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lundi 14 octobre 2013
Habs : Gionta will be in lineup against Jets; Brière demoted to fourth line
Source : Hockeyinsideout
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Captain Brian Gionta will be back in the lineup when the Canadiens face the Jets Tuesday night in Winnipeg (8 p.m., TSN-HABS, RDS, TSN Radio 690) while Daniel Brière will be demoted to the fourth line with Michael Bournival at centre and Travis Moen.
Ryan White will be the odd man out with Gionta returning to the lineup.
Gionta, who left the team last week for a family reasons and missed Saturday’s game in Vancouver,
will play on a line with Lars Eller and Max Pacioretty. Gionta said his young son, who had been ill, is doing much better. The team gave the captain the option of staying home, but Therrien said Gionta wanted to play and he flew out of Montreal on Sunday and practised with the team Monday in Winnipeg.
”It puts things in perspective,” Gionta, who will play his 700th career game Tuesday, told reporters in Winnipeg. “It’s family first. But it will be good to get back on the ice.”
P.K. Subban will continue to play with Andrei Markov on the No. 1 defence pair and Carey Price will start in goal against the Jets.
In his first five games with the Canadiens after signing a two-year, $8-million free-agent contract during the offseason, Brière has one assist and 11 shots on goal and is even in the plus/minus stats.
“We reflected on it for a long time before we made this decision,” coach Michel Therrien told reporters about the decision to demote Brière. “The reason is purely because of a lack of production. I’m convinced Daniel understands the move. But I believe strongly in using all four lines. That’s how we’ll start tomorrow, but things can change quickly, even in the middle of the game. It all depends on how guys are performing.”
Said Brière: “It’s not the end of the world. The team is doing well and that’s what matters. For sure, personally, it’s not the best. I’d like to be producing more than I have. But I’ve always been the type of guy who gets going a bit later offensively. I’m looking forward to that happening, but there’s no drama here. I’m not worried about it.”
Here’s how the lines and defence pairings looked at practice:
Pacioretty-Eller-Gionta
Galchenyuk-Plekanec-Gallagher
Prust-Desharnais-Bourque
Moen-Bournival-White/Briere
Gorges-Diaz
Markov-Subban
Bouillon-Tinordi/Beaulieu
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lundi 23 septembre 2013
Habs : Brian Gionta wears the ‘C’ with class
Source : Montrealgazette
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It was hockey night, 40 minutes before Saturday’s faceoff between the Canadiens and visiting Carolina Hurricanes, and Brian Gionta was woefully out of uniform — even in a stylish navy suit.
He would much rather have been a short walk away in the Bell Centre, behind the sliding steel doors of the Canadiens dressing room, pulling on his No. 21 jersey for his team’s preseason game.
This could happen as early as this week, the Habs captain hoping to be cleared for action Wednesday or Thursday following biceps tendon surgery four months ago and extensive rehabilitation through the summer.
But now, Gionta was sitting to talk in the arena’s ice-level alumni lounge, beneath many portraits of Canadiens legends. In a half-hour, he would step out to centre ice and accept the Jean Béliveau Trophy from the award’s iconic namesake.
“It’s a huge honour,” Gionta said of the annual team prize recognizing charity and community work, a $25,000 donation from the Montreal Canadiens Children’s Foundation going to a charity he will choose.
“Mr. Béliveau is just a huge key to this organization and to the history of this team. He’s such a great ambassador, so well respected. To be awarded something with his name on it …,” Gionta said, his unfinished sentence speaking as loudly as any words he might have spoken.
The 34-year-old native of Rochester, N.Y., is a professional athlete who gets it — that is, who understands that the pedestal on which he’s placed comes with special, even profound responsibility.
Not that the Canadiens captaincy to which Gionta was named three Septembers ago, intensifying the spotlight, has changed the path he walks through life.
With his wife, Harvest, Gionta uses his fame in many charitable ways, the smile he can put on a gravely sick child’s face worth every bit as much as the funds he helps raise with involvement in a wide variety of projects.
This work is nothing new. Since Gionta signed his first pro contract with the Devils in 2001, the couple have been involved with charities in their hometown and in New Jersey.
Since his 2009 arrival in this city, Gionta has sponsored a Bell Centre loge for the use of the Canadiens Children’s Foundation, which every home game hosts ill and underprivileged children and their families, spoiling them for a few hours to chase away their dark clouds.
The captain and his wife are involved in many of the foundation’s initiatives, as they were with other projects before they landed in Montreal.
As she did in New Jersey, Harvest continues to organize wintertime clothing donations for needy families, “finding little things,” Gionta said, “that make a big difference.”
