November 24, 2024

Stanley Cup final: Lightning-Canadiens Game 1 live updates

Lightning #Lightning

a group of people posing for the camera: Fans cheer for the Lightning before Game 1 of the Stanley Cup final Monday outside Amalie Arena. © Ivy Ceballo/Times Fans cheer for the Lightning before Game 1 of the Stanley Cup final Monday outside Amalie Arena.

If you are viewing this story via our mobile app and are unable to see videos and tweets, click here.

Erik Cernak, Yanni Gourde and Ondrej Palat have goals, and the Lightning lead the Canadiens 3-1 in the third period of Game 1 of the Stanley Cup final at Amalie Arena.

a group of people standing in front of a crowd: Fans cheer for the Lightning before Game 1 of the Stanley Cup final Monday at Amalie Arena. © Ivy Ceballo/Times Fans cheer for the Lightning before Game 1 of the Stanley Cup final Monday at Amalie Arena.

Cernak redirected a Palat pass past Montreal goaltender Carey Price in the first period, and Gourde deflected a Blake Coleman shot into the net in the second.

Patrick Maroon in a blue uniform holding a football ball: Lightning defenseman Victor Hedman (77) and left wing Pat Maroon (14) skate during pregame warmups. © Dirk Shadd/Times Lightning defenseman Victor Hedman (77) and left wing Pat Maroon (14) skate during pregame warmups.

After the Canadiens’ Ben Chiarot scored from the right point late in the second period, Palat restored the Lightning’s two-goal lead by batting a puck out of the air early in the third.

Follow our live updates throughout the game:

Third period

LIGHTNING GOAL! Ondrej Palat knocks a puck into the net after Montreal defenseman Ben Chiarot batted it out of the air. The play started when Nikita Kucherov backhanded a puck on net from near the right sideboards. Lightning 3, Canadiens 1.

a group of baseball players standing on top of a snow covered field: Lightning defenseman Erik Cernak (81), center, celebrates his first-period goal along with right wing Nikita Kucherov © Dirk Shadd/Times Lightning defenseman Erik Cernak (81), center, celebrates his first-period goal along with right wing Nikita Kucherov

Cernak and Staal receive roughing penalties, and we’ll have 4-on-4 play for two minutes

Second period

Lightning will carry over the power play from the end of the first period

a baseball player holding a bat on a field: Lightning players celebrate Erik Cernak's first-period goal. © Dirk Shadd/Times Lightning players celebrate Erik Cernak’s first-period goal.

Point shot from the slot just misses the net

Canadiens kill the penalty

Vasilevskiy stops Caufield shot from low in the left circle

a person skiing on the snow: Lightning goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy (88) works to keep the puck out of the net in the second period. © Dirk Shadd/Times Lightning goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy (88) works to keep the puck out of the net in the second period.

McDonagh shot bounces into the crease and is covered by Price

Vasilevskiy covers Gallagher shot

Chiarot shot from the left point hits the post with Corey Perry setting a screen in front of the Lightning net

Price makes a glove save to rob Steven Stamkos from low in the right circle

LIGHTNING GOAL! Blake Coleman’s shot from the slot deflects off Yanni Gourde, who was setting a screen in front, into the net. Coleman picked up a Goodrow shot from the high slot that had been blocked. The play started with a turnover by Gallagher at the offensive blue line. Lightning 2, Canadiens 0.

Wow. Vasilevskiy makes a glove save on Shea Weber, who tried to go top shelf from low in the left circle on a breakaway

Stamkos backhand shot goes up out of play

Palat shot high of the net

Cernak shot from the right point blocked in front

McDonagh shot from the left point deflects wide

Tyler Johnson backhand shot blocked by Price’s right pad

SCORING CHANGE: The second Lightning goal has been awarded to Gourde

After Hedman loses his stick behind the Lightning net, Killorn gives him his, then lays out to block a shot from the right point off the heel of his left skate.

Price turns away a Gourde shot off an odd-man rush

Sergachev shot blocked in front

Big hit by Palat on Chiarot, who has to leave the ice because he loses his helmet

Palat wrist shot saved by Price

CANADIENS GOAL: Ben Chiarot’s shot from the right point deflects off two players into the net. Shea Weber knocked down a Lightning pass at the blue line to start the rush up ice. Lightning 2, Canadiens 1.

McDonagh hustles back to break up Gallagher scoring opportunity

First period

Cole Caufield shot from the high slot off the rush misses high. Caufield skated right and shot left, and Vasilevskiy seemed to have trouble tracking the puck.

