BEST MOVES MADE: Signing Tyler Toffoli, Corey Perry, Jake Allen --The addition of three Stanley Cup champions this offseason gave the Canadiens plenty of experience. Toffoli, who won the Cup with the Los Angeles Kings in 2014, provided much-needed scoring from the start of the 56-game regular season, and the forward led the Canadiens with 28 goals. Perry, who won the Cup with the Anaheim Ducks in 2007, began the season on the taxi squad before the forward worked his way into a regular spot in the lineup, ultimately forming a formidable fourth line with Eric Staal and Joel Armia. Allen, who backed up Jordan Binnington when the St. Louis Blues won the Cup in 2019, became a crucial addition after Carey Price sustained a concussion. Brought in to serve as a veteran backup to Price, Allen was thrust into the No. 1 role in the middle of the playoff race and helped the Canadiens clinch a berth as the No. 4 seed in the Scotia North Division.
BEST MOVE NOT MADE: Retaining assistant coach Luke Richardson --Assistant coach Dominique Ducharme took over as coach after Claude Julien was fired Feb. 24, and associate coach Kirk Muller was also fired. Canadiens general manager Marc Bergevin fired goaltending coach Stephane Waite on March 2, replacing him with Sean Burke, who was named director of goaltending. That left Richardson as the only member of the coaching staff whose role did not change during the regular season. His AHL coaching experience with Binghamton from 2012-16 and the relationships he cultivated during his tenure with Montreal made him the natural choice to assume coaching duties prior to Game 3 against Vegas after Ducharme tested positive for COVID-19. Ducharme said he expects to return for Game 3 of the Cup Final.
SIGNATURE WIN (REGULAR SEASON): April 16 vs. Calgary Flames --The Canadiens needed a win in the second game of a two-game set against the Flames at Bell Centre in order to increase their lead in Scotia North Division playoff race. Toffoli scored his second goal of the game with 4:15 remaining in the third period and Allen made 28 saves in a 2-1 win, handing Calgary a defeat that ended its three-game winning streak. "We understand what's ahead of us and what's behind us," Allen said. "We're not looking behind, we're looking at chasing the guys ahead of us. So we realize every game is important." The Canadiens played a three-game set the following week in Calgary, with the Flames winning the first two before Montreal responded with Toffoli again scoring the winning goal in a 2-1 victory. The win put the Canadiens six points ahead of Calgary for fourth place in the North and gave them breathing room down the stretch.