“The foundation here is great,” he added. “They help facilitate a lot of things so you don’t have to go out on your own. Harvest is involved in all the charities the foundation does, and then there are plenty of other things we get involved with. You help out whatever way you can.”
The vast majority of what Gionta and his wife do — and other Canadiens players and their wives and girlfriends — is off the public radar. Annual holiday-season children’s hospital visits draw much media attention, but they aren’t even the iceberg’s tip.
“You know so many people, you have so many friends who have friends and you find out about certain things,” Gionta said. “You try to accommodate whatever you can. You pick and choose what you feel very strongly about, where you put the main part of your efforts. It’s very hard to say no when it’s a special situation.”
To be in the Canadiens dressing room an hour after a game, long after the cameras and notebooks have left, is to see the deep impact players have on many lives.
Foundation executive director Geneviève Paquette will usher in a youngster and their family, a favourite player awaiting star-struck child with an autograph, a photo, a comforting word, often a priceless souvenir.
Some of these children are on the road to recovery. But others have weeks or less to live. Gionta, the father of three healthy, young children, feels a crowbar dug into his chest with every such visit.
“It’s very tough to deal with some of the situations,” he admitted. “It’s hard to feel that you have any significance to a sick kid. One came by last week, soon going in for a huge operation. You meet him after the game, take him on a tour, take some pictures, spend some time with him and his family. He was terminally ill, just a young kid. It’s very touching, very hard to deal with.
“The hospital visits every year are a tug both ways. You come home and appreciate the health you’ve been afforded, but at the same time you see what all these other families are going through and how blessed you are that you’re not going through that.”
Gionta paused, emotion welling up in him.
“You feel so much for them. You’re a parent. You can’t imagine what they’re going through, but it still gets you thinking about it.”
Now, he says, with three children, he and Harvest can be role models at home with their daily deeds, which he believes carries more weight than merely talking about what’s right.
“It’s the little gestures, like holding a door for an elderly lady who’s coming into a store, that your kids see,” Gionta said. “You can say all you want, but unless you’re doing things, acting a certain way …
“You can say, ‘Be a part of your community and help unfortunate kids.’ But it’s much more powerful when you bring your kids to pick out Christmas gifts for the less fortunate or the families you sponsor, and they help with the wrapping.”
Gionta’s name is on the 2002-03 Stanley Cup for a championship he won with New Jersey, a reflection of his hockey talent. That his name is now engraved on the Jean Béliveau Trophy speaks to the values he holds dear, qualities that enrich the lives of more Montrealers than he’ll know.
“For a long time, I’ve been very fortunate for the position I’ve been put in and the life I’ve been afforded,” he said. “I’m playing a game I dreamed of playing and I’m very well compensated for it.
“What makes Montreal so special is that you’re a public figure. You’re noticed. And you’re able to use that status in a good way. You can give something back.”
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jeudi 19 septembre 2013
Canadiens : Un honneur pour Gionta
Source : RDS
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Brian Gionta est le récipiendaire du trophée Jean-Béliveau pour la saison 2012-2013, à titre de joueur du Canadien de Montréal s'étant distingué pour son implication au sein de la communauté et son dévouement à la cause des enfants.
Le capitaine du Tricolore sera honoré lors d'une cérémonie précédant le match entre les Hurricanes de la Caroline et le Canadien au Centre Bell, samedi. Jean Béliveau lui remettra le trophée portant son nom.
Depuis l'arrivée de Gionta à Montréal en 2009, sa conjointe Harvest et lui ont permis à plus d'un millier de jeunes patients d'assister aux matchs de l'équipe au Centre Bell dans une loge, dont certains ont pu visiter le vestiaire de l'équipe. La saison dernière, le capitaine a participé à des oeuvres caritatives telles que l'Opération Père Noël, un souper bénéfice chez Moishes au profit de The Gazette Christmas Fund, une levée de fonds pour le groupe Alzheimer, une visite à l'Hôpital de Montréal pour enfants durant la période des Fêtes et la réalisation d'un repas pour les familles au Manoir Ronald McDonald avec certains coéquipiers et leurs conjointes.
Gionta a aussi peint un canevas sur lequel il a transcrit une phrase inspirante de Nelson Mandela. L'oeuvre a été mise à l'encan dans le cadre d'une soirée de collecte de fonds qui a permis d'amasser 50 000 $.
Outre le trophée Jean-Béliveau, Gionta recevra un don de 25 000 $ qu'il remettra à l'organisme de son choix.
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mercredi 18 septembre 2013
Canadien : Gionta sur la bonne voie
Source : Tvasports
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Bonne nouvelle pour le Canadien de Montréal : Brian Gionta s’est
présenté à l’entraînement des siens sans le chandail réservé aux blessés
mercredi.
