The Toronto Maple Leafs suffered a 2-1 shootout loss to the Montreal Canadiens in a tightly contested game at Scotiabank Arena. Dennis Hildeby made 33 saves in his first start of the season, while Scott Laughton's late third-period goal tied the score and extended his scoring streak to three games. The defeat snapped Toronto's three-game winning streak but earned them a valuable point.
The Toronto Maple Leafs returned home after a six-game road trip to face the Montreal Canadiens in their third matchup of the season, with the series tied 1-1 after two 5-2 games. The contest unfolded as a defensive battle, evoking a playoff atmosphere, with both teams' goaltenders shining in a hard-fought affair.
Montreal struck first on a power-play goal by Cole Caufield, giving the Canadiens a 1-0 lead that held until late in the third period. With under 10 minutes remaining, Scott Laughton tied the game on a breakaway slapshot from the hashmarks, beating Canadiens goaltender Jakub Dobes over the shoulder from 15-20 feet out. The goal, described as a "Laughtomic Bomb," came on a short-handed opportunity and marked Laughton's third consecutive game with a goal since joining the Leafs from the Philadelphia Flyers at last season's trade deadline.
Third-string goaltender Dennis Hildeby, thrust into action due to injuries to Anthony Stolarz and Joseph Woll, delivered a standout performance. The 23-year-old Swede faced 34 shots, stopping 33 for a .971 save percentage in the game, including a highlight-reel glove stop on Zachary Bolduc's breakaway that drew a standing ovation. "The more games I play, the better it feels," Hildeby said postgame. Teammate Oliver Ekman-Larsson added, "He played unbelievable" and kept the Leafs in contention.
The game proceeded to overtime without a winner, and in the shootout, Caufield's goal proved decisive as Hildeby was beaten twice. Toronto was outshot 14-3 and out-attempted 30-9 in a dominant second period for Montreal but finished tied 8-8 in high-danger chances. The Leafs' power play struggled, generating just one shot on goal in 5:11 of man-advantage time, continuing a 8% conversion rate over their last 11 games.
Coach Craig Berube noted the team's resilience: "Found a way to get a point. Definitely didn’t have our best stuff." The loss leaves Toronto tied with Ottawa for fourth in the Atlantic Division, four points behind Tampa Bay, with a quick turnaround against the Lightning on Monday.