Ylonen scores 1st goal of season as Canadiens roll past Flyers for 5th win in 7 games
Montreal forward also collects assist for 1st career multi-point game
Jesse Ylonen had a goal and an assist for his first career multi-point game, Jake Allen made 24 saves and the Montreal Canadiens defeated the Flyers 5-2 on Friday night in Philadelphia.
Chris Tierney, David Savard, Josh Anderson and Nick Suzuki also scored for Montreal, which followed up Tuesday's impressive win over New Jersey with another solid performance.
"It was one of our best games of the year," Anderson said. "We were really balanced tonight and it showed. When everybody's in the right spot, it's easy to play like that. It just looked like everybody was connected."
Owen Tippett and Ivan Provorov scored for Philadelphia, which has lost seven of nine since the all-star break. Carter Hart made 26 saves.
The game pitted two of the Eastern Conference's worst teams, but the Canadiens looked like Stanley Cup contenders against Philadelphia.
Montreal skated circles around the Flyers in a dominating first period that ended with the home team being booed off the ice. The rest of the game pretty much followed that pattern.
"I think we were very organized for the whole game," Ylonen said. "We played a very mature game, and even when we got the lead, we still kept doing the same thing, keeping it simple. So I think it was very good."
The Canadiens peppered Hart during a power play early in the first, with Philadelphia's goalie making strong saves on slap shots from Mike Hoffman and Rafael Harvey-Pinard to keep the game scoreless. But Montreal kept up the pressure and netted a pair of goals in the final 2:10 of the period to go in front 2-0.
Savard opened the scoring by shooting under Hart's right arm from close range after a pretty chip pass from Hoffman set him up perfectly. Tierney gave the Canadiens a two-goal lead with five seconds left in the first. Michael Pezzetta won a battle behind the net and fed the puck in front to a wide-open Tierney.
WATCH | Tierney scores in Canadiens debut:
"That's a kick in the teeth," Tortorella said.
Suzuki scored the only goal of the second on a power play for his team-leading 45th point. Montreal got the man-advantage when the Flyers' Wade Allison received an instigation minor and 10-minute misconduct in addition to a fighting major for his scrap with Alex Belzile. It took just 19 seconds for the Canadiens to take advantage when Suzuki's pass to the front of the net deflected off defenceman Provorov's stick and high over Hart.
"We made plays that were there," Anderson said. "We didn't really force much. And we still played a smart game, too, when we needed to get it in and forecheck."
Tippett gave the Flyers some life with a wrister that whizzed past Allen just nine seconds into the third, but Ylonen answered with his first of the season on a deflection six 1/2 minutes into the period.
Un premier but cette saison pour Jesse!<br><br>First of the season for Jesse!<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/GoHabsGo?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#GoHabsGo</a> <a href="https://t.co/OEiI2FtHXN">pic.twitter.com/OEiI2FtHXN</a>
—@CanadiensMTL
The Canadiens pulled within two points of the Flyers, who have 56. Only Columbus, with 41 points, has less in the conference.
Montreal forwards Joel Armia and Kirby Dach both sat out with illnesses.
Philadelphia leading scorer Travis Konecny (upper body) missed his second straight game.
The Canadiens play the second of a back-to-back in Ottawa on Saturday night.