Sera-t-il de retour pour le début de la saison? C’est très certainement ce que l’état-major du Tricolore souhaite.
Pour l’instant, il s’entraîne avec ses coéquipiers. Et c’est avec Michaël Bournival et Martin St-Pierre qu’il a été jumelé lors de l'entraînement matinal.
Autre bonne nouvelle, Alexei Emelin a lui aussi sauté sur la patinoire, dans son cas, en solitaire. Il s’agissait seulement de la deuxième fois qu’il patinait depuis son opération.
Mais petite ombre au tableau, Douglas Murray brillait par son absence en raison d’une blessure au bas du corps.
Pour sa part, George Parros, blessé à une épaule, portait toujours le chandail bleu marin de non-contact.
Formation à l’entraînement
Trios d’attaquants :
Bourque-Plekanec-Prust
Brière-Desharnais-Pacioretty
Galchenyuk-Eller-Gallagher
Moen-White-Blunden
Bournival-St-Pierre-Gionta
Duos de défenseurs :
Markov-Diaz
Subban-Gorges
Tinordi-Bouillon
Drewiske-Pateryn
Sera-t-il de retour pour le début de la saison? C’est très certainement ce que l’état-major du Tricolore souhaite.
Pour l’instant, il s’entraîne avec ses coéquipiers. Et c’est avec Michaël Bournival et Martin St-Pierre qu’il a été jumelé lors de l'entraînement matinal.
Autre bonne nouvelle, Alexei Emelin a lui aussi sauté sur la patinoire, dans son cas, en solitaire. Il s’agissait seulement de la deuxième fois qu’il patinait depuis son opération.
Mais petite ombre au tableau, Douglas Murray brillait par son absence en raison d’une blessure au bas du corps.
Pour sa part, George Parros, blessé à une épaule, portait toujours le chandail bleu marin de non-contact.
Formation à l’entraînement
Trios d’attaquants :
Bourque-Plekanec-Prust
Brière-Desharnais-Pacioretty
Galchenyuk-Eller-Gallagher
Moen-White-Blunden
Bournival-St-Pierre-Gionta
Duos de défenseurs :
Markov-Diaz
Subban-Gorges
Tinordi-Bouillon
Drewiske-Pateryn
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mercredi 26 juin 2013
Habs : Déjà vu
Source : canadiens.nhl.com
The way Brian Gionta’s 2012-13 campaign finished was all too familiar for the Habs captain.
He knew exactly what was wrong as soon as he heard the pop. After spending the final four months of 2011-12 recovering from season-ending surgery to repair a torn biceps tendon in his right arm, Gionta didn’t need to wait for the doctor to give him the diagnosis when he felt a similar snap in his left arm this May.
“I knew right away. It was just a fluke play in the neutral zone. My arm got caught behind me with a guy and it got twisted the wrong way,” explained the 34-year-old, who injured his left biceps tendon in Game 1 against the Senators this spring. “It’s discouraging. The fact that not too many people have had it and it happened to me in back-to-back years is definitely hard to deal with. We’re hopeful [I’ll be back] for the start of camp next season. It’s a long road but I’ve been there and I’ve done it, so I obviously know what’s ahead.”
The silver lining in Gionta’s experience level when it comes to recovering from biceps surgery is he already knows how to bounce back stronger than ever. Coming off the longest injury of his career last year, the Rochester, NY native was one of just six Canadiens players to suit up for all 48 games in the truncated season. The 11-year NHL veteran also finished tied for second on the team with 14 goals, including three game winners, and improved from a minus-7 differential in 2011-12 to a plus-3 in 2012-13.
“The earlier they do [the surgery], the easier it is because if you wait too long with the muscle all balled up, it starts to build scar tissue and attach itself up there,” described Gionta of the procedure he’s since learned inside-out. “Basically once it was pain-free and the tendon had stretched back, it was mid-summer [last year] when I got really comfortable pushing it and not being worried. When I put on an elbow pad last year after about three months, I could feel it but I don’t even question it at all anymore. I’m hoping this one is the same.”
Entering the final year of his five-year deal with the Canadiens, the captain is planning on arriving for camp in September with a pair of healthy arms and a big chip on his shoulder. Having experienced everything from the team’s Centennial celebrations in 2009 and an incredible run to the Eastern Conference finals in 2010 to a disappointing last-place finish in 2012 followed by a complete overhaul behind the bench and in the front office that summer, Gionta is ready to lead the Habs to another place the 2003 Stanley Cup champ is familiar with: the top.