Jeff Petry shot from the side boards covered by Vasilevskiy

Carey Price makes save after Victor Hedman shot goes off Joel Edmundson’s skate

Anthony Cirelli wrist shot saved by Price

Vasilevskiy makes right toe save on Brendan Gallagher wrist shot from low in the right circle

Price stops Brayden Point shot from the right circle

Vasilevskiy makes save on Shea Weber shot

Tyler Toffoli shot from the high slot misses the net after a turnover at the Lightning blue line

Vasilevskiy makes a blocker save on Caufield shot from the center point

Price makes glove save on Hedman shot

LIGHTNING GOAL! Erik Cernak, from between the hashmarks, redirects an Ondrej Palat shot from above the left circle. Brayden Point started the rush by intercepting a pass on the backcheck and passing out of the defensive zone. Lightning 1, Canadiens 0.

Cernak partially blocks Jake Evans shot from the right circle

Ben Chiarot with a hard hit on Barclay Goodrow

Vasilevskiy makes save on Arrturi Lehkonen, and then Victor Hedman and Gallagher go at it after Gallagher tried to push Hedman into Vasilevskiy

Price saves David Savard shot from the right point

Mikhail Sergachev shot misses the net

Goodrow penalized for cross-checking Gallagher with 4:39 left in the period, and the Canadiens go on the power play

Cirelli shorthanded shot from the slot on 3-on-2 break deflected wide after Gustafsson turned the puck over at the blue line

Lightning clear the puck out of the zone

Goodrow returns as the Lightning kill the penalty. No Canadiens shots with the man-advantage

Phillip Danault backhand shot misses the net after a turnover by Ryan McDonagh

Palat shot from above the left circle misses wide

Chiarot penalized for cross-checking Nikita Kucherov, and the Lightning get a power play with 46 seconds left in the period

Kucherov fans on a shot attempt from the right circle

Kucherov looks for redirect from Killorn in front

Canadiens clear the puck

(Lightning lead 1-0 after one period)

Pregame scouting report

When you’ve got goaltenders as talented as the Lightning’s Andrei Vasilevskiy and Canadiens’ Carey Price meeting in the Stanley Cup final, there is a temptation to want to reduce the NHL’s championship series to a matchup between the two.

Vasilevskiy, the best goalie in the world, gave Tampa Bay a sizable advantage in net in each of its first three playoff series. But that edge will be reduced significantly against Price, who previously held that title.

So, while there is certainly merit to that story line, it’s not as simple as that.

Okay, yes, it’s also the defending Stanley Cup champion against the team with the worst regular-season record in the playoff field. But as Montreal showed in beating Vegas — whose 82 points tied Colorado for most in the league — it’s not a team to be taken lightly.

And the Canadiens, who have won 11 of their past 13 games, play a similar tight-checking, defense-first, counterattacking style to that employed by the Islanders, who pushed the Lightning to seven games in the semifinal round.

While Montreal has nowhere near the offensive firepower Tampa Bay does, it also rolls out four lines, the first (Phillip Danault, Brendan Gallagher and Artturi Lehkonen) of which neutralized the top scorers from Toronto (Auston Matthews, Mitch Marner), Winnipeg (Nikolaj Ehlers and Blake Wheeler) and Vegas (Mark Stone and Max Pacioretty) in the first three rounds.

The Canadiens also have the postseason’s top penalty kill, one operating at a 93.5-percent success rate. But they have yet to face a power play with the number of options the Lightning’s top unit presents, including postseason scoring leader Nikita Kucherov, playoff goals leader Brayden Point and sniper Steven Stamkos.

Tampa Bay, playing in its third Cup final in the past seven seasons, has a considerable advantage in playoff experience. Montreal, which last won the Cup in 1993, was knocked out in the first round last season and failed to make the playoffs in three of the previous four.

The Lightning, meanwhile, hope to join the 2016-17 Penguins as the only teams to win back-to-back Cups in the salary-cap era. And unlike last season, they have captain Stamkos back in the lineup and will be playing in front of their home fans, starting with Game 1 tonight at Amalie Arena.

Are the Bolts still hungry for more?

We’ll find out tonight, starting at 8 p.m., as the Lightning hope to earn the first of four wins needed to secure their second consecutive Cup and third in franchise history.

Gameday scene

• • •

Sign up for Lightning Strikes, a weekly newsletter from Bolts beat writer Eduardo A. Encina that brings you closer to the ice.

Never miss out on the latest with the Bucs, Rays, Lightning, Florida college sports and more. Follow our Tampa Bay Times sports team on Twitter and Facebook.

Leave a Reply