The Montreal Canadiens suddenly find themselves backed into a corner after suffering consecutive overtime gut punches at the hands of the Carolina Hurricanes in the Eastern Conference Final.
Carolina’s relentless forecheck has thrown Montreal off and turned every shift into a heavyweight fight, especially for the Canadiens’ young core trying to handle playoff pressure under the brightest lights.
As the intensity keeps rising, Lane Hutson has become the Hurricanes’ top target every time he touches the puck. That escalating physical edge finally pushed Canadiens head coach Martin St. Louis to break his silence ahead of a pivotal Game 4 showdown.
Martin St. Louis Addresses Hurricanes’ Physical Approach Toward Lane Hutson
Hutson has been one of Montreal’s biggest offensive drivers throughout the postseason, but the Hurricanes have made it clear they intend to wear him down physically every chance they get.
After Carolina secured a 3-2 overtime win in Game 3 at Bell Centre, Canadiens head coach St. Louis openly acknowledged the challenge his rookie defenseman is facing in this series.
Speaking to reporters, St. Louis avoided criticizing officials or accusing Carolina of crossing the line. Instead, he pointed toward his own team’s responsibility in protecting Hutson from repeated high-speed pressure situations.
“Lane is a good player, and I understand the opponents’ mandate,” St. Louis said. “But are we going to be able to slow guys down for him so we don’t give them so much speed heading toward him? I think that’s something we can do better.”
The Canadiens coach added that Carolina’s intentions are obvious, but Montreal must adjust tactically rather than expect the physical play to disappear. “You can’t take away the other team’s intentions. You just try to prevent them from doing that all the time,” he explained.
The comments came after another rough night for Hutson. Late in overtime, Hurricanes forward William Carrier delivered a heavy hit near the end boards that went unpenalized. Moments later, Hutson turned the puck over in his own zone, leading directly to Andrei Svechnikov’s overtime winner.
That sequence followed another major collision earlier in the series involving Taylor Hall during Game 2 overtime. Hutson limped off after that hit but avoided a serious injury and returned for Game 3, where he still managed to score on the power play despite Carolina’s relentless pressure.

Carolina’s strategy has not been subtle. The Hurricanes have consistently attacked Hutson with hard finishes on checks and aggressive puck pressure because of how important he has become to Montreal’s transition game.
Even with the physical targeting, Hutson continues producing offensively and now sits with 15 playoff points during his impressive postseason run.
DON’T MISS: Montreal Canadiens Undoubtedly Interested in Trade for $50.75M ‘Left-Handed Nick Suzuki’
Montreal, however, now trails the series 2-1 and faces enormous pressure entering Game 4 at Bell Centre. The Canadiens already survived consecutive seven-game series against Tampa Bay and Buffalo earlier in the playoffs, but Carolina’s speed and forechecking have created a different kind of challenge.
With the Vegas Golden Knights already sitting in the Stanley Cup Final, Montreal knows there is no longer any room for mistakes. For St. Louis, keeping Lane Hutson protected has now become more than a toughness issue or a playoff talking point.