“I believe whole-heartedly in this team and what we can do. Those guys battled hard all year,” explained Gionta, whose team skyrocketed to second in the East just one year after their 15th-place finish. “What I’m most proud of is how we bounced back from games. When we had a tough loss or a subpar effort, it didn’t last long. Earlier in the year, when we had three games where we couldn’t get a win and we weren’t playing our best hockey, we continued to stick with it and continued believing in ourselves. That showed a lot of character in this room and that’s what it takes to win.”
jeudi 30 mai 2013
Habs : Gionta still leading by example
Source : Montrealgazette.com
Brian Gionta will turn the corner into his fifth season with the Canadiens this September, and he knows no better than the rest of us whether he’ll be in Montreal for a sixth.
“How I’ve always dealt with it, including the last years of my deal in New Jersey, is I just go out and play,” Gionta said this week at the Habs’ Brossard training facility for a daily session of biceps tendon surgery rehab treatment.
“I don’t worry about it, I let my agent take care of it. That’s just my personality. I’m not the guy who’s going to get caught up in stuff and worry about it. Things work out for a reason. They happen the way they’re supposed to.”
Of any contact to this point with Canadiens general manager Marc Bergevin:
“No, there’s been none,” Gionta replied, not that there’s anything whatsoever revealing about that.
Gionta, 34, signed with Montreal on July 1, 2009, his five-year, $25-million contract bringing him to town as part of the free-agent armada that docked in then-GM Bob Gainey’s massive Habs retooling.
Gionta was named the club’s 28th captain on Sept. 29, 2010, the position having historically sat fallow for a season as team management and head coach Jacques Martin had the dressing room led by committee through 2009-10.
Two hundred and 22 games played with the Canadiens since his arrival, an even 250 counting the postseason, Gionta well knows the business of hockey.
He’s worn just two NHL jerseys — that of New Jersey for 473 games, beginning as a 23-year-old rookie in 2001-02, and then the Canadiens. It was with the Devils in his sophomore season that he won his Stanley Cup.
For 170 games with Montreal, regular-season and playoffs, Gionta has been captain both by the letter on his jersey and his actions on the ice, where he has played much taller and heavier than his advertised 5-foot-7, 175 pounds.
“I don’t think things will change too much,” Gionta told a media crowd upon being introduced as captain. “I’m a leader by example on the ice. There’s a good group of core guys on this team who can do a majority of the leading. That’s still going to be the case.”
Much of that core has changed in the nearly three years since Gionta spoke those words. But veterans who departed for elsewhere have been replaced. And Gionta still leads by example.
“I love the captaincy. I’m very honoured to have it and I try to do what I can,” he said this week. “I try to leave everything on the ice every night.
“I’m not a ‘show’ person. I don’t have to prove things. I don’t do things to say, ‘Hey, this is why I’m doing it.’ I am who I am. I don’t need to go down the bench and whisper in someone’s ear to prove it to a camera. I play and that’s it.”
Gionta has ridden the roller coaster that is hockey in Montreal. He went three rounds deep into the 2009-10 playoffs; lost a seven-game, overtime-decided series the following year to Boston, the eventual Cup champion; endured the 2010-11 disaster of dented bodies and dysfunction; then was part of the remarkable turnaround of this season, which ended on a personal low when he tore a biceps tendon in the first postseason game against Ottawa.
If Gionta is surprised by the dramatic about-face of this season, following the world’s longest funeral of 2010-11, he’s not letting on.
“It started when Mr. Molson made changes,” he said of owner Geoff Molson’s bold hiring of Bergevin as GM last summer. “(Molson) made decisions that I’m sure are really tough in the business. He put people in place who were great, and it trickled down from management.
“Marc has been great right from the start. He has a player’s perspective, he played the game for a long time. He understands what guys you need in the room.
“Michel was great,” Gionta added of head coach Michel Therrien. “He brought in a system that everybody bought into and played. That’s why you saw the success we had. It doesn’t matter what system we had — as long as everybody’s doing it, it’s going to pay off.”
Gionta described 2010-11 as “a bad year, an off year,” the season that was called a lot worse by many.
“But we always believed in the guys in the room,” he said. “Everybody kind of wrote us off (this season) and didn’t expect much from us, but we expected what we achieved.
“That’s why I was so disappointed at the end of the year (falling in five games to Ottawa). We’re a last-place team last year, then we finish on top of our division and go to the playoffs. People said,
‘That should be a good year.’ Well, it was disappointing. We should have gone further.
“The success starts with leadership at the top. Mr. Molson has invested in having a great team and Marc is the guy who will do that.
“I’m confident that this is just the start of it. It’s not a fluke thing that we bounced back. It’s getting the right guys in that room. It’s character guys. You see the transformation and it will only continue.”
