Quick Pick: Montreal vs. Tampa Bay
- Best Bet: Under 5.5 goals at -104
- Confidence: 3 out of 5
- Win Probability: Tampa Bay 58% | Montreal 42%
- Best Value Angle: Every game in this series has been decided by 1 goal, 3 went to overtime, and Montreal generated only 18 shots in Game 4 — the under fits the series fingerprint even with Vasilevskiy posting a subpar .882 save percentage.
Why This Bet Has Value
Game 4 told a story that the final scoreline partially obscured. Montreal controlled the middle portion of the game, took a 2-0 lead into the third period on just 18 shots, and then committed 3 penalties in the deciding period — handing Tampa Bay the rope it needed. The Lightning’s comeback was real, but it was also built on Montreal’s discipline failures rather than a dominant shift in 5-on-5 play. Tampa Bay generated only 20 shots and had 15 giveaways. This was a tight, structurally stingy game that ended 3-2, and it followed 3 overtime games before it. The market has set the total at 5.5 with the over at -118, implying the public expects more offense now that the series is a true winner-take-more situation. That instinct is understandable, but the underlying game data does not support a scoring explosion. The edge on the under is modest, not overwhelming — but the -104 price on the under relative to -118 on the over suggests the market itself leans slightly toward offense without meaningful evidence to justify it in this series.

Game Snapshot: Montreal vs. Tampa Bay
- Matchup: Montreal Canadiens at Tampa Bay Lightning
- Date & Time: April 29, 2026, 7:00 PM ET
- Venue: Benchmark International Arena, Tampa, FL
- Series Score: Tied 2-2
- Broadcast: The Spot
Matchup Breakdown
Key Storylines
Every single game in this series has been decided by exactly 1 goal. 3 of those 4 games needed extra time. That is not noise — it is a repeating structural pattern rooted in how these two teams play each other. Tampa Bay’s advantage heading into Game 5 is home ice and a more experienced lineup in high-leverage moments. Montreal’s advantage is that it has the better underlying numbers at 5-on-5 across the series, and its blue line has been elevated by Lane Hutson’s breakout performance in the absence of Noah Dobson.
What Happened Last Game
Tampa Bay rallied for a 3-2 win in Game 4 after trailing 2-0. Zachary Bolduc and Cole Caufield scored for Montreal, while Jake Guentzel, then Brandon Hagel twice in the third period, powered the Lightning comeback. Andrei Vasilevskiy made 16 saves. The box score numbers tell a muted story: Montreal had 18 shots and Tampa Bay had 20. Neither team dominated possession. What decided the game was Montreal taking 3 penalties in the third period. Hagel’s first goal came on the power play 1:40 into the third, and the winner came off a Kucherov shot that deflected off Hagel’s chest. The comeback involved both execution and fortune. Treating this as a comprehensive Lightning resurgence would be an overreaction.
What Changed
Montreal coach Martin St. Louis acknowledged his team did not play a good enough third period and cited 3 penalties against a veteran, talented team as the root cause. Discipline is the single most correctable factor heading into Game 5. If Montreal manages the puck better and stays out of the box, Tampa Bay’s power play — which converted once in 7 opportunities in Game 3 — loses its most reliable leverage point. Montreal also won the faceoff battle convincingly in Game 4, taking 65% of draws, which supports zone time and defensive structure if the discipline holds.
Recent Form
This series has produced 4 identical results: low-scoring, 1-goal finishes with no team establishing clear control of a game. Tampa Bay has won 2, Montreal has won 2. Each team has won on the road. The Lightning won Game 4 on the road before this Game 5 return to Tampa. Road wins in this series carry real weight — neither home team has been able to impose its style convincingly.
Goaltending
Andrei Vasilevskiy is 2-2 in the series with an .882 save percentage. That is below his career playoff standard and continues a multi-year trend of postseason struggles. Vasilevskiy had a 4-13 record and .878 save percentage across the 3 prior postseasons heading into this run. He has shown flashes — making 26 saves in Game 3 — but this is not the dominant version of Vasilevskiy. Montreal’s starter Jakub Dobes has been the stronger goaltender in the series on a numbers basis, making 17 saves in Game 4 and keeping a team with discipline issues in the game until the final minutes. If Vasilevskiy continues performing near his series average, the Canadiens’ 5-on-5 game should generate real chances.
Key Skaters
Brandon Hagel leads the series with 6 goals and 7 points, while Jake Guentzel has 1 goal and 6 assists for 7 points as well. That top line is generating genuine danger. Kucherov has been dangerous but streaky in the series — he finished Game 4 with 2 assists but also had 6 missed shots and generated high-volume misses rather than clean looks. On the Montreal side, Nick Suzuki has 4 assists in 4 games and controls the faceoff circle at an elite level. Lane Hutson scored the overtime winner in Game 3 and is clearly operating above expectations for a young defenseman in a playoff environment.
