Habs have hope down the middle with post-season play of Suzuki, Kotkaniemi
TORONTO — Marc Bergevin’s Montreal Canadiens entered the NHL’s restart amid questions over whether they deserved to be given a playoff lifeline. They leave Toronto with heads held high as worthy participants — and with a potential remedy for one of the team’s shortcomings.
The Canadiens were eliminated from the playoffs after a tough first-round series with top-ranked Philadelphia, falling 3-2 to the Flyers in Friday’s decisive Game 6. Playing a competitive first-round series with the Flyers after shocking the heavily favoured Pittsburgh Penguins in a best-of-five qualification series is a respectable fate for a club that ranked last among the 24 teams entering the restart.
Among the bright spots for the Canadiens in Toronto was the play of young centres Nick Suzuki and Jesperi Kotkaniemi, a blessing for a team that has had trouble finding depth down the middle. Bergevin, the team’s general manager, said both centres elevated their game in the post-season.
Suzuki had four goals and three assists in 10 post-season games, including both Montreal goals Friday as the team fought to stave off elimination. The 21-year-old built off a solid rookie campaign that saw him post 13 goals and 28 assists in 71 games before the 2019-20 season was suspended.