Time will tell whether Gionta, having been a part of this team’s recent checkered past, will be here for what seems to be a promising future.
Hockey, this captain has learned, is too rugged a game to be played with a crystal ball.
jeudi 9 mai 2013
Habs : ‘I want to beat these guys’: Subban
Source : Montrealgazette.com
With the
the Canadiens facing elimination in their playoff series against the Ottawa
Senators, there was a touch of the old P.K. Subban swagger Wednesday.
The
Senators lead the best-of-seven Eastern Conference 3-1 going into Thursday’s
Game 5 at the Bell Centre (7 p.m., CBC, RDS, TSN-690 Radio) but
Subban said the series is far from over.
“They
want to end this but they have to beat us first,” said Subban. “Good luck to
them.”
The
Canadiens star defenceman has been relatively low-key this season after missing
the first six games of the season while hammering out a new contract. He has
deferred to veteran Andrei Markov on numerous occasions but Subban’s emergence
as an elite player was confirmed Tuesday when he was named as one of the three
finalists for the Norris Trophy, which goes to the best defenceman in the NHL.
Subban
was one of three players who addressed the media Wednesday as the team confined
its preparations for Game 5 with a meeting and off-ice workouts. Subban opened
by apologizing for not talking about the Norris Trophy nomination on Tuesday,
explaining that he was concentrating on the playoffs.
“We still have a rule right now, we’re still alive and tomorrow’s game is the biggest of the season and we have to be ready to play,” said Subban. “Our focus has to be on bringing the best we have to this next game.We can sit and talk about last night’s game all we want, but it’s over with, and quite frankly, I want to beat these guys. We have another opportunity to go and do that tomorrow.”
He might
have provided the Senators with some bulletin board material when he said on at
least three occasions that the Canadiens are the better team.
The
Canadiens were certainly the healthier team for most of the season but the
losses have been mounting for Montreal. Coach Michel Therrien announced
Wednesday that Brian Gionta is finished for the season after tearing his left
biceps. Rugged forwards Ryan White and Brandon Prust will both miss Game 5 with
upper-body injuries and starting goaltender Carey Price is doubtful with a
lower-body injury.
“We know
this isn’t an ideal situation, but these guys are showing that they have a lot
of courage,” said Therrien. “I know because I’m right there with them every
day. You look at Brian Gionta. He got hurt in the first game and has done
everything possible to try and come back since. When the decision was finally
made that he wasn’t going to be able to play anymore, he was absolutely
devastated. Those are the hardest moments to see.
“These
guys all have a lot of courage and we probably deserved a better fate than the
one we’re facing at this moment,” he added. “But one thing’s for sure: with the
type of character this team has, I know we’re going to play another strong game
tomorrow and go out there and give it everything we have.”
If Price
can’t play, Peter Budaj will get the start in goal. He was called up to play
the overtime Tuesday night in Ottawa and gave up the winning goal to Kyle
Turris.
“It was a
floater,” explained Budaj, who who was one of the few players to step on the
ice Wednesday. “I don’t know whether it hit (Montreal defenceman Raphael Diaz)
— I don’t think it did — but I misplayed it. I should have made the stop.”
Budaj
said he didn’t know whether Price would be able to play but he said he would be
ready if needed. He had an 8-1-1 record in the regular season and backstopped
the Canadiens to a win over Toronto in the final game of the season to give
Montreal the top spot in the Northeast Division.
In
Ottawa, rookie defenceman Eric Gryba said: “We smell blood. We can taste blood.
It’s time to put them away.” There was a perverse twist to his comments since
he was the player who took Lars Eller out of the series with an illegal hit.
But
Senators coach Paul MacLean, who knows first-hand that a wounded team can be
dangerous, offered a cautionary note when he said: “we’re scared to death.”
Canadiens : L'adversité suprême
Source : Rds.ca
Privé de
plusieurs éléments importants, dont Carey Price, le Canadien tentera de
poursuivre sa saison et d’éviter de subir l’élimination devant ses partisans
lors du 5e match de sa série contre les Sénateurs d’Ottawa au Centre Bell. Ce
match vous est présenté sur les ondes de RDS, précédé de Hockey 360 dès 18h30.
Comme si
les mauvaises nouvelles prenaient plaisir à hanter le Canadien, voilà que Price
ne reviendra pas au jeu dans la série contre Ottawa en raison d'une blessure au
bas du corps. Selon notre informateur hockey Renaud Lavoie, le gardien a subi
un test d'imageries par résonnace magnétique et force est d'admettre que les
résultats n'étaient pas rassurants.
