Hockey

Habs use big 2nd period to beat slumping Blues

Brendan Gallagher, Jonathan Drouin and Nick Suzuki scored in the second period, and the Montreal Canadiens beat the St. Louis Blues 5-2 on Saturday.

Carey Price saves 32 to notch 325th career victory

Goaltender Carey Price of the Canadiens is congratulated by teammate Phillip Danault during Montreal's 5-2 in over the St. Louis Blues on Saturday. (Bill Boyce/Associated Press)

Brendan Gallagher got a lucky bounce, and the Montreal Canadiens took over from there.

Gallagher, Jonathan Drouin and Nick Suzuki scored in the second period, and the Canadiens beat the St. Louis Blues 5-2 on Saturday.

Gallagher picked up his fourth goal of the season six seconds into the second when he pounced on a loose puck off the faceoff and beat Jake Allen on a seemingly harmless shot from just inside the blue line.

"It was a pretty fortunate goal," Gallagher said. "But any time you can score the first five minutes of the period or the last five minutes, those things seem to propel you. They're big momentum goals."

Allen said the shot deflected off the shaft of his stick and into the net.

WATCH | Habs beat the Blues away:

Game Wrap: Habs knock off Blues for 2nd time in two weeks

5 years ago
Duration 1:28
Nick Suzuki scored his second career goal in Montreal's 5-2 victory over the Blues in St. Louis.

Price notches 325th career win 

"I'm going to take a lot of responsibility on that one, for that goal," Allen said. "I think it took a lot of wind out of our sails. I thought we did a pretty decent first period back and forth, got a little bit into their style of game which we didn't want to play, but that's on me for losing that momentum for the boys."

Jordan Weal and Shea Weber also scored for the Canadiens, who won for the third time in four games. Carey Price made 32 saves in his 325th win, passing Sean Burke for 27th on the NHL career list.

"It seems the older I get the more it happens but I'm just thankful to have played with a lot of good teams that have helped me win those games," Price said.

St. Louis dropped its fourth straight game. Jaden Schwartz and David Perron scored for the Stanley Cup champions, and Allen made 20 saves in his first home start since Jan. 8.

The Canadiens grabbed control after Gallagher's tiebreaking goal.

Gallagher provides boost

Drouin made it 3-1 with a one-timer at 3:39. It was the second power-play goal of the game for Montreal, which improved to 5 for 14 on the road with the man advantage.

Drouin said the team got a huge boost by Gallagher's score.

"Obviously that's a fluke goal and that's not going to happen all the time," he said, "but for us to get that goal on the road against a team like that to start the period after 6 seconds to be up by one we know if we got the lead, we could play the third period kind of conservative and just play our game."

Suzuki scored his second goal in as many games with 8:27 left in the second. He buried a one-timer after a Nate Thompson pass freed him up in the slot.

"All I know is it was a good start for us, six seconds in," Canadiens coach Claude Julien said. "We get the lead and it just kind of gave us that kind of excitement of playing with the lead again."

Perron scored with 37 seconds left in the third, but Weber answered with an empty-netter.

Weal's power-play goal gave the Canadiens a 1-0 lead at the 5:57 mark of the first period. Max Domi picked up an assist to extend his points streak to five games.

Schwartz's first goal of the season tied it 71 seconds later. Schwartz buried a backhander after an Alex Pietrangelo slap shot caromed off the end boards right to his stick.

"I thought we played really well in the first," Pietrangelo said. "We just shot ourselves in the foot again. It's a cliche, but we've got to manage the puck better. It's how we create offence. It's how we create goals and draw penalties and get momentum."