The stage was set for the perfect Hollywood script on Monday night for the Montreal Canadiens. Ivan Demidov was making his debut, and the excitation was palpable in the Bell Centre, but the Habs needed to beat the Chicago Blackhawks to qualify for the playoffs, and they failed to do so.
Canadiens: St-Louis On Ivan Demidov’s Linemates And Hughes On His Arrival
In Hainsight: Demidov’s arrival
David Reinbacher is Getting Closer To a Return
Who Needs Shielding?
Martin St-Louis said on Monday morning that it made sense to put Joel Armia, a defensively responsible player, on the ice with Ivan Demidov, but with 3:32 left in the first period, there was no Armia and Patrik Laine was with Demidov and Alex Newhook.
By then, the rookie had assisted on the game's first lamplighter and scored his first career goal, becoming the second youngest player in Canadiens history to score in his first game and setting the Bell Centre alight. It’s a small sample, but Demidov didn’t need shielding as he adapted immediately to the North American game. He was only on the ice for 3:25 in the first frame, but he certainly made the most of it.
Newhook scores on a Demidov assist, just his third shift #GoHabsGo 1-0 Habs @TheHockeyNews#THNpic.twitter.com/DVpFloBhAc
— Karine Hains (@KarineHains) April 14, 2025
As for the game's physicality, in his very first shift, he nailed Frank Nazar by the boards, sending the Bell Centre crowd to its feet. He did, however, get his welcome to the NHL moment halfway through the first when Artyom Levshunov caught him in the offensive zone. That was the only time he was caught off-guard, lightyears away from the way Juraj Slafkovsky looked like a deer in the headlights a few times in his rookie season.
On his new player, the coach said:
I think he was great. If there’s one player that wasn’t worried about much and not stressed out it was him, but it’s almost naïve because he just got here, that’s why I wasn’t afraid to inject that kind of talent, he hasn’t gone through what these guys have gone through all year, he comes in and he plays.- Martin St-Louis on Ivan Demidov
He finished his night with two points, a plus-one rating, three shots and one hit having spent close to 17 minutes on the ice. The sole blemish on his record was that he took a shot which was blocked and led to the Blackhawks' third goal, and he didn't exactly backcheck.
Costly Penalties
The Habs were up 2-0 when they were assessed their first penalty, and a minute and a half later, their lead was cut in half. While Kaiden Guhle’s hits are often massive momentum makers, that one tonight, without Oliver Moore having touched the puck, started the Canadiens’ downfall. Asked to comment on the play, the bench boss explained:
I think you have to be near the line without crossing it. It was a play with the puck coming to him, but it wasn’t there yet. If he (Moore) had touched the puck, it would have been a good body check, but he never touched it, so that’s a penalty. It happens so quickly that the player is already all in on the play. He thinks the puck will get there faster. Those are the penalties we don’t need, but I understand the action and where he was coming from. It’s just a shame that it cost us.- The coach on a bad penalty
Then, late in the second period, the Alexandre Carrier-Mike Matheson pairing couldn’t decide who was covering who, and as a result, the former was forced to trip Ilya Mikheyev. Five seconds later, the game was tied.
While Samuel Montembeault had only faced 18 shots by then, the two scored goals couldn’t be put on him. In fact, the Canadiens’ goaltender had to make a few big saves to keep his side in the game.
St-Louis On The Notion Of Urgency
In the final frame, with a playoff berth on the line, the Canadiens didn’t look like the team with something to win in that game. There was no urgency in their play, which was somewhat puzzling. Asked how he would describe his team’s urgency level, St-Louis replied:
I’d say it was a little average, but you know, playing with urgency and executing are two different things. Playing with urgency means being ready defensively and always in the right spot. You can’t daydream on the ice, but when you have the puck, can you be calm in a stressful moment? Because if you’re calm in a stressful moment, you’ll execute much better. Your reading of the game is a lot clearer when you’re calm. If you’re playing with urgency, want to succeed, and are working so hard, the wheel is spinning so fast that your read isn’t as good as when you’re more relaxed. We’ve got a young team right now. We have urgency, but sometimes it interferes with our reading. We know it’s so close, and we can almost touch it. It’s an experience you have to live; you can’t practice that.- St-Louis on his young team and dealing with urgency
When Slafkovsky tied the game in the third frame, Lane Hutson got the secondary assist he needed to become the sole holder of the franchise’s record for the most points by a rookie blueliner with 65.
While Demidov passed his first test with flying colors, his performance hid the fact that the Canadiens didn’t play a good game. Perhaps the coach is right. However, the moment was huge, and his team is very young. On Tuesday night, the Columbus Blue Jackets will play the Philadelphia Flyers. A win from the Pennsylvania outfit would make Wednesday’s game against the Carolina Hurricanes a lot less stressful as it would clinch the Canadiens' playoff berth.
Perhaps the most anticipated rookie lap in Canadiens history @TheHockeyNews#GoHabsGo#THNpic.twitter.com/yO8t6q8UIQ
— Karine Hains (@KarineHains) April 14, 2025
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