Comeback comes up short, Thrashers lose
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By CHARLES ODUM
AP Sports Writer
ATLANTA (AP) -- Carey Price's busy night in the net was pretty easy, too.
Price made a quick recovery from the flu to stop 40 shots and help the Montreal Canadiens beat Atlanta 3-1 on Tuesday for their first win over the Thrashers in three tries this season.
Price stopped some shots at the net, but he gave credit to his defensive help which consistently forced the Thrashers to take most of their shots from the outside.
"It was busy out there, but it wasn't a lot of hard shots," Price said. "We kept most of the shots outside. It's not hard to stop 40 shots when they're from the outside."
Max Pacioretty, James Wisniewski and Brian Gionta scored for Montreal, which has won three of four.
Price stopped Atlanta's first 35 shots before Nik Antropov finally scored 14:14 into the third period to cut Montreal's lead to 2-1. Gionta scored an empty-net goal with 45 seconds remaining.
The Canadiens were outshot 41-23 but stopped the Thrashers' five power plays.
Atlanta coach Craig Ramsay and Montreal coach Jacques Martin agreed Price was the difference.
"I thought their goaltender made some really great saves on us, which increases the frustration," Ramsay said.
Added Martin: "You have to give the win to Carey. He played a strong game."
Price returned after missing one game with the flulike symptoms.
Montreal's Michael Cammalleri said the game "wasn't good on a lot of levels" but looked good in the standings as the Canadiens solidified their hold on sixth in the Eastern Conference.
"That was really good, to win a game when you didn't play very well," Cammalleri said.
The loss was another setback to the Thrashers' playoff hopes. Atlanta ended a five-game skid by beating Toronto 3-2 in overtime on Sunday. The Thrashers rallied from a 2-0 deficit against Toronto but couldn't complete the comeback attempt against Montreal.
The Thrashers, who are tied for 10th in the Eastern Conference, have lost 17 of 21.
Pacioretty's unassisted goal in the first period gave Montreal an early lead.
Atlanta's Anthony Stewart was called for cross checking as the first period ended. Wisniewski's power play goal 34 seconds into the second pushed Montreal's lead to 2-0.
Stewart complained after the game about the costly penalty which followed his hit on Roman Hamrlik.
"Their guy takes a slap shot at my foot like three seconds after the whistle blows and you have to respond," Stewart said. "I don't think it should have been called. I just gave him a little bump there, but that's the way it goes."
Price, who played in his second All-Star game this year, was less than 6 minutes away from his seventh shutout of the season when Antropov scored from outside the left circle. The New York Rangers' Henrik Lundqvist leads the NHL with eight shutouts.
Price withstood four Atlanta power plays in the first two periods. Following Montreal's fourth penalty kill, Atlanta trailed 2-0 despite a 21-6 advantage in shots on goal.
The Thrashers had two players in uniform who were acquired Monday: forwards Radek Dvorak, who came to Atlanta in a trade with the Florida Panthers, and Rob Schremp, who was claimed off waivers from the New York Islanders.
NOTES: Montreal D Jaroslav Spacek is expected to miss four to six weeks following arthroscopic surgery on his right knee. The team announced the timetable after Spacek visited Dr. James Andrews in Birmingham, Ala. ... Atlanta's Chris Mason stopped 20 shots. ... Thrashers G Ondrej Pavelec missed his second straight game with an undisclosed injury. ... The Canadiens were slow on substitutions early and drew two minor penalties for too many men on the ice.
Updated March 1, 2011