Wendell Cruz-USA TODAY Sports

Chris Kreider scored a tiebreaking power-play goal 3:59 into the third period, Artemi Panarin added a goal and three assists and the host New York Rangers earned a 5-2 victory over the Montreal Canadiens on Sunday night.

The Rangers (53-21-4, 110 points) matched the team record for regular-season wins set in 2014-15 and won for the eighth time in nine games (8-1-0).

Kreider scored in the third period on a power play for the third straight game by scoring on a quick deflection.

After Montreal defenseman Joel Armia took a hooking penalty, Kreider scored his 38th goal 54 seconds later. Panarin took a shot from the middle of the ice near the blue line that went under Jake Evans and under Mike Matheson's skate.

Kreider was all alone in front and quickly tipped the puck under Montreal Cayden Primeau's glove for his 17th power-play goal of the season. It was Kreider's 109th career power-play tally, surpassing Rod Gilbert for second in team history.

Panarin continued his pursuit of Jaromir Jagr's single-season points record by scoring 2:10 after Kreider's tally. Panarin extended his points streak to nine games and his 115 points are eight shy of Jagr's team record set in 2005-06.

Panarin notched his fourth four-point game of the season when he finished a give-and-go with Alexis Lafreniere, who capped the four-goal third by scoring an empty-netter.

Mika Zibanejad (two goals, assist) added a power-play goal in the second period before scoring his second of the game with 3:04 left as the Rangers extended their Metropolitan Division lead over the Carolina Hurricanes to five points. New York also moved three ahead of the Boston Bruins in the race for the President's Trophy.

New York goalie Igor Shesterkin made 26 saves.

Primeau made 41 saves.

Cole Caulfield scored late in the first period and Alex Newhook also tallied as the Canadiens (29-36-12, 70 points) dropped their third straight.

Caufield scored with 30 seconds left when he was alone at the left side of the net after deflecting a long pass from David Savard. After being stopped on his initial shot, he controlled his rebound and slid the puck under Shesterkin for his 24th goal.

Zibanejad tied it 10 seconds into New York's second power play when his pass from the right circle intended for Kreider at the edge of the crease banked off Armia's skate.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Detroit Lions dominate PFF's top-25 players under 25
Hall of Famer, legendary Raiders offensive lineman dead at 86
Report: Cavs owner 'would never' trade Donovan Mitchell to this team
Kim Mulkey adds legendary LSU alum to coaching staff
Insider details LeBron James' role in Lakers' head-coaching search
Cardinals switch up offensive line, move 2023 first-rounder to new position
Commanders poach another key overseer of Lions rebuild
Commanders to hire veteran executive as player personnel director
Guardians designate outfielder for assignment
Patriots' Drake Maye starts OTAs in surprising position
Bettors are buying Bronny James hype before the 2024 NBA Draft
Mets release veteran infielder
Anderson Silva, Chael Sonnen will finish off their trilogy in a boxing ring
Victor Wembanyama, Chet Holmgren highlight 2023-24 All-Rookie team
Jaguars' Doug Pederson discusses Trevor Lawrence contract extension
Saints, star CB 'moving forward' following trade chatter
Pacers ride historic shooting performance to Game 7 blowout of Knicks
Timberwolves mount incredible second-half comeback to stun Nuggets in Game 7
Xander Schauffele proves doubters wrong with historic win at 2024 PGA Championship
Four things we learned from Joey Logano's All-Star Race win at North Wilkesboro

Want more NHL news?

Join the hundreds of thousands of fans who start their day with Yardbarker's Morning Bark, the best newsletter in sports.