Montreal Canadiens Centennial Season in Review

Matt Eichel by Senior Writer Written on April 23, 2009

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MONTREAL- APRIL 22:  Members of the Montreal Canadiens huddle after being defeated by the Boston Bruins 4-1 after Game Four of the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals of the 2009 Stanley Cup Playoffs at the Bell Centre on April 22, 2009 in Montreal, Quebec,
(Photo by Richard Wolowicz/Getty Images)

It began with so much promise.

On the heels of a first place finish in 2007-08 and the emergence of Carey Price and Alex Kovalev as leaders of the Montreal Canadiens and the arrival of Robert Lang and Alex Tanguay, the 100th season in Habs history proved to be quite the opposite of so many seasons that had come before.

Laying Into the Leafs

TORONTO - OCTOBER 11:  Sergei Kostitsyn #74 and Saku Koivu #11 of the Montreal Canadiens talk during the game against the Toronto Maple Leafs at the Air Canada Centre October 11, 2008 in Toronto, Ontario. (Photo By Dave Sandford/Getty Images)

Starting their Centennial season on the road with a 2-1 shootout loss to the Buffalo Sabres, the Canadiens meet he Toronto Maple Leafs at the Air Canada Centre and prove their potent offense early and often with a convincing 6-1 blowout win.

The Canadiens would go 2-0-1 to start the season on the road.

Something's Bruin

MONTREAL- APRIL 20:  Josh Gorges #26 of the Montreal Canadiens skates with the puck while being forechecked by Mark Recchi #28 of the Boston Bruins during Game Three of the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals of the 2009 Stanley Cup Playoffs at the Bell Cent

After going 8-0 against their rivals from Boston in 2007-2008, the Canadiens start off the season series with a 4-3 shootout win against the Bruins.

However, it would be Montreal's only win against the B's, who would then string off 11 consecutive victories against the Canadiens.

Comeback on the Island

UNIONDALE, NY - NOVEMBER 01: The Montreal Canadiens celebrate a goal against the New York Islanders on November 1, 2008 at Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale, New York. The Canadiens defeated the Isles 5-4. (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images)

After leading 1-0 over two minutes into the game against the New York Islanders, the Canadiens surrendered two goals in the first and then two more in the second to go down 4-1.

Cue the comeback, when, in the third, Tomas Plekanec scored 7:48 into the period, followed by another goal over two minutes later, followed by the tying goal by Christopher Higgins five minutes later, all capped off by Alex Kovalev's game winning goal over a minute later to cap off a tremendous 5-4 comeback victory.

Bruins Maul Helpless Canadiens

MONTREAL - OCTOBER 15:  Mike Komisarek #8 of the Montreal Canadiens and Milan Lucic #17 of the Boston Bruins exchange words during the game at the Bell Centre on October 15, 2008 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.   (Photo by Richard Wolowicz/Getty Images)

In a malestorm of Boston Bruins offense, Milan Lucic drops the glove with Mike Komisarek which not only puts the Canadiens bruising defenseman out for a while, but also electrifies an already electric TD Northbank Gardens crowd.

The Canadiens lost 6-1.

Extra Time Needed

OTTAWA - NOVEMBER 20:  Saku Koivu #11 of the Montreal Canadiens is stopped in his shootout attempt by Alex Auld #31 of the Ottawa Senators during the game on November 20, 2008 at the Scotiabank Place in Ottawa, Canada.  (Photo by Phillip MacCallum/Getty I

In November, the Canadiens went to the shootout five times, losing three of five, including to the top seeded Bruins and the lowest seeded Islanders. The Canadiens would go 7-7 in the shootout and 4-4 in overtime.

The most notorious overtime loss came March 12, when the Canadiens lost to the lowly Islanders again in overtime on a somewhat weak Kyle Okposo wrist shot that fooled Carey Price. The Habs were booed off the ice once again by the Bell Centre faithful.

Capital Injuries

MONTREAL- MARCH 10:  Alex Tanguay #13 of the Montreal Canadiens skates during the game against the Edmonton Oilers at the Bell Centre on March 10, 2009 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.  The Canadiens defeated the Oilers 4-3 in overtime.  (Photo by Richard Wol

Montreal's woes with injuries begin as Alex Tanguay separates his shoulder during a December 30 game in Tampa Bay. Carey Price also goes down to injury pressing backup Jaroslav Halak into service in which he goes 6-3 down the stretch of January.

Later on February 1, Robert Lang severed his achilles tendon ending his season with the Canadiens as their leading goal scorer at the time.

The Canadiens, injured, limped on through the rest of the regular season.

Grabovski Steals the Show

MONTREAL- JANUARY 8:  Guillaume Latendresse #84 and Mike Komisarek #8 of the Montreal Canadiens exchange words with former team mate Mikhail Grabovski #84 of the Toronto Maple Leafs at the Bell Centre on January 08, 2009 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.   (Ph

Once a Hab, Mikhail Grabovski steals the show January 8 with a show on Bell Centre ice during a 6-2 Canadiens win. Having enough of losing that night, Grabovski and former teammate and countryman Sergei Kostitsyn mix it up, try to fight, but are denied.

