The Carolina Hurricanes entered Game 1 looking calm, sharp, and fully in control of the postseason pace. They had rolled through the first two rounds without a loss, and their long break suggested a rested team ready to keep that run going. Instead, the Montreal Canadiens arrived with the confidence of a club that had already survived two elimination games on the road, and they turned the series opener into a 6-2 rout that exposed every weakness in Carolina’s structure.
This was more than a hot start. It was a statement about timing, pressure, and execution. Montreal played with urgency from the opening shift, while Carolina looked as if the pause between rounds had dulled its edge. The result was a wild first period that flipped the mood in Raleigh and changed the tone of the conference final before it had time to settle.
A First Period Carolina Could Not Contain
Seth Jarvis gave the home side a quick lift by scoring just 33 seconds in, and for a moment it felt like the Hurricanes had preserved their playoff rhythm. That feeling vanished almost immediately. Cole Caufield answered with the equalizer, and Montreal never allowed Carolina to reset.
Phillip Danault then scored on a clean breakaway after a sharp transition play from Alexandre Carrier, putting the Canadiens ahead and forcing Carolina to chase the game far earlier than expected. Alexandre Texier added another goal soon after, and then rookie Ivan Demidov produced the kind of finish that makes a playoff game feel out of reach. In less than 12 minutes, Montreal had turned one goal down into a 4-1 lead.
| Time | Scorer | Assist | Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| 00:33 | Seth Jarvis | Unassisted | 1-0 Carolina |
| About 03:00 | Cole Caufield | Nick Suzuki | 1-1 |
| 04:00 | Phillip Danault | Alexandre Carrier | 2-1 Montreal |
| 08:00 | Alexandre Texier | Nick Suzuki | 3-1 Montreal |
| 11:32 | Ivan Demidov | Nick Suzuki | 4-1 Montreal |
Why Montreal’s Game Plan Worked
The best way to understand the upset is to look at the style clash. Carolina wanted to squeeze the life out of Montreal with heavy forechecking, quick pressure, and repeated zone time. That approach usually wears opponents down. On this night, though, Montreal had the answer ready.
The Canadiens moved the puck quickly and escaped pressure before Carolina could fully lock the zone down. They used the middle of the ice, made crisp outlet passes, and attacked the open space left behind when Hurricanes defenders stepped up too high. That created rush chances, and rush chances became goals. Montreal did not just survive the pressure; it turned it against Carolina.
Jake Evans said the execution was sharp from the start, and that showed. The Canadiens looked connected, while the Hurricanes looked rushed and flat. Passing lanes disappeared, coverages slipped, and Carolina’s top players struggled to impose themselves on the game.
Goaltending Made the Gap Even Bigger
Frederik Andersen had been one of the storylines of the entire playoff run. Entering the series, he carried elite numbers and the confidence that comes with near-perfect form. Game 1 was a much harsher test. Montreal’s early wave of chances left him exposed, and Carolina’s defensive breakdowns made his job almost impossible.
Andersen allowed five goals on 21 shots, a rare rough night for a goaltender who had looked nearly untouchable. At the other end, Jakub Dobes recovered after the opening goal and delivered a steady performance. He stopped 24 of 26 shots and gave Montreal the calm it needed once the lead was established.
Goaltending snapshot
Andersen faced traffic, breakaways, and little support in front of him. Dobes faced pressure later in the game, but Montreal’s early cushion let him settle in. The difference was not only in saves; it was in the confidence each team played with after the first period.
Montreal Kept the Foot Down
Carolina tried to respond in the second and third periods, and Eric Robinson did briefly trim the margin. But Montreal never let the game drift. Juraj Slafkovsky added two goals in the final frame, including an empty-netter, to close the door for good and make the final score even more lopsided.
Nick Suzuki quietly ran the offence with three assists, and his impact was bigger than the score sheet alone. He controlled pace, found seams, and helped turn defensive recoveries into immediate threats. Montreal did not need one star to carry the night. It had a line of players who each found a way to matter.
What Comes Next in the Series
There is a long way to go, and the Hurricanes are too disciplined to stay down for long. Rod Brind’Amour’s group will adjust, tighten its gaps, and likely look far different in Game 2. Still, the opener matters because it showed that Carolina can be exposed when its structure breaks under pace.
Montreal also learned something valuable: it can skate with one of the NHL’s toughest teams and win decisively if it plays with speed and detail. That makes this series much more interesting. The Canadiens did not steal Game 1 by accident. They earned it by being faster, cleaner, and more decisive in every critical area.
If the first game is any indication, this conference final may be less about Carolina’s perfect run and more about whether Montreal can keep forcing the Hurricanes to play on its terms.
