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You’ve Gotta Have Heart

April 14, 2021

By Dan Meagher

On a night when Montreal had a golden opportunity to deal a crushing blow to the team chasing them, they played more like the team on its deathbed. Hosting a Calgary team that played the night before in Toronto and who would be left on life support with a loss, Montreal played like it was an exhibition game after a bachelor party.  Where was the heart?  Aside from Brett Kulak, evidently, sitting in the stands with a cast on his thumb.

In the early going the Habs created several chances on Jacob Markstrom who was starting on back-to-back nights after the Flames dealt David Rittich to the Leafs, perhaps signalling how they feel about their chances.  Three consecutive lost own zone draws (two by Kotkaniemi and one by Suzuki) led to a goal on a point drive by Noah Hanifin to give Calgary a lead.

The trouble with having officials who “let them play” against Calgary is that it’ll inevitably favour the Flames who applied several hooks, holds and elbows that went uncalled. The rough rides were clearly getting to the Habs as the Flames took over the first period. Montreal was a step behind the entire time and hearing footsteps every time they touched the puck.

The first period was a statement by a desperate team. Calgary threw down the gauntlet and if Montreal has the character and drive Marc Bergevin thought he was accumulating, the second period would go a long way to proving it.

Unfortunately, the early signs were not positive as yet another lost draw led to chaos in Montreal’s end and another point man was given way too much room to unload. Mark Giordano blew one straight past Jake Allen to double Calgary’s lead. Montreal’s legs were not moving nearly as much as they needed to be in the first half of this one.

After flailing for most of the period along the periphery, a quick breakout saw Jonathan Drouin hit a breaking Brett Kulak who streaked in on a partial breakaway to beat Markstrom and get the Habs back in it. It was certainly not the pushback period you might expect after a dismal first though. Montreal started the third period with a minute of power-play time against what should be a Flames team that is running on fumes. This feels like a litmus test period for this hockey club.

Brett Kulak came to play. He was alone.

The lack of puck-moving defencemen definitely showed up throughout the game and started to eat up the clock with added own zone time as a result. Stay-at-home defenders are valuable when you have a lead, but not ideal when you need a goal. 

That was never more apparent than a wide-open lead pass by Shea Weber that was four feet in the air and behind his man. After Calgary regained the zone, Weber had the puck on his stick again and passed it directly onto the tape of Josh Leivo who took it to the slot and backhanded it past Allen to put this game away.

A Sean Monahan empty netter made the score as embarrassing as it looked. And like that, Montreal is back in the race for an early summer.

What was good:

Even though it didn’t score, Montreal’s first-period power play gave them some momentum and helped them right a period that was getting ugly.

The first Montreal goal was one of the few times in the last month that a defenceman has joined the rush with authority. Early on this season, that was driving the offence for them.

Maybe it was playing his former team or maybe it was sensing an upcoming threat to his job, but Brett Kulak was one of the only guys who looked like he wanted to win this game.

What was bad:

Early on, all of Montreal’s centers were getting chewed up on faceoffs and it got them completely off their game plan. They have to find a way to be better in that aspect. It has been years of this.

Five games against Calgary will exert a physical toll on Montreal, but it’ll be even worse if they continue to make it obvious how well it works against them.

Halfway through the game Montreal had not generated any slot chances, nor had they had a single shift with two quality shots on goal. The lack of chance generation and net presence is a huge unsolved problem. 

There were several times when a chance was there for the taking if a player had simply put in that extra bit of effort to get to a spot, but the work ethic was lacking all night.

One player who needs to raise the level of his game is Tyler Toffoli who has not done anything that could be construed as energetic in a while.

Paging Nick Suzuki. He has had a rough go of late without making any tangible impression on this one either.

It was disheartening to see Eric Staal come over the boards with the goalie pulled. I know your GM surrendered two picks for him, but at some point, you have to acknowledge he’s your worst forward consistently and do what’s right for the team.

To sum it up:

I’m not going to post a redundant rant about Weber’s struggles or ooze negativity after another loss. All I will do is express disappointment in the effort level yet again from a team that could have made life a lot easier with one single win at home against a tired team.

I’m not sure how big the sample size has to be before we deem this team to just not have the right stuff? There have been far too many games where this team had every reason to come out flying and issue a statement where the only statement they made was “meh.” 

The Canadiens are determined to make every game a grind, which over time becomes a grind for the fans to watch. At some point, they have to want to help themselves. It has been far too long since they have looked like they want to.

About Dan Meagher

View all posts by Dan Meagher

  • Rick Lund says

    April 15, 2021 at 8:27 am

    Well said. Last night’s game was disheartening for fans because the team really looked like it just doesn’t care….no intensity, no heart….this a team that has serious problems. The effort doesn’t match the talent and when that is the case, it’s hard to fix. The playoffs are not a lock. If they continue to play like they have over the last 7 games, they don’t deserve to make the playoffs.

