Lightning overcome sluggish start before holding off Habs
Tampa Bay leapfrogs Montreal for 4th place in Atlantic Division
Through 12 minutes, Tampa Bay trailed by two goals and hadn't even put a shot on net.
Victor Hedman matched the franchise record for assists by a defenceman with four, Alex Killorn scored twice and Tampa Bay rallied past the Canadiens 5-4 Saturday night.
"We dipped our toes into this game and Montreal dove in head-first," Lightning coach Jon Cooper said. "So good on them, but good on our guys to regroup after the break."
Steven Stamkos had a goal and an assist to reach 800 career points, and Mitchell Stephens scored for the first time in his career as Tampa Bay leapfrogged Montreal for fourth place in the Atlantic Division. Andrei Vasilevskiy made 39 saves.
"Tonight was a perfect example of making some really nice plays as well as being really responsible," Stamkos said. "That's where you get a night like this, where everyone is feeling good, everyone is touching the puck and everyone gets rewarded."
Jesperi Kotkaniemi, Ben Chiarot, Jordan Weal and Max Domi scored for Montreal, which had won five of of its past six road games. Carey Price stopped 25 shots.
WATCH | Killorn scores twice as Lightning best Canadiens:
Montreal out-hustled Tampa Bay to every loose puck early and forcing the Lightning into turnovers. In the opening 12:24, Montreal scored twice and registered 18 shots on goal before Tampa Bay even tested Price.
"The first period we played the exact game we wanted to," Montreal defenceman Jeff Petry said. "We were skating, moving the puck, playing good defensively."
Kotkaniemi finished off a broken play and snapped a wrist shot through the legs of Erik Cernak and beat Vasilevskiy up high on the first shot of the game at 2:08. Domi doubled the lead on a shot that was initially ruled no goal as play continued for 62 seconds before the horn stopped play for a review that determined the puck crossed the line.
Tyler Johnson registered the first shot on goal for Tampa Bay at the 12:25 mark, and Killorn made it 2-1 with 59 seconds left in the period.
Stamkos tied it 1:34 into the second period when his initial shot hit the glass behind the net and caromed back out in front, where he was able to bat the puck out of the air He's the third player in franchise history to reach 800 points, joining Martin St. Louis and Vincent Lecavalier.
Stephens put Tampa Bay in front at 4:56. After Killorn scored his second of the game at 12:00, the Canadiens called a timeout and responded off the faceoff when Chiarot cut down from the left point to put in a rebound of Brendan Gallagher's shot.
Anthony Cirelli regained the two-goal lead with a rebound 55 seconds into the third period before Weal scored a power play goal with 1:28 left in the third.
"The second period really hurt us with the amount of goals we gave," Montreal coach Claude Julien said. "We gave them the opportunities that they had and it was an uphill climb that was very hard in the third. We tried to make a game of it but the damage was done in the second."