Vanek’s hat trick leads Habs past Roy’s Avs

Thomas Vanek had a hat trick to lift Montreal to a 6-3 win over the Colorado Avalanche in former Canadiens great Patrick Roy's first game at the Bell Centre as an NHL head coach.

MONTREAL — There was so much more to the Canadiens 6-3 win over the Colorado Avalanche on Tuesday night than Patrick Roy’s return to Montreal.

A game that had the 21,273 in the Bell Centre seats rocking even before the puck was dropped saw NHL trade deadline addition Thomas Vanek score his first three goals as a Canadien.

It saw plugger Travis Moen score a spin-around goal worthy of a first-line star.

And it had a spectacular performance from Colorado rookie Nathan MacKinnon, who dazzled the crowd and the Canadiens defence for an entire shift before scoring his 23rd goal of the season in the first period.

On the downside, Colorado defenceman John Mitchell was taken to hospital for tests after crashing back-first into the end boards at 8:02 of the second period. Roy had no update on his condition after the game other than that it was back injury.

The game started with the spotlight on Roy, but players from both teams made sure it was game to remember as well.

“I thought both teams played really well and tonight the puck bounced their way,” said Roy, the former Canadiens goaltending great who was on his first trip to Montreal as an NHL coach.

There was no pre-game ceremony for the player once known as Saint Patrick, but he didn’t need one. The fans gave him a long, rousing ovation when he was shown on the scoreboard during the national anthems.

Some wondered how the Bell Centre crowd would react to Roy, who won Stanley Cups for the Canadiens in 1986 and 1993 but later demanded a trade and was on the outs with the organization until 2008 when they retired his No. 33 jersey.

“I thought they showed lot of class,” said Roy. “It was nice. They didn’t make a big thing and that’s the way I wanted it.”

Brandon Prust, who left the game late in the first period with an apparent shoulder injury, returned to score a goal and set up Moen’s tally for Montreal (38-25-7), which won its third game in a row.

Trailing by two goals, Roy pulled goalie Jean-Sebastien Giguere with 2:20 left to play, but Dale Weise scored into the empty net.

Max Talbot and Jamie McGinn also had goals for the Avalanche (44-20-5), which lost for only the third time in 10 games. The Avs end a three-game road trip Wednesday night in Winnipeg.

Vanek had a ton of chances since he was acquired from the New York Islanders, who had got him early in the season from the Buffalo Sabres. He finally broke through against Colorado.

“It was frustrating,” he said. “I think I’m pretty emotional out there and sometimes I show my frustration too much.

“But it’s been a tough year moving around, trying to get your first goal with Buffalo and then a new team and then here. But I thought we were generating chances and it just didn’t go in. Getting that first goal was nice. I was really pressing the last few games.”

The Avalanche players clearly wanted to win for Roy, who has taken them from last to fourth in the Western Conference in one season and who is likely to be named the NHL’s coach of the year.

Roy’s team responded with a strong opening period.

No. 1 overall draft pick MacKinnon put on a show as he ragged the puck in the Montreal zone for most of an entire shift. Then he got the puck alone in front of the net off a strange deflection and deked Carey Price at 18:03. He got 20:55 of ice time and, other than Vanek, was perhaps the best player in the game.

Even Montreal coach Michel Therrien was impressed.

“For an 18-year-old kid… I had the luxury of coaching great ones at 18 and 19 years old (Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin) and he’s right there,” said Therrien. “He’s a special player.”

Roy knew his players wanted to get him the victory, even though he told them to concentrate on getting the two points.

“(Ryan) O’Reilly was hurt and I knew he wanted to play,” said Roy. “(Paul) Stastny came back (from a back injury) tonight.

“I knew what they were doing. I have a lot of respect for my players and I appreciate it, but I didn’t want them to feel the pressure of winning a game for their coach. I wanted them to win for the team. I don’t want to put myself ahead of the team. I didn’t need a special night.”

The Canadiens bounced back in the second, as Vanek tapped one into an open goal after Desharnais lured Giguere out of his net on a rush at 7:44.

Talbot was parked at the doorstep to knock in a Matt Duchene feed at 9:33, but Moen tied the score at 10:21 with his second of the year and his first since Nov. 22. Prust dove to chip the puck into the middle, where Moen caught it, then did a spin-around move to beat Giguere with a backhand.

Giguere took a holding the stick penalty and Vanek made him pay as he converted a Max Pacioretty feed on a power play for the game-winner at 14:45. Montreal was on the power play again when Vanek reached behind his back to deflect an Alexei Emelin shot in at 17:40 for the hat-trick.

Only two hats were thrown on the ice. Montreal fans have never been big on the hat-throwing thing.

Weise added an empty-netter at 19:00, giving each member of the checking line a goal.

“We were energized tonight,” said Prust. “We knew it was going to be a big game. We knew they would come hard to get Patty the win, so we’re glad we spoiled it.”

Notes: It was Roy’s first game against Montreal since he was a player on Nov. 6, 2001. Roy opted to put Montreal native Giguere as No. 1 Semyon Varlamov sat out. Roy said Reto Berra will start in goal in Winnipeg… Stastny returned from after missing four games with a back injury… The Avs went into the game with the NHL’s fourth best power play and Montreal with the fourth best penalty kill.

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