Canadiens hit new low after blowing late lead to league-worst Red Wings
Ilya Kovalchuk picks up pair of assists as Montreal drops 7th straight
The Detroit Red Wings are the worst team in the NHL. They just happen to be very successful against the Montreal Canadiens.
Filip Zadina scored the tie-breaking goal with 3:52 left in the third period, giving Detroit a 4-3 victory over Montreal on Tuesday night.
"We needed this win against them so bad," Zadina said.
The Red Wings are 3-0 against Montreal this season, but have won just eight of 41 games against the rest of the league.
"Yeah, that hurts," acknowledged Canadiens forward Tomas Tatar, who played in Detroit for seven seasons.
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Montreal coach Claude Julien, meanwhile, refused to answer a question about losing all three games to Detroit.
"I'm just talking about tonight's game," Julien said.
The Red Wings had lost two in a row and 20 of their last 23, giving them the NHL's worst record by a wide margin.
Montreal has dropped seven straight games.
"When you get tired of losing enough, you do something about it," Julien said. "And hopefully, we're there."
Frans Nielsen got his second goal of the game with 8:41 remaining to pull the Red Wings into a 3-all tie. Earlier in the period, Victor Mete was credited with a go-ahead goal that went off Detroit defenceman Filip Hronek's skate.
Artturi Lehkonen had a short-handed goal in the first period off Hronek's turnover and Nick Suzuki scored on a power play in the second to give the Canadiens a two-goal lead they couldn't hold.
Nielsen scored midway through the second and Robby Fabbri's wrist shot from the slot early in the third tied it at 2.
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Detroit goalie Jonathan Bernier made 23 saves. Montreal's Charlie Lindgren stopped 26 shots.
"We're up a goal going into the third and I think everyone in this room thought we were going to finish it off," Lindgren said. "We had a chance to put them away, but they score in the first minute and now it is a hockey game again. It came down to who made the biggest plays down the stretch and they did it."
Lehkonen made the most of one of the many mistakes by the Red Wings midway through the first period. He skated in front of a poorly passed puck from Hronek just inside Montreal's blue line and carried it up the ice to beat Bernier between his pads with a backhand.
Suzuki took advantage of extra time and space on a power play 6:31 into the second and scored to put the Canadiens up 2-0.
The Red Wings, though, rallied for a rare win, and Zadina's fist pump after his go-ahead goal showed how much each game still matters to their players and coaches.
Zadina connected on a one-timer in front off Adam Erne's pass from behind the net.
"He definitely has a shooting mentality," Detroit coach Jeff Blashill said. "I think it's a positive. There's times where he gets in that scoring square that even there's a potential for a pass to be made, but I never, ever talk to him about it because I'm not going to take away that shot-first mentality."
Habs swap AHL forwards with Preds
Prior to the game, the Canadiens acquired forward Laurent Dauphin from the Nashville Predators in exchange for forward Michael McCarron.
Dauphin, 24, has played 33 games this season with the AHL's Milwaukee Admirals, registering 16 points (seven goals, nine assists).
He has three goals and one assist in 35 career NHL regular-season games, all with Arizona, since his debut in 2015-16. The native of Repentigny, Que., has also appeared in 252 career AHL games, posting 55 goals and 78 assists.
Dauphin, who was drafted in the second round by the Coyotes in 2013, played junior hockey with the QMJHL's Chicoutimi Sagueneens.
McCarron has appeared in 69 NHL games with two goals and six assists for the Canadiens from 2015-2018. He has played in 29 games with the AHL's Laval Rocket this season.