When Grabovski is denied access to a fight by the linesman, he pushes the linesman away and kicks ice at him. Realizing he's gone for the game, Grabovski skates off the ice and gives a peace sign to the crowd, which many think was him flipping the crowd off.

Both Grabovski and Kostitsyn get 10 minute misconducts while Grabovski is suspended three games for his abuse of the linesman.

Welcome Back Schneidy!

PHILADELPHIA - FEBRUARY 27:  Mathieu Schneider #24 (C) of the Montreal Canadiens is mobbed by teammates Alexei Kovalev #27 and Andrei Markov #79 after scoring the overtime goal against the Philadelphia Flyers on February 27, 2009 at Wachovia Center in Phi

The return of former Canadien Mathieu Schneider is an immediate boost in the arm of the Canadiens powerplay.

Schneider's first game back in a Canadiens uniform since the mid-1990s is a 4-3 shootout loss to the Washington Capitals, though Schneider picks up his first assist in bleu, blanc, et rogue.

Schneider would pick up his first goal back with the Canadiens the next night in Pittsburgh on the powerplay. Schneider would score five goals and add 12 assists for 17 points in 23 regular season games for Montreal, while only amassing 15 points in 44 games previously with Alanta.

The Canadiens powerplay picked up dramatically as all five of Schneider's goals came on the powerplay, including a game winning, overtime goal over the Philadelphia Flyers on February 27.

The Canadiens also picked up Glen Metropolit off waivers to add more depth at the center position.

Nose Dive to the Playoffs

NEW YORK - APRIL 07:  Chris Drury #23 of the New York Rangers celebrates his second period goal against the Montreal Canadiens on April 7, 2009 at Madison Square Garden in New York City.  (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images)

Amidst turmoil that owner George Gillette is selling the team, Vincent Lecavalier is heading to Montreal, the Kostitsyn brothers are part of a drug ring, and the constant injuries plaguing some of the Canadiens, March proves to be the most difficult month for the Canadiens.

The Habs go 5-5-5, losing games and points that they should have won, such as on March 12 against the Islanders. Bright spots include a 4-3 overtime win over the Edmonton Oilers as well as a 3-2 overtime win over the Tampa Bay Lightning in which Saku Koivu provided the winning goals.

Yet, the main focus in on the coaching change. After concluding a western road trip with a 3-1 win in Dallas, Guy Carbonneau is fired as head coach and replaced by general manager Bob Gainey.

The move comes as a surprise to many, since the Canadiens had seemingly come out of the their post-All-Star slump, going 6-3-1 since the arrival of Mathieu Schneider.

Those games included a 3-2 win over the President Trophy winning San Jose Sharks and a 3-0 blanking of the Vancouver Canucks.

However, Gainey takes the reigns and the Canadiens stumble through March and manage to stay in the race to the end.

Leafs Bite Back

TORONTO - MARCH 29:  Andrei Markov #79 of the Montreal Canadiens moves the puck against Jason Blake #55 of the Toronto Maple Leafs during the game at Air Canada Centre on March 29, 2008 in Toronto, Ontario. (Photo by Dave Sandford/Getty Images)

With only four games to go in the season, the Canadiens are hit hard by the Toronto Maple Leafs, despite rolling over their longtime rivals 6-2. Both Mathieu Schneider and Andrei Markov are hurt in the win and are likely gone for the season and playoffs.

However, Schneider makes a miracle comeback, yet is not 100% for the rest of the going as the Canadiens finally stumble their way into the post-season with only one point in their last four games, enough to earn them a ticket to a first round rematch dance with the Boston Bruins.

Round One...Round Done

MONTREAL- APRIL 22:  Alexei Kovalev #27 and Georges Laraque #17 of the Montreal Canadiens shake hands with Stephane Yelle #18 and Zdeno Chara #33 of the Boston Bruins after Game Four of the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals of the 2009 Stanley Cup Playoffs

The Boston Bruins and Montreal Canadiens switched spots in the 2009 Stanley Cup Eastern Conference Quarter-Finals. While the Canadiens were the top dogs in 2008 and Bruins were banged up, the Canadiens could not do what the Bruins had done to them the year before.

The Canadiens had life early in the series until a penalty late in Game 1 by Josh Gorges sealed the Canadiens fate as they rolled over and lost Game 2 5-1, Game 3 4-2, and Game 4 4-1, being outscored by a combined total of 17-6.

Alex Kovalev, Chris Higgins, Yannick Weber, and Andrei Kostitsyn were the only Canadiens able to beat an average Tim Thomas as the Canadiens couldn't compete with the faster, bigger Bruins.

On To The Future

MONTREAL- APRIL 22:  Members of the Montreal Canadiens skate out to Carey Price #31 after being defeated 4-1 by the Boston Bruins after Game Four of the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals of the 2009 Stanley Cup Playoffs at the Bell Centre on April 22, 2009

Despite a first round sweep, the Canadiens may be a entirely different team in 2009-2010, with a long list of free agents, both restricted and unrestricted.

The Centennial season did not go as well as planned but the Canadiens legacy will never dim or die. It is here to stay. Now it is time for the second century of Montreal Canadiens hockey history to begin.

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written on April 23, 2009 Game Recap

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