Offence: Michael Leighton has a .969 SV% and a 0.87 GAA in these playoffs, and 2 shutouts against Montreal. The Canadiens forwards have to find a way to disrupt Leighton's stellar play and put some pucks by him. In order to overcome the 2-0 series deficit, the Habs have to get in Philadelphia's crease, screen Leighton, and beat the Flyers defence to rebounds.
Defence: Montreal has to get back to what made the successful in the first two rounds, that is blocking shots. The Canadiens have blocked 355 shots in this postseason, over 100 more than any other team. But after frustrating Ovechkin and then Crosby, the Habs only got in the way of 35 shots through two games against Philadelphia.
Why isn't Ryan O'Byrne playing? He played over 18 minutes a game towards the end of the first round, is a +1, and has 25 shot blocks. And he could keep the Flyers forwards from feeling at home in Jaroslav Halak's crease. Compare that to Marc-Andre Bergeron's -11, 1 goal and inability to play defence in general, and it seems like a no brainer. Bergeron could be put on the 4th line and used on the PP where his shot would still garner attention from Flyer penalty killers.
Goal: Halak can't be blamed for any losses where the team in front of him fails to score a single goal, but one has to wonder if back to back losses and a couple weak goals are starting to wear on him. Another concern is the ridiculous workload Halak has had. After coming back from the Olympics where he started for Slovakia, he got the majority of starts down the stretch. In the first two rounds of the playoffs he saw a load of shots from Washington and Pittsburgh. That's a lot of work for a goalie who wasn't a regular starter until 3 months ago.
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