Team Performance & Metrics
| Metric | MTL | TBL |
|---|---|---|
| Last Game 5-on-5 | 9 shots, 1 goal, won 65% of faceoffs | 13 shots, 2 goals, 35% faceoff rate |
| Series Chance Quality | Stronger underlying 5-on-5 numbers, controlled play in Games 1 and 3 | Opportunistic — converting on fewer, higher-danger looks |
| Special Teams | 1-for-6 PP in Game 4, took 3 critical penalties in 3rd | 1-for-7 PP in Game 4, disciplined when ahead |
| Goaltending | Dobes .882+ SV% in series, consistent under pressure | Vasilevskiy .882 SV% in series, below career standard |
| Matchup Edge | Hutson elevated, Suzuki controlling pace, Caufield dangerous | Hagel and Guentzel generating real volume, home ice |
| Regular Season Context | 48-24-10 overall, top-10 Expected Goals For | 52-26-10 overall, strong at home in regulation |
The expected game script here is a familiar one: a tightly contested, low-event game decided late. Tampa Bay will push for momentum early at home. Montreal has shown it can weather pressure and generate counterattacking chances. Discipline is the swing factor. If Montreal cleans up the penalty taking, the game likely goes to 60 minutes and is decided by a single bounce, as have all 4 prior games. If the Canadiens take penalties again, Tampa Bay’s power play becomes the decisive variable.
Market & Odds Analysis
Tampa Bay is priced at -170 on the moneyline, with Montreal at +140. The total is set at 5.5, with the over at -118 and the under at -104. The -170 moneyline implies roughly 63% win probability for Tampa Bay. The sports betting model probability of 60.1% aligns closely with that. Given home ice, Vasilevskiy’s historical record versus Montreal in the postseason, and the series momentum after a comeback win, this line feels appropriately set. There is no compelling edge on the moneyline at those prices. The market on the total, however, is worth a closer look. The over being priced at -118 suggests the market expects a higher-scoring game in a win-or-go-home environment. But this series has averaged 5 goals per game across 4 contests, none has gone above 7, and both goaltenders — despite being below their peaks — have kept games tight. The -104 price on the under represents slightly better value than the market’s own lean.
| Market | Odds |
|---|---|
| Moneyline — Tampa Bay | -170 |
| Moneyline — Montreal | +140 |
| Total | 5.5 — Over -118 / Under -104 |
| Puckline — Tampa Bay -1.5 | Not confirmed |
Key Edges
- Every game in the series has finished under 6 goals, and 3 of 4 have finished at 5 or fewer total goals — the under 5.5 fits the series pattern with a favorable price.
- Vasilevskiy has struggled consistently in recent playoffs at .882 SV% in this series, but Dobes has been just as solid, making a blowout in either direction unlikely.
- Montreal’s faceoff dominance in Game 4 at 65% is a repeatable structural advantage that keeps possession time manageable and limits Tampa Bay’s transition opportunities.
Risk Factors
- 4 games is not enough to definitively establish series-level trends, especially in a game where a single power play goal can entirely shift outcome.
- Playoff intensity in a winner-takes-more context can accelerate pace and special teams volume, pushing the total above its series average.
- Vasilevskiy’s historical .915 save percentage versus Montreal in the postseason prior to this series suggests he may be due for a reset game at home.
- Victor Hedman is confirmed out for this series per available reporting, but the full scope of Tampa Bay’s defensive injury picture has some uncertainty — Ryan McDonagh’s extended absence is a factor that could affect how Tampa Bay manages depth minutes.
Prediction & Verdict: Montreal vs. Tampa Bay
- Best Bet: Under 5.5 goals at -104
- Score Projection: Tampa Bay 3, Montreal 2
- Win Probability: Tampa Bay 58% | Montreal 42%
- Edge: Small
The moneyline does not offer value. Tampa Bay at -170 is correctly priced given home ice, Vasilevskiy’s postseason track record against Montreal specifically, and the series momentum. Montreal at +140 is tempting given their underlying 5-on-5 numbers, but the implied 42% win probability is close enough to the real probability that there is no meaningful gap to exploit. The under is the cleaner play. This series has played out with tactical discipline from both benches, limited shot volumes, and goals that have required bounces, deflections, and special teams execution rather than sustained offensive dominance. The market appears to be inflating the total slightly based on the playoff urgency factor.
Final Score Prediction: Tampa Bay 3, Montreal 2
We offer daily NHL predictions throughout the Stanley Cup playoffs. Be sure to bookmark ATS.io

