May 3, 2026; Tampa, Florida, USA; Montreal Canadiens defenseman Mike Matheson (8) handles the puck under pressure from Tampa Bay Lightning forward Jake Guentzel (59) during the second period in game seven of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Benchmark International Arena. Mandatory Credit: Morgan Tencza-Imagn Images Alex Newhook broke a third-period tie with the game-winning goal to give the visiting Montreal Canadiens a 2-1 Game 7 victory over the Tampa Bay Lightning on Sunday.
Nick Suzuki also scored for the Canadiens, who were outshot 29-9 and outplayed for much of the deciding game, but now face the Buffalo Sabres, who finished atop the Atlantic Division, in a best-of-seven second-round series that begins Wednesday in Buffalo.
The Canadiens set a Stanley Cup playoff record for fewest shots on goal in a win, per Sportsnet.
Montreal goaltender Jakub Dobes made 28 saves, standing especially tall while Tampa Bay peppered him with shots in the second period.
“I feel we are such a good team, no matter what the situation or circumstances, we’ll find a way to win,” Dobes said. “Now we’ve got to go to Buffalo. We cannot get satisfied, we have to keep going. I’m really excited about the second round.”
With overtime on the horizon, Lightning goalie Andrei Vasilevskiy stopped a point shot, sending the puck bounding to the end boards. But Newhook batted it out of the air toward the front of the cage, banking it off Vasilevskiy and into the cage for his first goal of this year’s playoffs with 8:53 remaining in regulation.
Montreal had last won a series in 2021, the year the Canadiens lost to Tampa Bay in the Stanley Cup Final.
“It feels amazing,” Suzuki said. “We had a lot of dark days after (going to the Stanley Cup Final in 2021) and going into the rebuild. This moment definitely makes up for a lot of it and we want to keep this journey going.”
Dominic James scored for the Lightning, who were eliminated in the opening round of the playoffs for a fourth consecutive year.
“You don’t get any younger, that’s for sure,” Tampa Bay forward Brandon Hagel said. “Listen, I got one goal on my mind and one goal on my mind every single year … I just want to win.”
Vasilevskiy stopped seven of nine shots in the game.
The Canadiens opened the scoring on the game’s first big break. Suzuki netted his first goal of the series when he deflected Kaiden Guhle’s point shot off Lightning defenseman J.J. Moser and into the net at 18:39 of the opening frame.
James tied the game with a deflection tally of his own, tipping a Charle-Edouard D’Astous point shot for a power-play marker at 13:27 of the second period.
The Canadiens failed to register a shot on goal in the middle period, even with two power plays, while the Lightning fired 12 on the Montreal net in the period. It is the first time the Canadiens failed to net a shot on goal in a period during the playoffs since shots were counted in 1955-56.
The Canadiens finally put a puck on net more than five minutes into the third period, going nearly 27 minutes between shots. That sparked Montreal to gain some momentum and eventually Newhook’s winning goal.
The Lightning pushed, and even pulled the goalie for the extra attacker with more than two minutes remaining, but could not find the equalizer.
“It’s not the movies,” Tampa Bay coach Jon Cooper said. “It’s not something where you can retake it and get the scene right. It is live theater right there in front of you and you never know what is going to happen. That is why it’s unbelievable to be a part of, to be a part of something like this, but it damn well stings when you are on the wrong side of it.”
Montreal benefited from the return of defenseman Noah Dobson, who had been out since being hit in the left hand by a slap shot April 11. Dobson blocked a shot with his right hand in the waning minutes of regulation.
–Field Level Media
