Kings at Canadiens | Recap

MONTREAL -- David Rittich made 26 saves for the Los Angeles Kings, who ended a three-game losing streak with a 4-1 win against the Montreal Canadiens at Bell Centre on Thursday.

Rittich was making his second consecutive start for the Kings after he allowed four goals on 14 shots and was replaced by Pheonix Copley in the second period of a 6-2 loss to the Toronto Maple Leafs on Wednesday.

Mikey Anderson, Alex Laferriere, Andreas Englund and Adrian Kempe scored, and Vladislav Gavrikov had two assists for Los Angeles (2-1-2), which allowed 14 goals in its past two games and was 0-1-2 in its past three.

“[Rittich] was huge for us tonight, just kind of being a backbone back there and us knowing if we break down at all, he’s going to bail us out,” Laferriere said. “So I thought he did an unbelievable job and he was ready to go tonight right from the start.”

LAK@MTL: Laferriere tips it in for the lead

Sam Montembeault made 28 saves in his third straight start for Montreal (2-3-0), which lost 6-3 to the Pittsburgh Penguins on Monday.

“I’m definitely disappointed,” Canadiens captain Nick Suzuki said. “I think it was an immature effort from us, especially with them playing yesterday and getting in late. I think we gave them too much life and let them feel comfortable in the game. So it’s on us to be a lot better than that.”

Montreal went 0-for-5 on the power play and allowed a shorthanded goal.

“Our team played really good defense and obviously ‘Ritter’ played unbelievable,” Laferriere said. “But I think it's just our resilience as a team. Our penalty kill was something we wanted to focus on tonight, and I thought they did an unbelievable job tonight keeping them off the scoreboard. So I think it just goes to show our resilience.”

LAK@MTL: Barron strikes first with a wraparound shot

Justin Barron scored on a wraparound at 7:02 of the first to give the Canadiens a 1-0 lead.

“We didn’t like that [goal] but the one thing was we felt we were playing really well,” Kings coach Jim Hiller said. “If you’re not playing well and they score first, you’re like, ‘OK, it’s going to take some time to get over this.’ That one, though, down the bench everybody was pretty calm and positive. We knew we were playing well.”

“After five or six shifts you get a pretty good sense of, ‘Is your team ready to play and are they going?’ And we were going from the drop of the puck, so we felt we could overcome that.”

Anderson tied it at 1-1 at 18:20 on a slap shot from the left point after Kempe won an offensive-zone draw.

Laferriere gave the Kings a 2-1 lead at 1:37 of the second period, redirecting Jordan Spence’s wrist shot past Montembeault.

Englund made it 3-1 at 17:02 of the third on a wrist shot from just inside the blue line. Kempe scored an empty-net goal with 48 seconds remaining and Montreal on the power play for the 4-1 final.

“Our forwards did a great job on the forecheck and backcheck,” Gavrikov said. “They tried to keep it tight and create some turnovers, so that’s how the chances started.”

LAK@MTL: Anderson fires in a slap shot to tie it up

Lane Hutson played 30:05, a season high, for the Canadiens, who were down to five defensemen for the second and third periods. The 20-year-old rookie appreciated the increased workload.

“It means a lot, but obviously you want to get more out of that opportunity,” Hutson said. “It’s a lot of ice and you want to keep taking steps in the right direction.”

Montreal was without Mike Matheson, who sustained an upper-body injury and did not return after the first.

“Mike is one of the biggest parts of our D-corps,” said Canadiens defenseman David Savard, who played his 800th game on Thursday. “Losing him, he’s playing against top lines, playing power play, and we want him on the ice. Losing him was a big loss, but we’ve got to figure out a way to get the two points even if a player goes out. I think all the guys have to step up and do the job, but obviously losing Mike was big.”

NOTES: The Kings have won seven straight against Montreal, their longest active streak against any team. … Kevin Fiala, who scored three goals in his previous two games, shot wide on a penalty shot at 7:10 of the third period after he was hooked by Hutson on a breakaway. … Alex Turcotte has a three-game point streak (one goal, two assists) for the Kings. … Suzuki has four assists across a three-game point streak.