Flyers Shutdown Habs in Game 2

Fly Guys go up 2-0 in Eastern Conference Finals after 3-0 win

Michael Leighton, on the eve of his 29th birthday, stopped 30 shots and recorded his second straight shutout as the Philadelphia Flyers beat the Montreal Canadiens 3-0 on Tuesday night to take a 2-0 lead in the Eastern Conference finals.

Danny Briere, Simon Gagne and Ville Leino all continued their hot streaks as they scored for the Flyers.

The Flyers have scored 13 straight goals in the postseason since trailing 3-0 in Game 7 against Boston in the East semifinals. Leighton has been impeccable since taking over for an injured Brian Boucher in Game 5 of the semis.

His season was considered over once he went down with an ankle injury in mid-March. Leighton has the Flyers two wins away from their first Stanley Cup finals appearance since 1997.

Leighton is the first Flyers goalie to record consecutive playoff shutouts since Bernie Parent in 1975. His shutout streak of 165:50 is the second longest in team history behind Boucher's 184:45 in Philadelphia's run to the East finals in 2000.

The Flyers haven't won the Stanley Cup since the second of their consecutive championships in 1975.

Leighton was tested from the opening faceoff as the Canadiens outplayed the Flyers most of the first two periods.

The netminder who turns 29 on Wednesday turned away a ferocious slapshot from P.K. Subban in the first period to set an early tone of denial. Leighton made three quick stops in about a minute on a Montreal offense treating the game like shooting practice. When the puck hurled through the air on the last one, the Flyers crowd erupted and gave Leighton a standing ovation.

Leighton's emergence was as timely as Gagne's return. He rushed back to the lineup in the semifinals after a broken toe and scored his sixth goal in six games since then.

His goal late in the second period gave the Flyers a 2-0 lead -- and a badly needed cushion. The Canadiens outshot the Flyers 16-6 in the first period and the Flyers didn't reach double-digits in shots until mid-second.

Montreal goalie Jaroslav Halak was shaken early when Briere scored his ninth goal of the postseason 4:16 into the game. Briere took a beautiful backhand feed from Claude Giroux and fired from the slot to beat Halak for a 1-0 lead.

Briere had little explanation for his sizzling postseason scoring streak.

“I'm just trying to ride the wave,” he said.

Leino capped the scoring with a high wrister in the third.

The Flyers are in good shape -- but they know the series isn't over yet. They rallied from a 3-0 deficit to eliminate Boston. They were just the third team in NHL history to win a round after trailing 3-0. Montreal has proved it can play from behind, too, in these playoffs. The Canadiens erased a 3-1 series deficit in the first round, and were down 1-0, 2-1 and 3-2 in the second.

Game 3 is Thursday at Montreal.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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