National Hockey League
Canadiens 4, Lightning 3, SO
National Hockey League

Canadiens 4, Lightning 3, SO

Published Feb. 13, 2013 4:59 a.m. ET

A major meltdown nearly cost the Montreal Canadiens a victory.

Carey Price stopped all three shots in the shootout, David Desharnais had the lone goal in the tiebreaker, and the Canadiens rebounded after blowing a three-goal lead to beat the Tampa Bay Lightning 4-3 on Tuesday night.

''You know what? We came to win this hockey game, and this is what we did,'' Montreal coach Michel Therrien said. ''And we were almost perfect for 54 minutes. We opened the door. We will learn from it.''

Victor Hedman scored twice and Sami Salo added a power-play goal during the final six minutes of regulation as the Lightning tied it at 3.

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Tampa Bay's Anders Lindback made a series of strong saves during a Montreal power play during overtime. He finished with 31 saves, including six in the extra session.

Price was bidding for his 17th NHL shutout and first since Feb. 11, 2012, when Hedman scored with 5:56 to play.

''At the end of the day, as long as we're getting wins, that's what really matters,'' Price said. ''But, it would be nice to close out one, that's for sure.''

Hedman cut the deficit to 3-2 on an in-close goal that stood up following a video review with 1:43 remaining. Salo tied it from just inside the blue line with 43.3 seconds left.

Brian Gionta, P.K. Subban and Travis Moen scored for the Canadiens, who were 0-2-1 over their previous three games. Price, who stopped 21 shots during regulation, made shootout saves against Hedman, Martin St. Louis and Steven Stamkos.

''That's not the way we wanted to do it,'' Gionta said. ''We had a good two periods, then we sat back in the third and they got themselves back into it.''

Tampa Bay, which opened the season 6-1, has since lost five in a row (0-4-1).

''In the third period, our character showed up, again,'' Tampa Bay coach Guy Boucher said. ''We have to build on a positive. That's extremely positive.''

After Subban scored on a blue line shot at 8:21 of the second, Moen made it 3-0 from the low slot with 1:06 to go in the period. Moen snapped his 21-game goal drought, dating to Dec. 31, 2011, against Florida.

Gionta put Montreal ahead 1-0 when he tipped a pass through the crease from Tomas Plekanec past Lindback during a 5-on-3 power play with 43 seconds left in the first.

Hedman received a roughing penalty that set up Tampa Bay's two-man disadvantage. The Lightning allowed one goal on seven short-handed situations.

''A lot of the penalties ... I won't say anything,'' Boucher said.

Tampa Bay went 1 for 5 on the power play.

The Canadiens had a couple of quality scoring chances early in the first. Lindback made a save on Colby Armstrong's backhander during a 2-on-1, and Andrei Markov hit the post with a drive.

Lindback also made a lunging blocker stop on Markov's rebound attempt.

Price stopped an in-close redirection by Vincent Lecavalier late in the first, and had a glove save on Stamkos' shot from the right circle during a second-period power play.

Montreal's Lars Eller had two assists.

NOTES: Tampa Bay LW Ryan Malone sat out his second straight game and could miss three to four weeks because of an undisclosed lower-body injury. ... It was Gionta's first goal in nine games. ... Lightning RW Richard Panik, recalled from Syracuse of the AHL on Monday, made his NHL debut. ... Armstrong has gone 24 games without scoring a goal. He assisted on Moen's goal for first point in 17 games.

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