Capitals 2 — Canadian 6 | Armia, Matheson and the spring embellishments

Samuel Montembeault was very proud to pull up his shorts to reveal the beautiful big trace of puck on the top of his thigh. ” It’s because of him. If you give him time, his shot is very heavy. »



“Him” is Joel Armia, the unexpected hero of the Canadiens’ 6-2 triumph over the uninspired Washington Capitals on Thursday. The kind of memorable victory for the bravest supporters of the Habs, those who can now boast of having lost a cap for him. Armia indeed signed the second hat trick in the victory.

We’re talking about an unexpected hero because before that magical Thursday, Armia had scored exactly 17 goals since the pandemic changed our world. Seventeen goals in 140 games.

On the other hand, it should come as no surprise that he scores a hat trick. The refrain is familiar, but Armia is endowed with enviable skills, enough for Buffalo Sabers scouts to fall in love with him in 2011 and draft him in 16e rank. These skills, we saw them in particular in his first two months in Montreal, in the fall of 2018, but also during the 2021 playoffs.


PHOTO ERIC BOLTE, USA TODAY SPORTS

Rafael Harvey-Pinard (49) and Craig Smith (16)

“It seems so easy for him,” said Rafaël Harvey-Pinard, his linemate on Thursday. Everything is natural. His hands, his throw… he’s a sniper. We saw it tonight. His goals were on shots you don’t often see in a game. »

On some rare evenings, Armia looks like the player described by Harvey-Pinard. “Probably when I win battles and create chances, believes the Finn. I know I can also score. But too often I am my own worst enemy by being too hard on myself.

“It happens when I miss chances, if I lose a battle. I’ve always been like that. I need to handle this better. »

Armia says he is working on it with Jean-François Ménard, the Habs mental preparation specialist. Martin St-Louis also tries to “talk to him a lot” to help him. “Less good players have a lot of confidence and very good players who have fragile confidence,” recalled the CH head coach.

“As simple as it sounds, you can’t play a perfect game,” Armia said. I have to understand it. Everybody makes mistakes. You can’t mope over these mistakes. »

End of season points


PHOTO FRANÇOIS ROY, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

Michael Matheson

Michael Matheson is another who took advantage of the visit of the Capitals to fatten his statistics. The Quebec defender had three assists to set a personal-high in an NHL season with 33 points in just 45 games. His production rate since the All-Star Game is staggering: 25 points in 28 outings.

It’s not really a question of having the green light. When the chance is there, take it. You have to know when to go, what the risk-reward ratio is.

Michael Matheson

Without taking anything away from Matheson, it is important to remember that his points were amassed in a context where the Habs are playing without stakes. His 25-point streak in 28 games began at the All-Star Game break, when the team was virtually eliminated. However, history has taught us that at the end of the season in the water, we must be wary of players who start piling up points at an unusual rate.

Think Rem Pitlick, who scored 21 points in 37 games after the All-Star Game break last year. When the counters were reset last fall, he became a marginal player. Alex Galchenyuk, at the end of the 2015-2016 campaign, had scored 19 goals in 32 games after the break, en route to his first-finally only-season of 30 goals.

Conversely, Jeff Petry had hatched offensively in the second half of the infamous 2017-2018 season. It was his first of four straight 40-point seasons. What he had demonstrated that spring was no frills and to see Matheson skating, it is tempting to believe that he could experience the same type of outbreak as Petry.

Either way, blacking out the score sheet, even at the end of the schedule, doesn’t hurt anyone. “When you experience offensive success, recalls Armia, it allows you to relax more, it puts you in a positive state of mind instead of focusing on negativity. »

The Canadian will play two of its last three games against rivals (Boston and Toronto) who can no longer move in the standings by the playoffs. It is therefore possible that these games without stake for the playoffs allow some to improve their statistics. But it’s only next fall that we will distinguish between what was the start of something and what was just an upturn in spring.

Up: Jake Evans


PHOTO ERIC BOLTE, USA TODAY SPORTS

Jake Evans (71) and Sonny Milano (15)

Two assists and success in faceoffs. He also obtained one of his assists on a faceoff won. He has six points in his last seven games.

Down: Chris Wideman


PHOTO PETER MCCABE, THE CANADIAN PRESS

Conor Sheary (73) and Chris Wideman (6)

His clumsiness with the puck forced the CH to spend long sequences in its territory.

The number of the match: 145 min 7 s

This is the time that elapsed between the goal of Nick Suzuki on Thursday and that of Rafaël Harvey-Pinard on March 30. In real time, some 167 hours have passed, but it would be dishonest to count the days off in the lethargy of the CH.

In details

Two shorthanded goals


PHOTO PETER MCCABE, THE CANADIAN PRESS

Nick Suzuki beats Darcy Kuemper in the second period.

The Canadian scored two shorthanded goals on Thursday night. That’s as much as in the previous 37 games combined! On the first goal, Joel Edmundson spotted Nick Suzuki, hidden behind the Capitals defense. The captain of the Canadian escaped, then thwarted Darcy Kuemper with a masterful feint. The second came from Joel Armia, a shot into the slot after a face-off won by Jake Evans. Let’s take this opportunity to highlight the good evenings of Evans (60%), Suzuki (57%) and Chris Tierney (78%) in the face-off circle.

Successful comeback for Harvey-Pinard


PHOTO PETER MCCABE, THE CANADIAN PRESS

Rafael Harvey-Pinard and Joel Armia

Rafaël Harvey-Pinard was back in action after a two-game absence to treat an injury. He was composing a new trio, with Nick Suzuki and Joel Armia. The young Quebec forward had a good game, with an assist and a differential of +2. He particularly stood out in numerical inferiority, when he blocked a powerful shot from Alexander Ovechkin, which he then converted into two against one with Nick Suzuki. Did it pinch? ” No. The puck hit me in a good place this time! »

Big night for Johnathan Kovacevic


PHOTO DAVID KIROUAC, USA TODAY SPORTS

Stefan Noesen (23) and Johnathan Kovacevic (26)

With his game rather erased, Johnathan Kovacevic is rarely found in our observations. But against the Capitals, he participated more in the attack than usual. He finished the night with six shots on target — a personal best. For the first time in the last 12 games, he also exceeded 20 minutes of play.

They said

We really didn’t give anything. We let them work 4v3 to my left and we had a guy on him. If you give him time to shoot on reception, he will make you pay.

Samuel Montembeault, about Alexander Ovechkin on the power play

It is a step in the right direction. We’ve been talking about trying to sprint to the finish line for three or four games. But we were crawling a bit. Today the goal was to try to start jogging. That’s what we did and it might help to sprint eventually.

Martin St Louis

It’s a very good feeling. I don’t know how to express it. We have enough to build for the next game.

Joel Armia

It’s not something you can do often. We hope that the teams will not see it too much!

Michael Matheson on Joel Armia’s second goal from a planned game

It’s amazing the things he does with the puck, but also without the puck. I think he’s in the top three or five in the league at protecting the puck. And you saw his throw tonight. It’s really special. I was happy that he pulled off his hat trick.

Michael Matheson, about Joell Armia


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