Habs collapse late to suffer season series sweep at hands of league-worst Red Wings
Montreal allows trio of unanswered 3rd-period goals in Shea Weber's return to lineup
The Detroit Red Wings can only wish they played Montreal more than just four times this season.
Andreas Athanasiou scored his second goal with 5:15 remaining in regulation to cap Detroit's three-goal third period, helping the Red Wings rally to beat the Canadiens 4-3 Tuesday night to sweep the season series.
"Feels good to beat them four times," Red Wings centre Dylan Larkin said. "They've got a good goalie, a good team. That's a team that the last couple of years beat us pretty bad."
Detroit has earned four of its NHL-low 15 victories against the Canadiens.
"I think they wanted to win the game more than we did, so they made plays when we didn't," Canadiens forward Paul Byron said. "They fought and made some big plays."
Red Wings goaltender Jonathan Bernier did not give up a goal in the third period and finished with 19 saves.
WATCH | Red Wings surge past Canadiens:
Nate Thompson and Jeff Petry scored to give Montreal a 2-0 lead in the first period and Nick Suzuki's goal put it ahead 3-1 after two periods.
"Some guys were playing and some guys were just in their jerseys," Detroit coach Jeff Blashill said.
Detroit's Robby Fabbri had a goal in the first period and teammate Mike Green scored a game-tying goal midway through the third period for his 500th career point. The veteran defenceman scored on a shot that fluttered past Price.
"With Carey, he probably knew where I was going," Green said. "Good thing I flubbed it. I'll take it."
Athanasiou scored his first goal early in the third and followed up later in the period with the winner, giving him 10 goals in 45 games. The performance perhaps increased his trade value for a rebuilding team that may deal the speedy, 25-year-old forward for draft picks or prospects by Monday's deadline.
Carey Price had 21 saves for the Canadiens, who have lost five straight for the third time this season.
Montreal had chances to avoid getting swept by a team that has by far been the league's worst this season and failed.
"We all knew we haven't played well against them and we know we blew a lead here the last time," said Montreal's Shea Weber, who returned to play after missing six games with an ankle injury.
The Canadiens failed to take advantage of a power play late in the third period and their comeback chances took a hit when Joel Armia was called for roughing with 2:44 left. Price was pulled to add an extra skater after the penalty was killed, but the Canadiens could not pull into a tie to send the game to overtime.
"I can't put my skates on and play for them," Canadiens coach Claude Julien said. "We need them to play 60 minutes."