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Habs survive Subban ejection, hang on vs. Sens

Senators Canadiens Hockey

Montreal Canadiens goalie Carey Price watches the puck as Ottawa Senators’ Erik Condra (22) and Canadiens’ Tom Gilbert (77) battle in front of the net during first period NHL playoff action in Montreal, Wednesday, April 15, 2015. (Paul Chiasson /The Canadian Press via AP) MANDATORY CREDIT

AP

The Montreal Canadiens probably didn’t draw it up this way - who could, really? - but they got what they wanted with a 1-0 series lead, besting the Ottawa Senators 4-3 on Wednesday.

The most eyebrow-raising stuff happened in the first 40 minutes. To start things off, the Senators managed a 1-0 lead after Andrei Markov’s unfortunate own-goal.

All bets were off in the second period, though, really. The wildest moment came when P.K. Subban received a game misconduct and five-minute major slashing penalty, but it really set the stage for a manic run of traded blows.

To start things off, Torrey Mitchell and Tomas Plekanec scored two goals less than 30 seconds apart to give the Canadiens a 2-1 lead.

Ottawa took advantage of the power-play opportunities afforded by the Subban call ... to an extent. Kyle Turris tied it up a little more than two minutes into that PP, yet a wild Lars Eller shortie made it 3-2 again.

The Senators managed one more tie thanks to Mika Zibanejad, but Brian Flynn’s tally ended up being the game-winner.

To review, six of the game’s seven goals happened in about a 10-minute span in the second period. This box score view of that scoring run may help illustrate the point more clearly:

sixgoals

James OBrien

Yeah, pretty crazy.

Ultimately, the Atlantic Division-winning Canadiens took a 1-0 series lead against the magical Senators, even with Max Pacioretty out of the lineup because of his injury issues and Subban only playing half the game.

In other words, clearly how Michel Therrien drew things up.