4-0 Canes FINAL
Carolina leads series 3-1
Game 4 in Montreal tonight and the Habs fall behind by 3-0 inthe 1st period, then, to make it worse, take no shots in the 3rd period on their home ice. That’s a home‑ice gut punch — the kind that doesn’t just bruise a team, it exposes the wiring underneath. And the wiring tonight is sparking.
Let’s lay it out cleanly, using the live sheet as the clock winds d-d-down.
Montreal didn’t just fall behind 3–0 — they got dismantled in real time
Carolina’s three‑goal avalanche in the first wasn’t a fluke, a bounce, or a bad shift. It was a systematic stripping of Montreal’s structure, and every goal tells you something different about how the Habs unraveled.
- Aho’s power‑play strike at 14:59 — a clean snap shot off Gostisbehere’s feed — punished Montreal’s inability to clear the zone or reset their shape on the kill.
- Staal’s tip at 16:07 — the kind of veteran, net‑front touch that only happens when the defending team is a half‑step late everywhere — made it 2–0 and put the Bell Centre into that stunned, low‑oxygen quiet.
- Stankoven’s snapper at 17:46 — pure tempo, pure hunger — was the dagger. Montreal’s coverage collapsed, and Carolina’s kids smelled blood and took it .
That’s three goals in 2 minutes and 47 seconds. On home ice. In a pivotal Game 4.
And then the real indictment: zero shots in the third
The shot line tells the story without needing adjectives:
- 1st period: CAR 12, MTL 5
- 2nd period: —
- 3rd period: —
- Total: CAR 12, MTL 5
Montreal didn’t just fail to push back — they flatlined. No attempts, no chaos, no desperation. A team down 3–0 in a playoff game at home is supposed to throw pucks from the parking lot if they have to. Instead, the Canadiens played the third like a team waiting for the clock to put them out of their misery.
This is the kind of period that forces a coach to look at his bench and ask who’s actually awake.
What this means for the series
Carolina now leads the series 3–1 after walking into Montreal’s building and dictating every inch of ice from the 15‑minute mark onward. They didn’t just score — they imposed a tempo Montreal couldn’t match, and then they squeezed the life out of the game.
Montreal’s youth has been their engine all spring, but tonight the kids got swallowed by a veteran team that knows exactly how to close its fist.
If the Habs don’t respond in Game 5 with violence, speed, and a willingness to get ugly, this series is going to tilt hard and fast.
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