight was going to be a hard game," Montreal coach
Guy Carbonneau said. "They challenged us the last two games.
We've kind of responded at times. We knew this game was really
a must. We needed to win tonight to hopefully finish it at
home."

All-Star Tim Thomas made 27 saves on his 34th birthday for
Boston, which snapped a 13-game losing streak to its "Original
Six" rival on Sunday with a 2-1 overtime victory.

After failing on their first two power plays, which put them at
1-for-20 in the series, the Canadiens finally broke through when
Bruins defenseman Andrew Ference was whistled for tripping with
1:48 remaining in the second.

Andrei Kostitsyn controlled the puck behind Thomas and tried a
wraparound shot. The netminder stopped the attempt with his
stick, but the loose puck bounced out to Brisebois, who fired a
slap shot from the top of the left faceoff circle.

The puck sailed through a screen and over Thomas' right shoulder
for the lone goal of the game.

"It was on a power play. Andrei Kostitsyn was behind the net
and tried to do the wraparound," Brisebois said. "The puck came
out right on my blade. It was not a shot to go for a rebound
or deflect it. I saw the hole and I just wanted to put my heart
and my Sherwood on it - and it was a good feeling, to tell you
the truth."

"The puck actually bounced off my stick and went right to him,"
Thomas said. "I saw him winding up and then somewhere in there,
I lost it. Then I heard it hit the crossbar, heard the crowd
cheer, so I thought it went up into the netting and it was out
of play. Then I saw the Montreal (fans) celebrating and
realized it must be in."

The Bruins had numerous chances in the first period but failed
to capitalize.

Just two minutes in, Glen Murray was denied from in close by
Price after a breakdown by Montreal's defensemen at the blue
line.

"We had some point-blankers," Bruins All-Star center Marc Savard
said. "I look at the first shift, (Murray) right in front, he
didn't get good wood on it. We were all around their net, the
rebounds were there and we couldn't seem to get a stick on it.
We've just got to stick with it. We know Price is playing well
and it's going to take a lot more than what we gave tonight."

"That's the playoffs," Price said. "It seems like every goal
counts, every goal matters, and you've got to try and do your
best every game or else it's going to bite you. Sometimes, one
goal is all you need, sometimes one goal against is all they
need. That's just the way it goes."

Midway through the first, rookie David Krejci fed Marco Sturm at
Montreal's blue line while shorthanded for a breakaway. Price
failed in his effort to play the puck, leaving an empty net for
Sturm, whose shot sailed high.

"The bottom line is, when we had a chance to capitalize tonight,
we had some great opportunities, we didn't bury them," Bruins
coach Claude Julien said. "Sometimes it's those little details
that make a big difference."

Less than a minute later, Sturm fed a wide-open Krejci, who
redirected the pass just wide of Price. Rookie Vladimir Sobotka
had the fourth point-blank chance of the first, but again Price
came up big.

"He's in a zone," Carbonneau said of Price. "I know he's a
rookie, a 20-year-old, but he's really strong mentally. He uses
his size really well, and I think right now, he's in that
comfort zone, and it's going to be really tough to get him out
of it."

Price became the first rookie goaltender since Montreal's Steve
Penney to shut out Boston in a playoff game. Penney blanked the
Bruins, 5-0, on April 7, 1984 in an Adams Division semifinal
game.


 
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