1930 Finals vs. Boston Bruins
The defending champion Bruins were a force. They had a record of 38–5–1 which translates to an .875 winning percentage, the best in NHL history. The Canadiens had lost all four of their regular-season meetings with Boston. The Bruins didn't lose two in a row all season, until being swept by the Habs in a best of three Finals. This upset prompted a change to the Finals format for the following year to a best-of-five series. Captain Sylvio Mantha (pictured) was the leader, scoring in both games.
1971 Quarter-Finals vs. Boston Bruins
Montreal were matched against the Bruins again, and Boston was heavily favored. The Bruins bested the canadiens by 24 points at the end of the season. Game 2 featured what might be one of the greatest comebacks in NHL history. Boston lead 5–2 heading into the third period, the Canadiens, who had trailed 5–1, scored 5 goals in the final frame to win 7–5. The Habs lead the series after game 3, but scored just four goals while allowing 12 against to lose games 4 and 5. Game 6 was 8-2 rout by Montreal at the Forum.
The seventh and deciding game in Boston saw Cournoyer, Beliveau, Mahovlich, Tremblay and others skate to victory before a hostile crowd at the Garden to capture Stanley Cup number 17.2002 Conference Quarter-Finals vs. Boston Bruins
Boston finished first overall in the Eastern Conference in 01-02. Donald Audette lead the way with 2 goals to win game 1 5-2 for Montreal. Game 2 would be a back and forth tilt that saw the Bruins prevail 6-4 despite a 4 point outing from Richard Zednik. The Canadiens won game 3 5-3 on a another 4 point performance, this time from Saku Koivu. Boston tied the series with a 5-2 win in game 4. Jose Theodore dominated Game 5 stopping 43 of 44 shots in a 2-1 win to take a 3-2 series lead. Theodore was outstanding again in Game 6 and Yanic Perreault scored the Game Winning goal to give the Canadiens a 2-1 win and series victory.
No comments:
Post a Comment