Hockey

Anthony Richard leads Canadiens over Penguins to snap 7-game losing skid

Anthony Richard scored the winning goal in the third period and the Montreal Canadiens beat the Pittsburgh Penguins 6-4 on Tuesday night.

Montreal, which won 1st game in March, has lost 8 of last 10 games overall

Montreal Canadiens' Josh Anderson, centre, is congratulated by his teammates after scoring an empty-net goal against the Pittsburgh Penguins.
Montreal Canadiens' Josh Anderson, centre, is congratulated after scoring an empty-net goal against the Pittsburgh Penguins during the third period of an NHL hockey game in Pittsburgh. (Gene J. Puskar/The Associated Press)

Anthony Richard scored the winning goal in the third period and the Montreal Canadiens beat the Pittsburgh Penguins 6-4 on Tuesday night.

Richard scored at 3:05 of the third period. He took a stretch pass from Justin Barron and beat Casey DeSmith to the glove side. Montreal rebounded from an 8-4 home loss against Colorado on Monday and snapped a seven-game losing streak.

Montreal, which won its first game in March, has lost eight of its last 10 games overall.

"I feel like we've played some really good hockey, as of late, but we just haven't gotten rewarded for it," Canadiens coach Martin St. Louis said. "It wasn't perfect, but I think the group needed that kind of result."

Josh Anderson scored an empty-net goal while the Penguins pressed for the tie. Mike Hoffman scored his 11th while Denis Gurianov, Jesse Ylonen and Joel Edmundson also scored for the Canadiens.

Sam Montembeault made 39 saves.

"Montembeault was probably the difference," St. Louis said. "He played real well for us."

Jake Guentzel scored twice and Evgeni Malkin and Kris Letang also scored for the Penguins, who play significant back-to-back division games at the New York Rangers on Thursday and Saturday. Pittsburgh, which currently holds a wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference, has points in eight of its last 10 games.

WATCH l Richard's game-winning goal helps Canadiens edge Penguins:

Canadiens edge Penguins to end 7-game losing skid

2 years ago
Duration 0:50
Montreal defeats Pittsburgh 5-4 with Anthony Richard's game-winning goal in the third period.

"Obviously, we missed an opportunity," Penguins coach Mike Sullivan said. "We have a lot of them moving forward that we have to get ready for."

Tristan Jarry started, but allowed four goals on seven shots. It was the fourth time in five games Jarry allowed four goals and the second time he was pulled. DeSmith stopped 13 shots in relief.

Pittsburgh played the final 16 minutes with four defencemen. Jeff Petry didn't take a shift in the third period and Jan Rutta left with a lower-body injury after he was hit with a shot.

Montreal had the first five shots of the third period and the only goal until Anderson's empty netter with 35 seconds to go.

Montreal scores final 4 goals of 1st period

"I thought we worked hard throughout the course of the game, but we didn't work smart," Sullivan said. "As a result, some of the looks they got, though they didn't get many, were high quality."

Pittsburgh scored twice in the first five minutes for an early 2-0 lead. But the Canadiens jumped ahead with three goals in the next 6:10 and another before the end of the first during a wild six-goal period.

Guentzel scored his 28th goal of the season and recorded his 400th NHL point just 21 seconds into the game. Guentzel, with five goals in his last five games, is the fastest player from the 2013 NHL Draft class to 400 points.

Malkin scored a power-play goal on a one-timer from the point at 4:49, making it a 2-0 game. Pittsburgh has a power-play goal in 11 of its last 13 home games.

WATCH l Nathan MacKinnon scores on brilliant solo effort against Canadiens:

MacKinnon's incredible individual effort leads Avalanche past Canadiens

2 years ago
Duration 1:04
Nathan MacKinnon extends his goal streak to five games with an outstanding rush in Colorado's 8-4 victory over Montreal.

But the Canadiens scored the final four goals of the period.

Hoffman scored 32 seconds after Malkin's goal and Ylonen tied it with a wrist shot from the point at 7:13 of the period.

Gurianov scored his third goal in as many games seconds after a penalty expired. Edmundson scored with 11 seconds left in the period on a slap shot from the point.

Pittsburgh outshot Montreal, 17-4, in the second period and evened the score thanks to goals by Letang and Guentzel. But it wasn't enough, as Richard scored early in the third and the Canadiens held on for their first win of the month.

"It was a tough feeling when [Pittsburgh] scored two goals early," Richard said. "It was basically the same start we had [Monday], so the group was kind of down a little bit, but the goal right after was huge just to get our legs going again."

Canadiens visit the Florida Panthers on Thursday.

Penguins play the first of consecutive games at the New York Rangers on Thursday.

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