Winning on the road in a Game 7 rarely comes easy, and it often has little to do with how pretty the performance looks. The Montreal Canadiens embodied that truth on Sunday night.
Montreal survived constant pressure from the Tampa Bay Lightning to pull off a stunning 2-1 victory, advancing to the second round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs. The result was as improbable as it was dramatic.
Tampa Bay dominated most of the game, pinning the Canadiens in their own zone and piling up a staggering advantage on the shot clock. The Lightning outshot Montreal 29-9, controlling possession for nearly the entire night.
Those numbers underscore how lopsided the game was. Montreal went without a single shot on goal in the entire second period, managing just five total attempts in that frame.
Despite that imbalance, the Canadiens made the most of their few opportunities and set a new NHL record for the fewest shots ever taken in a Stanley Cup Playoff win.
Nick Suzuki opened the scoring, redirecting a shot from long range past Andrei Vasilevskiy to give Montreal an early 1-0 lead. The goal came from about 30 feet out and briefly unsettled a Tampa Bay team that had been controlling the play.
The Lightning answered with relentless offensive pressure, swarming the Montreal zone and forcing goaltender Jakub Dobes to make repeated saves. Dobes stood firm, keeping his team alive as shots and scoring chances piled up.
Eventually, Tampa Bay tied the game 1-1, and by the third period, it seemed only a matter of time before another Lightning goal would come. The Canadiens, though, hung around long enough to get a fortunate bounce when they most needed it.
Late in the third period, Alex Newhook chased a loose puck behind the net and chipped it toward the crease. It caught a strange hop off Vasilevskiy’s pad and trickled into the goal, giving Montreal a 2-1 lead.
That fluky play turned out to be the game-winner, leaving Tampa Bay stunned and frustrated after dominating every measurable part of the game except the score. It was a brutal bounce for Vasilevskiy, whose play otherwise gave his team every chance to win.
From there, the Canadiens clamped down, surviving one last barrage in the final minutes. Dobes made several key stops down the stretch to preserve the lead, finishing with 28 saves on 29 shots.
Montreal’s defensive poise and goaltending composure proved the difference in a contest that could hardly have been won any other way. For Dobes, his effort represented the core reason the Canadiens were able to advance.
Sunday’s victory sends Montreal into the second round for the first time since the 2020-21 season. For Tampa Bay, the defeat marks a fourth consecutive first-round playoff exit, a humbling stretch for a team that once looked like a perennial contender.
While the Lightning can point to statistics and momentum as evidence they deserved a better result, the Canadiens will simply point to the scoreboard. In the Stanley Cup Playoffs, results are what matter most, and Montreal found the only thing that counts — a way to win.