Canadiens vs. Ducks
Anaheim, CA – The Anaheim Ducks won more medals than any other NHL team at the Olympics, but they haven’t been nearly as successful since their return from Canada.
The Ducks will try again for their first win since the Vancouver Games on Sunday night in a rare home matchup with the Montreal Canadiens.
Oddsmakers from online sports book Brobury Sports.com have made the Ducks –170 money line favorites for Sunday’s game against the Canadiens. Current NHL Public Betting Information shows that 52% of more than 1350 bets for this game have been placed on the Ducks -170.
Ryan Getzlaf, Corey Perry and captain Scott Niedermayer helped Canada win the gold-medal game against a United States team that featured Bobby Ryan and Ryan Whitney, who was dealt earlier this week to Edmonton. Teemu Selanne and former Canadien Saku Koivu also won bronze with Finland.
With the seven medals, the Ducks tied the 1998 Pittsburgh Penguins and 2002 Detroit Red Wings for the most by one NHL team.
However, Anaheim (30-27-7) didn’t get the benefit of any momentum from its Olympic success. In their first game back, the Ducks blew an early two-goal lead to Colorado on Wednesday night, having their franchise-record 11-game home winning streak snapped with a 4-3 defeat.
They followed that with a 4-0 loss in Phoenix on Saturday night. The Ducks, averaging 3.1 goals since the beginning of February, came up empty on seven power-play opportunities.
"The failure to execute when we had scoring chances was the disturbing part for us,” coach Randy Carlyle said. "It seems like right now we’re not getting anywhere near the performance level that’s required. I think everybody can do more."
Carlyle’s team, five points behind eighth-place Detroit in the Western Conference, will try to make up ground during a seven-game homestand that begins Sunday, but it will face three division leaders during that stretch in San Jose, Chicago and Colorado.
The Canadiens, meanwhile, are trying to wrap up a successful road trip in their first visit to Anaheim since a 3-1 loss on March 9, 2008. Since the Ducks began play in 1993-94, Montreal has made nine trips there, winning five times.
Anaheim, however, has taken the past three overall meetings, including a 6-4 road victory in the last matchup Oct. 25, 2008. Perry, who had a goal and two assists in that win, enters Sunday with a nine-game points streak at home (three goals, eight assists).
Montreal (31-29-6) could be without its top goal scorer, Michael Cammalleri, for the 11th straight game because of a knee injury. The former Los Angeles King, the Canadiens’ 10th player to miss at least 10 consecutive games due to injury this season, has 14 goals in 30 games against the Ducks – his highest total against any opponent in his career.
Canadiens center Maxim Lapierre will also be unavailable as he’s serving a four-game suspension for his hit on San Jose’s Scott Nichol in Thursday night’s 3-2 loss to the Sharks.
Montreal bounced back from that defeat Saturday night with a 4-2 win over Los Angeles as Brian Gionta recorded a goal and an assist for the second consecutive contest.
Gionta hopes to continue his hot streak while helping Montreal cap a four-game trip on a high note. The Canadiens could use the win in their push for a third straight playoff berth. They’re currently eighth in the East but only three points ahead of 11th-place Tampa Bay.
"Every point is big for us," Gionta said. "The standings are what they are, so we can’t sit back at all. We need to control our own destiny going down the stretch."
Posted: 3/7/2010 3:00PM ET