National Hockey League
Montreal 5, Toronto 3
When: 7:00 PM ET, Saturday, October 24, 2015
Where: Bell Centre, Montreal, Quebec
Referees: Eric Furlatt, Wes McCauley
Linesmen: Brian Murphy, Derek Nansen
Attendance: 21288

MONTREAL -- Goaltender Carey Price was Carey Price and the Montreal Canadiens' special teams did the rest.

The Maple Leafs tossed 52 shots at Price but a short-handed goal and a power-play tally were the difference in the Canadiens' 5-3 win over Toronto on Saturday night at the Bell Centre.

"He was solid," Leafs captain Dion Phaneuf said of Price. "We get those opportunities, it's our job to get one. I thought we generated a lot but generating doesn't count. You've got to find a way. But we also hit how many posts? That's not an excuse, that's reality. I thought we generated a lot but we'll come back to work tomorrow, head up and get back to it."

Goaltender Jonathan Bernier made 22 saves for the Maple Leafs (1-4-2).

Defenseman P.K. Subban, left wingers Lars Eller and Max Pacioretty, center David Desharnais and right winger Brendan Gallagher scored for the Canadiens (9-0-0, who became the first team in NHL history to win nine straight games in regulation to start the season.

"I think all we've accomplished is a good start," Subban said. "That's really all it is. There's a lot of hockey left to be played.

"Everybody's going to be talking about a lot of different things for the next couple of days and that's fine but for our team, it's just about the next game and getting prepared to play our best game."

Center Leo Komarov, left winger James van Riemsdyk and defenseman Morgan Rielly scored for Toronto.

The Canadiens' rejuvenated power play broke the ice at 10:53 of the first period. Pacioretty, along the left wall, fed Subban at the top of the right circle and the defenseman wired a shot that bobbled past Bernier for his first of the season.

Eller doubled Montreal's lead at 1:54 of the second.

Center Alex Galchenyuk showed off his moves with a dangle around Rielly before getting a shot off. Bernier made the save, but the rebound bounced out to Eller, who cashed in on the open side of the net.

The Leafs cut the lead in half less than a minute later. Defenseman Scott Harrington's shot from the point was deflected in front by van Riemsdyk. The puck went to the side of the net, where Komarov was there to send it past Price.

It took Montreal less than two minutes to restore its two-goal lead.

Defenseman Alexei Emelin got the puck out of the Canadiens' end with a quick pass to left winger Tomas Fleischmann, who immediately dished off to Desharnais. The diminutive center carried the puck from the neutral zone in and tried for a backhand feed to Fleischmann, but the puck hit Grabner's skate before sliding past Bernier.

Van Riemsdyk brought Toronto to within one once again at 6:36, capitalizing on Montreal's struggle to clear its zone. Phaneuf's point shot hit the back boards and bounced out to the winger to Price's left.

Pacioretty put the Canadiens up 4-2 when he skated two-on-one with center Tomas Plekanec and fooled the Leafs into thinking he was going to pass before sniping five-hole on Bernier at 15:30.

"(Our special teams) have to be better," Rielly said. "Whenever you have a goal against on the power play it's not a good sign, but we're still learning. We're still working at that. We have to improve on it, score a power play goal there at the end and make it a game."

Gallagher extended the lead on the power play at 19:46. Subban took blue-line partner Andrei Markov's feed and sent a nifty shot pass to Gallagher at the side of the net for the easy tip in.

"We're moving pucks quickly," Pacioretty said of the Canadiens' recent success on the power play, which scored multiple goals in back-to-back games.

NOTES: Called up by the Maple Leafs on Friday, C Byron Froese made his NHL debut. ... Toronto was without C Tyler Bozak (lower body) and D Jake Gardiner (undisclosed). Both were placed on injured reserve Thursday. The Maple Leafs scratched C Peter Holland and D Frank Corrado. ... Montreal used the same lineup as in its first eight games, with LW Paul Byron, D Jarred Tinordi and D Greg Pateryn as healthy scratches. ... The game marked Maple Leafs RW Pierre-Alexandre Parenteau's return to Montreal after he was traded to Toronto early last summer. ... Canadiens D Andrei Markov's five-point effort on Friday night moved him into a tie with Bob Gainey for 23rd on the club's career points list among all position players.
Top Game Performances
 
Toronto   Montreal
Leo Komarov 2 Points Max Pacioretty 2
Leo Komarov 1 Goals Max Pacioretty 1
Leo Komarov 1 Assists Max Pacioretty 1
N/A Power Play Goals P.K. Subban 1
N/A Short Handed Goals Max Pacioretty 1
Jonathan Bernier .815 Save Percentage Carey Price .942
Jonathan Bernier 22 Saves Carey Price 49
Team Stats Summary
 
Team Shots Goals Power Play Penalty Kill Penalty Mins Face Offs Won
Toronto 52 3 0-5 2-4 10 41
Montreal 27 5 2-4 5-5 12 34
Upcoming Games
  • Montreal will play their next game on the road against Vancouver. The Canadiens have a W/L % of 1.000 after a win and 1.000 after a loss.
  • Toronto will play their next game at home against Arizona. The Maple Leafs have a W/L % of .000 after a win and .167 after a loss.