All Lalonde could do was smile, looking over at the fathers and mentors who were celebrating Detroit's second straight overtime victory while waiting for the Red Wings players, coaches and training staff to join in the fun.
"We had a goal of six points on this little stretch with the dads' trip," Lalonde said. "We had to get two before we got four. Now we got four, and I just think it's a bigger picture. We're pushing to play significant games."
Detroit started fast against Montreal, taking a one-goal lead at 3:54 of the first period on Michael Rasmussen's ninth goal of the season. Jonatan Berggren and Oskar Sundqvist both found the back of the net in the second for the Red Wings, who headed into the second intermission tied, 3-3, against the Canadiens. After a scoreless third, Robby Fabbri scored the game-winner at 2:36 of overtime.
"We gave them a little bit too much tonight," said Fabbri, who has five points on four goals and one assist in 11 games since returning from his third career ACL tear. "But sometimes you get into those games, and you just gotta calm down and get back to your game as quick as possible. We did that."
Red Wings goalie Ville Husso made 20 saves for Detroit (21-18-8; 50 points), which is 3-1-1 over its past five games. The Canadiens (20-25-4; 44 points) earned a point in the loss.
Moritz Seider had three assists on Thursday, marking his fifth multi-point game of the season. He became the first Red Wings defenseman in franchise history with a trio of three-assist games at age 21 or younger.
NEXT UP: The Red Wings will play their final game before the 2023 NHL All-Star Break on Friday night, squaring off against the New York Islanders at UBS Arena. Puck drop is set for 7 p.m., and will be televised exclusively on ESPN.