À lire également
- Section Séries 2013
- «On peut s'inspirer du passé»
- Lars Eller patine
- Vaincre l'histoire et les statistiques
- Subban : « le CH est meilleur »
- Le blogue de Roger Leblond
C'est
donc sans son gardien numéro un, Brian Gionta, Brandon Prust, Ryan White et
bien sûr Lars Eller que le Canadien tentera de provoquer la tenue d’un sixième
match et de venger la controversée défaite du match 4.
Dans le
cas d'Eller, il a patiné en solitaire ce matin avec une visière complète. De
son côté, Mike Blunden tentera de donner un coup de main au Tricolore, lui qui
disputera le premier match de sa carrière en séries éliminatoires.
Certains
semblent déjà avoir lancé la serviette dans le cas du Canadien, surtout avec
les nouveaux guerriers ayant tombé au combat depuis la défaite crève-cœur subie
à Ottawa mardi. Michel Therrien a souvent parlé de la capacité de son équipe à
surmonter l’adversité. Un recul de 1-3 dans une série et plusieurs joueurs
importants sur la touche, voilà le test d’adversité suprême.
Pour que
le Canadien l’emporte, certains devront manifestement en donner plus. On
pourrait notamment penser au vétéran Michael Ryder, qui n’a qu’un but, une
passe et six tirs au but depuis le début de la série.
Pour sa part, David Desharnais
a été limité à une passe et un tir au but contre les Sénateurs.
Max
Pacioretty, qui a raté le deuxième match en raison d’une blessure au haut du
corps et qui ne semble pas à 100%, est toujours à la recherche de son premier
point en séries. Idem pour Andrei Markov.
Lars Eller patine
Les
statistiques et l’histoire ne jouent peut-être pas en faveur des hommes de
Michel Therrien, mais le Canadien a récemment comblé des retards de 1-3 en
séries.
Au cours
des dix dernières saisons, le Canadien a réussi à remporter en sept matchs deux
séries où il tirait de l’arrière 1-3. La dernière fois, c’était en 2010, alors
que, menés par les exploits de Jaroslav Halak, les hommes de Jacques Martin
avaient renversé la vapeur contre les Capitals de Washington au premier tour,
l’emportant respectivement 2-1, 4-1 et 2-1 lors des matchs 5, 6 et 7.
En
2003-04, le Canadien jouait le même tour aux Bruins de Boston. Après avoir subi
la défaite dans le quatrième match (le fameux match où Alex Kovalev était entré
en collision avec Sheldon Souray en zone neutre, pavant la voie au but de la
victoire de Glen Murray en deuxième période de prolongation), les hommes de
Claude Julien avaient gagné les trois suivants 5-1, 5-2 et 2-0.
Malgré sa
longue histoire, ce sont toutefois les deux seules remontées victorieuses du CH
en situation de 1-3. En tout et pour tout, il montre une fiche de 2-14 en telle
circonstance.
Les deux
dernières fois où il tirait de l’arrière 1-3 dans une série qu’il a perdue, les
deux contre les Flyers de Philadelphie, il s’est incliné dès la 5e rencontre,
en 2008 et 2010. Les trois fois précédentes, en 1997 contre les Devils du New
Jersey et en 1990 et 1988 contre les Bruins, il a également plié l’échine dès
le 5e match.
Pour leur
part, les Sénateurs n’ont jamais perdu une série qu’ils menaient 3-1, étant
parfaits en sept séries.
D’ailleurs, les trois dernières fois qu’ils ont mené
une série 3-1, ils ont fermé les livres dès la 5e rencontre. À une seule
occasion, un adversaire a réussi à forcer la tenue d’un 6e match, en 1998
contre les Devils au New Jersey, mais ils avaient complété le travail à la
maison au 6e match.
Les
Sénateurs ont remporté un cinquième match sur la patinoire adverse à trois
reprises : en 2002 à Philadelphie et en 2007 au New Jersey et à Buffalo.
Les
Sénateurs n’ont pas signé trois victoires consécutives depuis la finale de
l’Est contre les Sabres de Buffalo en 2007.
mercredi 8 mai 2013
Price hurt, Canadiens hurting
Source : Montrealgazette.com
It’s a judgment call on the part of NHL linesmen as a puck slows in its journey down the ice having been shot from the other side of the centre red line, toward the goal line and a potential icing.
If the linesman believes the defending player, usually the defenceman, isn’t giving honest pursuit, he can wave off the icing call.
But twice in the final 90 seconds of regulation time Tuesday night at Scotiabank Place, over a span of 31 seconds, highly questionable icings were whistled down, keeping fatigued Canadiens defenders on the ice.
