Montreal 4,
Pittsburgh 5
Malkin, Pens top Habs in shootout for fifth straight win
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| Game Information |
| Arena: Mellon Arena Location: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania |
| Referees: DonKoharski Linesmen: DonHenderson, ThorNelson |
| Attendance: 17,132 (101.0% full) |
| Team Stat Comparison | |||||||
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||||||
| 239 | Goals |
267 | |||||
| 251 | Goals Against |
240 | |||||
| 86 | Power Play Goals |
94 | |||||
| 69 | Power Play Goals Allowed |
75 | |||||
| 17 | Shorthanded Goals |
14 | |||||
| 6 | Shorthanded Goals Allowed |
13 | |||||
| 1133 | Penalty Minutes |
1249 | |||||
| 14 | Average Penalty Minutes |
15 | |||||
| Scoring Summary | ||||
| 1ST PERIOD | MON | PIT | ||
| 18:19 | ![]() |
Evgeni Malkin
(Power Play) Assists: Sergei Gonchar, Sidney Crosby |
0 | 1 |
| 2ND PERIOD | MON | PIT | ||
| 8:40 | ![]() |
Sergei Gonchar
(Power Play) Assists: Evgeni Malkin, Sidney Crosby |
0 | 2 |
| 10:35 | ![]() |
Radek Bonk
(Shorthanded) Unassisted |
1 | 2 |
| 11:38 | ![]() |
Sergei Gonchar
(Power Play) Assists: Sidney Crosby, Ryan Whitney |
1 | 3 |
| 17:13 | ![]() |
Radek Bonk
Assists: Sergei Samsonov, Mike Johnson |
2 | 3 |
| 3RD PERIOD | MON | PIT | ||
| 9:09 | ![]() |
Erik Christensen
Assists: Maxime Talbot, Colby Armstrong |
2 | 4 |
| 14:29 | ![]() |
Mike Johnson
(Shorthanded) Assists: Craig Rivet |
3 | 4 |
| 17:31 | ![]() |
Mathieu Dandenault
Assists: Mark Streit, Sergei Samsonov |
4 | 4 |
| OT | MON | PIT | ||
| No scoring this period | 4 | 4 | ||
| Shootout Summary | ||||
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Erik Christensen shootout attempt against David Aebischer with a Wristshot results in a GOAL. | |||
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Alexei Kovalev shootout attempt against Marc-Andre Fleury with a Wristshot results in a GOAL. | |||
![]() |
Christopher Higgins shootout attempt against Marc-Andre Fleury with a Wristshot results in a SAVE. | |||
![]() |
Tomas Plekanec shootout attempt against Marc-Andre Fleury with a Wristshot results in a SAVE. | |||
![]() |
Evgeni Malkin shootout attempt against David Aebischer with a Wristshot results in a GOAL. | |||
![]() |
Sidney Crosby shootout attempt against David Aebischer with a Wide of Net results in a MISS. | |||
PITTSBURGH -- The Pittsburgh Penguins were introduced to playoff-style hockey by the Montreal Canadiens. The youthful Penguins like the way they responded against an opponent that looked to be trying to intimidate them from the start.
Evgeni Malkin, who scored his 25th goal of the season Thursday, is the ninth Penguins rookie to score as many as 25 goals in a season, joining such luminaries as Sidney Crosby (39 last season), Jaromir Jagr (27 in 1990-91) and Mario Lemieux (43 in 1984-85). Since Pittsburgh joined the NHL for the 1967-68 season, the only other NHL teams that have had nine different rookies score 25-plus goals in a season are the Rangers (13) and Red Wings (nine). Story
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The Penguins squandered a two-goal lead late in the third period, but Evgeni Malkin won the shootout by deftly faking out David Aebischer with an inside-out move as Pittsburgh beat Montreal 5-4 on Thursday night for its fifth consecutive victory.
Erik Christensen also put the puck past Aebischer as the Penguins won their second shootout in a row -- they beat Dallas 4-3 on Friday -- after losing five of their first six. Montreal dropped its fifth in nine shootouts as Marc-Andre Fleury stopped the final two Canadiens shooters, Chris Higgins and Tomas Plekanec, after Alexei Kovalev had matched Christensen's score. Fleury made 40 saves in regulation and is 9-1-2 in his last 12 starts.
