NHL Eastern Conference Game 4 Preview: Tampa Bay Lightning (1-2) vs. Montreal Canadiens (2-1)

0
39
Montreal Canadiens logo

Faceoff is scheduled for 7:00 p.m. ET
Venue: Amalie Arena, Tampa, Florida
TV/Streaming: TNT / MAX

The Canadiens carry a 2-1 series lead into Game 4 after an emotional 3-2 road victory in Game 3 on April 24, where Nick Suzuki’s overtime winner capped a comeback from a 2-0 deficit. Montreal stole Game 1 in Tampa (4-2) before dropping Game 2 (1-3) but responded with back-to-back wins, outworking the Lightning at 5-on-5 and capitalizing on special-teams opportunities. Tampa has looked flat in the last two games, with goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy facing heavy pressure and the power play converting at just 1-for-12.

Team Records

Tampa Bay Lightning: 49-29-4 overall (2nd in Atlantic Division), 27-12-2 at home in the regular season. Playoff record: 1-2.

Montreal Canadiens: 44-33-5 overall (Eastern Conference wild card, 3rd seed via tiebreakers), 20-19-2 on the road in the regular season. Playoff record: 2-1.

Recent Team Forms

Lightning (last 10 games overall): 6-4, averaging 3.2 goals per game, 31.4 shots on goal, 26.8 hits, while allowing 2.9 goals per game. Goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy has a .912 save percentage in the series. In the series: strong at even strength in the Game 2 win but outshot 98-79 overall and struggling to generate sustained zone time.

Canadiens (last 10 games overall): 7-3, averaging 3.5 goals per game, 30.9 shots on goal, while allowing 2.7 goals per game. Goaltender Sam Montembeault has posted a .925 save percentage in the series. In the series: physical forechecking and timely scoring have flipped momentum; they are 1-1 on the road in the playoffs.

Injury Report

Lightning:

Nikita Kucherov (lower body): Questionable / game-time decision. Limited in Game 3 (12:47 TOI) and missed morning skate; his absence would be a massive blow to Tampa’s offense.

Steven Stamkos (upper body): Probable. Played through discomfort in Game 3 but is expected to center the top line.

Victor Hedman (rest): Day-to-day after heavy minutes; full participant in practice.

Goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy confirmed to start.

Canadiens:

Cole Caufield (upper body): Probable. Has been a game-time decision all series but scored in Game 3 and skated fully today.

Kirby Dach (knee): Out (missed entire series).

Mike Matheson (lower body): Out (missed last two games).

Goaltender Sam Montembeault confirmed to start after a 34-save performance in Game 3.

Kucherov’s status is the defining X-factor—if he sits, Montreal’s defensive structure becomes even harder to break.

Key Player Matchups

Nikita Kucherov / Brayden Point (TBL) vs. Nick Suzuki / Montreal shutdown pair: Kucherov (3 points in series) needs to create against Suzuki’s elite two-way play; Montreal will shadow him with physicality from Kaiden Guhle.

Steven Stamkos (TBL) vs. Cole Caufield / Juraj Slafkovsky: Stamkos’ net-front presence vs. Montreal’s speed and size on the rush. Caufield has been dangerous in transition (2 goals in series).

Andrei Vasilevskiy (TBL) vs. Sam Montembeault (MTL): Vasilevskiy has been excellent but overworked; Montembeault has stolen Game 3 with highlight-reel stops and looks poised in the crease.

Physicality / Forecheck: Lightning’s Brandon Hagel and Alex Killorn vs. Canadiens’ Brendan Gallagher and Josh Anderson. Montreal has won the hits battle 87-64.

Special Teams: Lightning power play (1-for-12) vs. Canadiens penalty kill (9-for-10); Montreal’s power play has gone 4-for-11 and could be decisive.

Series History

These Eastern Conference foes have met in the playoffs three times previously (most recently 2022, when Tampa won in six). Tampa leads the all-time playoff series record 2-1, but Montreal has won four of the last six regular-season meetings in 2025-26. This is the first time the Canadiens have led a series against Tampa since 2014.

Betting Trends

Lightning trends: 5-5 ATS as home favorites; 1-2 ATS in the series despite home-ice advantage.

Canadiens trends: 7-3 ATS as road underdogs this season; covered in both playoff road wins.

Over/Under: Over 5.5 has hit in 47 of 82 Lightning games (57%). Series games have averaged 5.7 total goals, with overs hitting in Game 1 and Game 3.

Home/road notes: Lightning are 27-12-2 at home but have lost Game 1 here; Canadiens are 20-19-2 away and have already stolen two games.

Game Odds

Tampa Bay Lightning      – 115

Montreal Canadiens       5.5

Odds Courtesy of Sports Odds Direct as of Saturday, April 25, 2026

Previous articleNHL Eastern Conference Game 4 Preview: Buffalo Sabres (2-1) vs. Boston Bruins (1-2)
Next articleNHL Western Conference Game 4 Preview: Colorado Avalanche (3-0) vs. Los Angeles Kings (0-3)
NHL Editor
Profile: A seasoned NHL analyst with a comprehensive understanding of the league’s tactical systems, player‑development pipelines, and organizational strategies. This columnist provides in‑depth coverage that blends film study, advanced metrics, and historical context to explain how teams evolve across an 82‑game season and into the postseason. Background: With extensive experience covering professional hockey, the columnist has contributed to national sports outlets, digital platforms, and radio segments focused on roster construction, coaching trends, and league‑wide movement. A background in sports journalism and analytics supports a disciplined approach to evaluating performance, interpreting data, and tracking long‑term competitive cycles across all NHL markets. Signature Coverage Areas: Game previews and matchup analysis Film‑based breakdowns of offensive, defensive, and special‑teams systems Player evaluation, draft analysis, and trade‑deadline coverage Salary‑cap strategy, front‑office trends, and organizational philosophy Historical context, rivalry features, and postseason analysis Style & Approach: The writing emphasizes clarity, accuracy, and accessibility — translating complex systems and statistical models into insights that resonate with both traditional hockey fans and analytically minded readers. Each column reflects a commitment to balanced reporting, thoughtful evaluation, and a deep appreciation for the NHL’s speed, physicality, and evolving style of play.