Hockey

Kempe's OT marker sends Kings past Canadiens in Danault's return to Montreal

Adrian Kempe scored at 3:39 of overtime to give the Los Angeles Kings a 3-2 victory over the Montreal Canadiens on Tuesday night at Bell Centre.

Habs fail to capitalize on former centre's late penalty as Los Angeles wins 6th straight

Los Angeles' Adrian Kempe celebrates with teammate Brendan Lemieux after scoring the OT winner during the Kings' 3-2 victory against the Montreal Canadiens on Tuesday. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press)

A highlight-reel goal by Adrian Kempe gave Los Angeles a 3-2 overtime victory over Montreal on Tuesday night and extended the Kings' winning streak to six games.

Kempe circled around the Montreal zone with the puck before beating Jake Evans along the boards and tucking the puck past Jake Allen at 3:39 for the victory.

"For [Kempe] to be able to control the puck, get across the net like that and make that, it's huge," said Kings goaltender Cal Peterson, who made 33 saves. "He's one of the guys that we count on in those overtime situations.

"He has plenty of handling moves like that so we count on him to do that and he comes through."

Brendan Lemieux and Alex Iafallo had the other goals for the Kings (7-5-1). Ben Chiarot and Jake Evans scored for Montreal (3-10-1) while Allen made 31 saves.

Montreal had a late power-play chance when former Habs forward Phillip Danault took a holding penalty with 2:12 to go in regulation, but the Canadiens couldn't capitalize.

"We obviously wanted the two points," said head coach Dominique Ducharme. "They took an early lead in the third period but we came back with a big goal from Jake. We had good chances around the net in the third period with [Mike Hoffman] and [Nick Suzuki] but we need to be difference-makers in those moments."

WATCH | Kempe strikes in OT to lift Kings over Habs:

Kings Adrian Kempe's overtime winner sinks Habs

3 years ago
Duration 1:12
Kings forward Adrian Kempe scored the overtime winner Tuesday night as Los Angeles Kings defeated Montreal 3-2 for their sixth straight win.

The Canadiens fell to 1-2-1 on their five-game homestand. With only three wins in 14 games this season, last season's Stanley Cup finalists are searching for answers.

"Last year was one of the most fun years I've had and there's still a lot left in this year but it's been one of the more frustrating ones," said Evans. "We work so hard in practice, we work so hard in games, we're a tight team.

"Everyone would take a bullet for each other. So we've just got to get back to it."

Danault did not record a point in his first game at Bell Centre since signing with the Kings as a free agent. He got a standing ovation after a special presentation in the first period but was also booed almost every time he had the puck.

"Playing in front of the Montreal crowd was a great honour and it was very emotional," he said.

Los Angeles' Phillip Danault stickhandles the puck away from Montreal's Christian Dvorak during the first period. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press)

The Canadiens opened the scoring at 15:03 of the first period when Chiarot scored after a scramble.

"I think we came out really excited in the first, we were focused and ready to go," said Evans. "I think the past few days we've had some really good starts and I think we kind of let off the gas a little bit."

Los Angeles pulled even at 4:56 of the second period when Lemieux beat Allen with a powerful shot in the top left corner. The Kings took a 2-1 lead just six seconds into the third period.

Iafallo broke down the side after the opening faceoff and fooled Allen with a wrist shot. Evans tied the game at 13:22 of the third after beating Tobias Bjornfoot with a nifty move near the faceoff circle.

Los Angeles was coming off a 5-1 victory in Toronto a night earlier.

"[The] good thing for us is that we found a way to win on back-to-back nights," said Kings head coach Todd McLellan. "The gas tank was running low but there was enough in it to win."

Add some “good” to your morning and evening.

Get up to speed on what's happening in sports. Delivered weekdays.

...

The next issue of The Buzzer will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in the Subscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.