Ultimately, Ottawa’s Cory Conacher scored the equalizer 31 seconds after the second icing call, 23 seconds from the end of regulation.
And 2:32 into overtime, Senators’ Kyle Turris gave the home team a come-from-behind 3-2 win over the Canadiens, putting the Habs on the brink of elimination.
Down 3-1 in the best-of-seven Eastern Conference quarter-final, the series resumes Thursday at the Bell Centre in what could be the Canadiens’ final game of the 2012-13 season.
“I just want everything to be called the same way, no matter which way it’s called,” said Habs defenceman Josh Gorges, who was one of five Montreal skaters on the ice trying to defend goalie Carey Price.
Forwards Tomas Plekanec, Rene Bourque and Michael Ryder were out with Gorges, as was fellow defenceman Andrei Markov.
“I couldn’t care less if (officials) called them all off or called them all,” Gorges added generally of icings. “As long as it’s consistently done.
“I know in the first period (the Senators) put one behind me and I stopped for a ref to go by, so he waved it off because I stopped skating. The explanation was, as soon as I stopped moving my feet, it was no longer an icing.
“So I asked the same thing as to why it didn’t happen (to the Senators twice in the dying moments of the game).
“But that’s not why we lost. I’m not saying it is. They make their calls, we live by them, and that’s a part of hockey.”
The Canadiens could have pointed to the instep-booted goal of Ottawa’s Mika Zibanejad, the Senators’ first of the night coming 11:55 into the third period, the Habs then up 2-0.
The NHL war room reviewed the goal on video and let it stand, saying that the puck was directed into the net off the skate of Zibanejad, rather than having been put there with a kick.
A coin toss when you look at the overhead video.
The Habs could point to the location of the faceoff before the Zibanejad goal, the wrong spot based on where the previous play had frozen the play.
And the icings …
The Senators iced — pardon — this victory when Turris beat Canadiens backup goalie Peter Budaj with the home side’s second shot of overtime. Budaj was replacing starter Carey Price, who limped to the dressing room at the siren ending regulation with what was announced to be an lower-body injury, perhaps hamstring or groin.
“When your starting goalie goes down … it’s tough to lose him and it’s tough on the guy who has to come in,” Gorges said. “He’s been sitting there for two-and-a-half hours and we expect him to go in there and be stellar. It’s a tough position to be in, and it’s unfortunate it unfolded that way.
“Plays get thrown to the front of the net,” he added of the scramble that produced the winning goal, “and a lot of times it’s a 50-50 puck. We have to be stronger.”
Canadiens coach Michel Therrien said his team “came to play” and “certainly deserved a better fate.”
Killing the end of a penalty to P.K. Subban to begin the third period should have been a lift, but the Canadiens fell back as the Senators poured it on, outshooting Montreal 13-4 and outscoring them 2-0 over the final 20 minutes.
Ottawa coach Paul MacLean couldn’t resist keeping alive what Therrien says is a lack of respect, that is, the Senators boss referring to Canadiens players by numbers only.
What did MacLean think, he was asked, when he saw Budaj skate into the Habs net to begin overtime?
“He’s a good goalie. What happened to the other guy?” he said with a playfulness that will be lost on the Canadiens.
“What number is Budaj? Thirty-one? No? He’s goalie No. 30? Obviously, the shot at the end of the period for goalie No. 31 gave them some discomfort. We didn’t know what to expect but we weren’t surprised certainly that he was there.”
And being up 3-1, the Canadiens on the ropes, changes nothing for the Senators.
“Thursday just gets harder,” MacLean said of Game 5, the potential clincher. “That’s what the Stanley Cup playoffs are all about. That’s the beauty of it.”
Canadiens : Budaj attend, Subban dit que le CH est meilleur
Source : Rds.ca
Après
avoir décanté leur dernière défaite pendant quelques heures, le Canadien est
revenu à son centre d’entraînement de Brossard pour repartir la machine en vue
de la suite de la série.
La grande
question concernait le gardien Carey Price qui a dû déclarer forfait pour la
prolongation de mardi soir en raison d’une blessure au bas du corps.
Et bien,
Price sera évalué quotidiennement et on ignore s’il pourra entamer la prochaine
confrontation.
En ce qui
concerne Brandon Prust, l’autre joueur blessé pendant cette rencontre, il sera
absent du cinquième match tout comme Ryan White. Ils sont tous les deux blessés
au haut du corps.
«C’est
certain que la situation n’est pas idéale, mais mon équipe démontre beaucoup de
courage. Par exemple (Brian) Gionta a tout fait pour revenir dans le troisième
match. Mais avec le courage que je connais de notre équipe, je suis certain
qu’on va jouer un autre bon match», a confié l’entraîneur du Canadien.
