It happened at 13:21 of the third period; a banal play in the game, but one dripping with symbolism as well.
The
Vancouver Canucks entered the
Montreal Canadiens’ zone, the puck got to all-world defenceman
Quinn Hughes along the left boards, just above the hashmarks, and he let go of a shot that went directly into the shin pads of Montreal defenceman
Alexandre Carrier.
It was, more than 53 minutes into the game, the first time the Canucks attempted a shot on the Canadiens goal at five-on-five with
Kirby Dach and
Alex Newhook on the ice. A few seconds later, the Canucks actually got a shot on goal with both players on the ice. That was it for the entire game.
Other than a five-second span late in the game, the Canucks did not get a sniff of the Canadiens net with Dach and Newhook on at five-on-five the entire night.
And why is that symbolic? Because Dach and Newhook have spent entire games this season defending in their own end, chasing after the puck and giving up shot after shot after shot, breaking any momentum the Canadiens might have built on their previous shifts and handing it back to the opposition.
Both players have been searching for something for much of the season, much like the Canadiens have been searching for something for much of the season. So to have them perform like this on the very night the Canadiens moved into a playoff spot in the Eastern Conference after a 5-4 overtime win makes it difficult not to link the two in some way — especially when it comes to Dach.