"I've never seen the [Eastern Conference] playoff race so close, five or six teams are so close, and it was a playoff atmosphere," said Sergei Gonchar, who scored twice on the power play and had another slap shot deflected in by Malkin. "You could see their intensity was there. But we're playing with more confidence."
The Canadiens trailed 4-2 after Gonchar scored twice during a rare seven-minute Pittsburgh power play in the second period. But Montreal tied it on goals by Mike Johnson and Mathieu Dandenault in the final 5½ minutes of the third, with Johnson's shot deflecting in off Gonchar and Dandenault's shot bouncing in off defenseman Rob Scuderi's skate.
"Those were tough bounces to take, but we stuck with it and got the two points," Penguins forward Sidney Crosby said.
Crosby, drilled in the midsection by Maxim Lapierre immediately after the opening faceoff to set the tone for a physical and feisty game, assisted on each of the Penguins' first three goals. Crosby became the first player to break the 80-point mark this season with 82, including 25 goals.
Montreal tried to establish its toughness from the start. But the Canadiens' aggressiveness cost them when Sheldon Souray was ejected for jumping on Colby Armstrong, punching him several times and slamming him to the ice after Armstrong leveled Saku Koivu behind the Montreal net.
"You expect teams to be intense, and they had that [checking] line out there to start the game and wanted to set a tone early," Crosby said. "That's part of playing in the second half of the season. Teams want to win hockey games and we're more than willing to play and do whatever we have to do to win games, too."
Souray was given a five-minute fighting major and a two-minute instigating penalty and, about midway into the extended penalty time, Montreal went down two men when Radek Bonk was called for interference.
"The penalties killed us," Montreal coach Guy Carbonneau said. "I understand the seven minutes but I just don't understand why Armstrong didn't get anything. I still think he was charging [Koivu] and then he drops his gloves. Armstrong knew what he was doing and dropped his gloves and didn't get anything."
Still, Carbonneau took Souray's side by saying, "Saku is our best player and if somebody does something like that to him, I have no problem with someone playing that way."
"I've never seen it called like that at all, it seemed to be one-sided," Souray said.
Bonk returned during the lengthy power play to score a shorthanded goal, but Pittsburgh was already up 2-0 following Malkin's 25th goal and Gonchar's slap-shot goal as Jordan Staal screened Aebischer during a two-man advantage. Gonchar scored his second of the game and ninth of the season, on another slap shot from the high slot, with 15 seconds left in the Souray-caused power play.
"We're moving the puck well and I had a chance to shoot it," Gonchar said. "There was good traffic in front and the puck is finding the net."
Bonk scored again, his eighth, late in the second, but Christensen answered with his 10th of the season to make it 4-2 midway through the third.
Game notes
Montreal led 44-33 in shots, 7-0 in overtime when Pittsburgh was shorthanded for the final 1:40 after Gonchar was called for holding. ... Montreal leads the NHL with 15 shorthanded goals. ... Crosby has more assists (57) than any Penguins player has points. Crosby has an eight-game scoring streak (four goals, 13 assists). ... Penguins forward Mark Recchi turned 39 on Thursday. ... Aebischer made his second successive start, the first time he's done so since Nov. 7-11.
NHL Scores
Thursday, February 1st
| Buffalo | 3 | Final |
| Boston | 1 |
| Tampa Bay | 4 | Final |
| Carolina | 0 |
| New Jersey | 6 | Final |
| Philadelphia | 5 | OT |
| NY Islanders | 5 | Final |
| Atlanta | 2 |
| Montreal | 4 | Final |
| Pittsburgh | 5 | SO |
| Washington | 3 | Final |
| Florida | 6 |
| Minnesota | 5 | Final |
| Colorado | 3 |
| Nashville | 2 | Final |
| Phoenix | 3 |
| Edmonton | 3 | Final |
| Vancouver | 5 |
| Chicago | 3 | Final |
| Los Angeles | 2 | OT |
| Dallas | 4 | Final |
| San Jose | 2 |



Evgeni Malkin, who scored his 25th goal of the season Thursday, is the ninth Penguins rookie to score as many as 25 goals in a season, joining such luminaries as Sidney Crosby (39 last season), Jaromir Jagr (27 in 1990-91) and Mario Lemieux (43 in 1984-85). Since Pittsburgh joined the NHL for the 1967-68 season, the only other NHL teams that have had nine different rookies score 25-plus goals in a season are the Rangers (13) and Red Wings (nine).