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Quick third-period flurry sends Canadiens past Canucks
David Kirouac-Imagn Images

Mike Matheson and Juraj Slafkovsky scored goals 38 seconds apart to break a third-period tie and send the host Montreal Canadiens to a 6-3 victory over the slumping Vancouver Canucks on Monday.

Alexandre Carrier tallied twice while Noah Dobson and Oliver Kapanen added a goal apiece for the Canadiens, who have won four of their past five outings.

Montreal's Ivan Demidov collected three assists while Nick Suzuki and Alexandre Texier each posted a pair of helpers. Canadiens goaltender Jakub Dobes made 20 saves.

Elias Pettersson, Evander Kane and Max Sasson replied for the Canucks, who have lost seven consecutive games (0-5-2) and sit at the bottom of the league standings.

Vancouver goalie Nikita Tolopilo stopped 35 shots.

With the back-and-forth affair tied at 3-3, Matheson put the Canadiens ahead for good 29 seconds into the third period when he gained the puck just inside the blue line and ripped a shot past a screen.

Slafkovsky made it a 5-3 game at 1:07 by unloading a high shot from the right faceoff dot as part of a three-point outing.

From there both clubs all but coasted to the finish line to end a clash in which Vancouver twice held a lead despite being thoroughly outclassed from the drop of the puck.

Although the Canadiens held all of the momentum from the start, Pettersson opened the scoring at 11:53 of the first period. He pounced on a rebound to net his third goal in five outings.

Dobson drew Montreal even on the power play by firing a perfect shot through a screen at 18:13 of the opening frame. He earned his second goal in three games.

Kane put the visitors ahead a second time two minutes into the second period by chipping home a rebound chance for his first goal in 12 games.

However, the Canadiens took a lead thanks to the most productive shift in Carrier's career. The defenseman tied the clash by converting a shot from the slot for his first goal in 44 games at 4:31 of the middle frame.

Carrier needed just 20 more seconds for his next tally. He made it a 3-2 game by driving to the net on the rush and redirecting Slafkovsky's crossing pass for his first career two-goal game.

Sasson buried the one-timer to end a 2-on-1 rush to even the clash before the midway point, only to see Montreal respond with three unanswered markers in the third period to pull away.

This article first appeared on Field Level Media and was syndicated with permission.

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