Michel Therrien
a donc la mission délicate de gérer la situation de ses blessés du mieux qu’il
le peut dans cette série.
«Ce n’est
pas évident de faire la différence entre les capacités d’un joueur en
pourcentage. Qu’est-ce que ça veut dire être à 60% ou 40%? Ce que je veux
savoir, c’est si un joueur est capable de jouer un match compétitif. Quand la
réponse est positive, je dois lui faire confiance ainsi qu’au personnel
médical», a précisé le pilote sur son processus de décision.
Tout de
même, l’entraîneur d’expérience est convaincu que le réservoir d’essence n’est
pas à vide.
«Oui,
oui, il nous reste du jus. Habituellement, les bonnes choses finissent par
arriver et j’ai vécu de telles situations dans le passé. On va continuer de
travailler fort pour que ce soit le cas», a-t-il souhaité.
Il se
pourrait donc que Budaj effectue son premier départ en carrière en séries
éliminatoires. Jusqu’à maintenant, il s’est amené cinq fois en relève dont
quatre fois avec l’Avalanche du Colorado et la situation n’a pas été évidente
contre les Sénateurs alors qu’il devait enfiler son masque pour la
prolongation.
« C'est une
défaite décevante »
«C’est
pas mal difficile, mais ça fait du sport. C’est dommage pour nous que Carey
n’ait pu terminer la partie. J’ai essayé de travailler fort pour aider
l’équipe. Malheureusement, le résultat n’a pas été favorable pour nous», a
raconté Budaj qui juge qu’il a accordé un mauvais but à Kyle Turris.
À 30 ans,
le gardien slovaque aimerait bien relancer sa troupe qui sera en danger de
subir l’élimination en première ronde après avoir conclu le calendrier au
deuxième rang de l’Association Est.
«Je ne
sais pas si je vais jouer, je me suis entraîné et je suis prêt à jouer si
nécessaire», a-t-il d’abord commenté.
«C’est un
cliché, mais on peut juste se concentrer sur le prochain match. Nous devons
être disciplinés et gagner trois parties consécutives comme nous avons pu le
faire durant la saison. On croit tous que c’est possible», a ajouté le
sympathique athlète.
À lire également
Au
lendemain d’une autre défaite crève-cœur, l’entraîneur aurait pu décider de
rencontrer sa troupe pour discuter de la situation, mais il a préféré se faire
discret pour laisser la poussière retombée.
«Je me
fie sur le feeling que je ressens au sein de l’équipe. Parfois, je dois
me retirer parce que je dois trouver le bon moment pour leur parler afin que le
message ait un impact. Aujourd’hui, j’ai pris un certain recul», a noté l’homme
de caractère qui n’a pas trop apprécié qu’un journaliste dise qu’il semblait
secoué.
Il a
balayé du revers de la main ce constat et il a conclu sa réponse à sa façon.
«Je ne
suis pas secoué pantoute!»
Subban
lance un message
Alors
qu’il avait refusé de parler de sa nomination au trophée au Norris la veille,
P.K. Subban avait un message très clair à prononcer.
« On veut
continuer à jouer »
«On
s’apprête à jouer notre match le plus important. Pour être honnête, je veux
vraiment battre cette équipe et nous pouvons le faire, nous sommes meilleurs!»,
a argué Subban à deux occasions.
«On veut
continuer de jouer et nous avons une chance de le faire. On peut identifier
plusieurs facteurs pour expliquer le portrait de la série, mais rien n’a tourné
en notre faveur. On doit tourner la page et nous sommes une meilleure équipe
même si on doit se débrouiller sans quelques joueurs. Il n’y a aucune raison
pour laquelle on ne pourrait les battre jeudi», a-t-il détaillé.
En ce qui
concerne l’honneur qu’il a reçu, voici ce qu’il avait à dire.
«Je vous
remercie d’avoir attendu une journée pour obtenir mes commentaires sur ma
nomination. Je voulais seulement me concentrer sur la partie mardi. C’est un
grand honneur, mais c’est un moment difficile pour en parler avec notre
situation.»
Depuis le
début de cette série, le Tricolore a échappé des avances dans les première et
quatrième parties tout en étant dominé au compte de 9-0 pour les buts en
troisième période.
Dans leur
histoire, les Sens ont gagné les sept séries dans lesquelles ils avaient pris
un coussin de 3 à 1.
Autour de
midi, Budaj et Robert Mayer ont procédé à un entraînement sous la supervision
de Pierre Groulx avec Yannick Weber, Tomas Kaberle, Davis Drewiske et Michael
Blunden.
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