    • Dan Meagher says

      April 15, 2021 at 8:36 am

      That’s the puzzling thing, right? A team with guys like Weber, Price, Petry, Danault, Staal, Perry, etc, looks like they don’t care? It is becoming all too clear that Bergevin miscalculated in how he built this team.

      • Ed Main says

        April 15, 2021 at 9:51 am

        Having experienced success (current or prior) does not mean that you are a leader. Being appointed/anointed as a leader does not then make you someone who can actually lead. The title alone, does not mean that you have the actual tools/skills to successfully lead.

        Professional sports in general, hockey in particular, tend to hoist leadership positions upon individuals whose only real offering is the physical skill that they bring. Sadly, it is often based upon the skill that someone used to exhibit as opposed to the skill that they are currently exhibiting.

        Just as with success, age does not miraculously provide someone with leadership abilities. I have over the eons(!) witnessed people being promoted to leadership/managerial/supervisory positions for reasons having nothing to do with any hint of leadership potential. They did however have the correct degree or went to the correct post-secondary institution or had the better marks or married the correct son/daughter or built the best deck for the boss or brown-nosed/curried favor with the correct person or played golf/old-timer hockey with the boss or or or or . . . oops, sorry, now back to the HABS . . .

        . . . IF the HABS had a leadership group amongst the players that everyone looked up to/listened to because they had more to offer than just what they have previously shown, then perhaps these stinker games would be fewer and further between.

        • Dan Meagher says

          April 15, 2021 at 10:44 am

          Leadership is such an intangible that it’s hard for anyone to get a grasp on what it is, does or looks like in the context on an NHL dressing room. My first real questions about leadership around Montreal were last year with the prolonged slumps. I didn’t want to pin it all on Weber or Price or whomever, but teams with really strong leadership tend not to go into effort tailspins they can’t get out of. They usually come back with fire before it gets out of control. The Habs couldn’t do that.
          This year, it appears Weber is distracted by his fight with age as is Price, so they’re not focused on the rest of the group and the rest of the group sees what’s going on. There is a void there for sure. But the effects of age seem to be what Bergevin miscalculated the most.

      • Dean Gerwing says

        April 15, 2021 at 10:41 am

        I don’t know… They are capable of playing at a high level.. It is just confusing and frustrating when they take nights off (i.e. – last night.).

        For me, the real test is Friday. Do they come out flying, controlling the play, and snuff out the Flames hopes which they opened the door on last night? Or do they really put the heat on themselves with another no-show performance?

        • Dan Meagher says

          April 15, 2021 at 11:00 am

          Bingo. Friday will be an answer to a huge question. If they do come out flying, it won’t mean everything is good. But if they don’t…. oh boy!

  • Donald MacDonald says

    April 15, 2021 at 10:16 am

    Character. Resilience. Heart. Speed. Depth. Veteran savvy. All the things used to describe this team at times this year, yet none were on display last night. Zero. Zilch. Nada. Instead of making the stretch easier on themselves with an honest effort against a mediocre team that should have been tired, the boys laid one of the biggest eggs of the season.

    After that deceptively fast start that fooled a few, this team seems to have reverted back to the consistently inconsistent bunch that teeters around .500 hockey. Been there, done that for years now. Last night was a prime opportunity to prove all the things that Berg has been saying will be different this year. One thing that was not different last night…that was just horrible to watch. Losing when they play inspired, entertaining hockey is one thing. Losing when nobody seems to willing to put in an honest day’s work is another.

    • Dan Meagher says

      April 15, 2021 at 10:49 am

      You hit the nail on the head at the end there. No one minds losing it it’s entertaining. This team does not play entertaining hockey.
      Perhaps most concerning is that they were playing a team last night who was not only tired, but also maligned for being inconsistent and lacking talent. Yet it was that team who showed up in spades and over-ran Montreal. The signs for me are in how confidently teams play Montreal. No one is scared of them or appears to respect them much. All of their opponents come in with a confidence from the puck drop, which, for me, is the biggest flag about the state of the team.

  • David Muhlstock says

    April 15, 2021 at 12:50 pm

    I’m late to this because I shut off the game after Calgary’s third goal, and I needed to forget about the Habs for the night.

    Excellent and accurate game summary and analysis, thank you.

    What I’m left with, after the game, is that the Habs were not beaten by superior skill. (Even though they were outclassed in faceoffs, and Markstrom was excellent).

    What struck me was their surprising slowness – almost passivity – at getting to pucks in their defensive zone. The Flames wanted the puck and leapt for it. I kept shouting advice to no avail. Our Habs looked oddly disconnected. That’s called beating yourself, and I couldn’t watch it anymore.

    I really don’t understand how this can happen. Is this a coaching problem? How can the “team” not have recognized how crucial the game was, and responded with the necessary urgency? I can’t comprehend this.

    • Dan Meagher says

      April 15, 2021 at 1:01 pm

      David, I couldn’t possibly say it better. That is exactly my experience last night – though I couldn’t turn it off as I had to do the article. Everything you stated matches exactly what I saw and experienced. I can’t comprehend that either.

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