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🚨Sabres Force Game 7 vs. Habs

Maple Leafs-Canadiens: A Priceless Performance in Montreal

Kevin van SteendelaarFeb 7, 2009

Carey Price was not scheduled to start tonight in Montreal, but a sudden case of the flu from back-up Jaroslav Halak gave coach Guy Carbonneau no choice but to start his struggling No. 1 goaltender.

Price was clearly not prepared for the game and nor were his teammates as the lost 5-2 to their long-time rival Toronto Maple Leafs.

Once Georges Laraque enticed the home crowd early in the first period by delivering a series of left hooks to the Leafs' Brad May, the real game could begin.

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Price did look sharp in the first period, facing 18 Leafs shots while his teammates only managed five against the Leafs' Vesa Toskala.

But the Leafs would manage the lone goal of the period. Their first round pick of 2009, Luke Schenn, scored his first NHL goal, beating a partially screened Price with a wrist shot from the face-off circle that went through Price's legs.

Toskala, recently criticized by both his coach and general manager, knew this was a must win game and played just that.

Facing 15 Canadiens shots in the second period, his only miss was on a Canadiens five-on-three power play when Matt D'Agostini scored at 19:35.

Nikolai Kulemin would put the Leafs ahead again shortly after, catching Price to far in his crease and beating him with a long shot. It was one of only five shots Price faced in he second period.

Jason Blake would beat Price twice in the third period, going glove high on both occasions where he young Canadiens goaltender looked out of position.

Tom Kostopoulus would cash in a rebound for the Canadiens at 11:02 but that was as close as it would get for Montreal.

The Leafs' Jeff Finger would catch Price napping on a face-off with just over a minute remaining to put it well out of reach.

Although the Canadiens defence played poorly in front of him by allowing 41 Leafs shots, the bulk of the attention in the loss turned to Price.

"I can't go like this the whole year. There's no way," Price told the media post-game. "I won't allow it. I'll find a way around it."

"It doesn't fall on one guy, " said defenceman Mike Komisarek, who put it more as a whole team breakdown as opposed to an individual failure. 

"It falls on six defencemen, 12 forwards. It falls on every single guy in this locker room. We still have some time to figure it out and get on the same page."

Coach Carbonneau was a little more critical on his goaltender.

"Where do you want me to start?" he answered in a frustrated tone to a reporter when asked what he didn't like about Price. "He gave five goals."

"Today was not a good defensive game," Carbonneau later added.

"Right now we're struggling on every front. It seems to be (either) not being able to score goals or tough times scoring goals and every time we make mistakes it's in our net."

The Canadiens now head out on a six-game road trip starting Monday in Calgary. It will be a true test for the Habs as they have lost their last five road games.

🚨Sabres Force Game 7 vs. Habs

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