Suzuki And Caufield Just Put Montreal's Scoring Identity On Display

Dominating from the left, Suzuki and Caufield are proving to be a dynamic duo for the Canadiens with their exceptional scoring prowess.

The Montreal Canadiens have carved out an unusual kind of league-wide bragging right: two of the NHL’s 12 most productive ice areas belong to them.

That was the takeaway from a graphic the NHL released Monday, one that mapped out where the league’s top scorers are doing their damage. And on the left side of the ice, it’s Nick Suzuki and Cole Caufield who stand out for Montreal.

Caufield led the way from the area closer to the net, finishing with five goals from that spot. It’s the kind of zone where his touch around the crease keeps paying off, and this past season he kept showing how dangerous he can be when he gets in tight.

Suzuki matched him with five goals of his own, but from a slightly different left-side lane, higher in the zone and near the boards. The Canadiens captain has made a habit of beating goalies from angles that don’t look like much until the puck is already in the net.

The NHL’s graphic also put a few other names in the spotlight across the ice. Macklin Celebrini owned the high slot for the San Jose Sharks with 16 goals from there.

Cutter Gauthier made the right-side faceoff dot his territory for the Anaheim Ducks, scoring 11 times from that area. Nikita Kucherov found seven goals from near the boards for the Tampa Bay Lightning.

Along the blueline, Matthew Schaefer led the way on the left side with three goals for the New York Islanders. In the middle, Lightning defenseman Darren Raddysh was the most productive with nine. On the right side, Brent Burns paced everyone with five for the Avalanche.

Only three teams had two players featured on the graphic: the Canadiens, Avalanche and Lightning. But Montreal and Colorado are the only clubs that kept both of their players, since Raddysh is set to be on the Toronto Maple Leafs’ blueline when the new season begins.

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