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NHL moves Habs Bolts Game 7 despite travel chaos

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David St-Jean
May 3, 2026  (7:36)
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May 1, 2026; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; Tampa Bay Lightning forward Gage Goncalves (93) scores the winning goal against Montreal Canadiens goalie Jakub Dobes (75) during the overtime period in game six of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at the Bell Centre.
Photo credit: Eric Bolte-Imagn Images

Game 7 is locked in for Sunday night at 6 p.m. ET in Tampa, and Martin St-Louis got his Canadiens through one of the messier travel days of this postseason.

Elliotte Friedman confirmed the schedule late Friday after Gage Goncalves forced the Lightning to a winner-take-all night at Amalie Arena.

Sunday's puck drop comes after a wild Saturday. Eric Engels reported the Lightning got re-routed mid-air to Sarasota because of weather over Tampa, then landed safely.

The Canadiens, departing Montreal around noon, were sent to Fort Lauderdale instead. Engels noted the drive from Fort Lauderdale to Tampa runs about three hours and forty-five minutes.

Sarasota sits roughly an hour from Tampa. Either way, both rosters spent more time in airports and on buses than anyone wanted heading into the biggest game of their season.

The math on this series is simple. Tampa finished 50-26-6 with a plus-59 goal differential. Montreal finished 48-24-10 with a plus-27. Same 106-point pace. Different shape.

Jon Cooper leans on home ice as St-Louis trusts the road group

Cooper has Game 7 in his building. The Lightning went 26-14-1 at home this season, and that's the entire reason this series swung back to Florida.

St-Louis has the trump card the Habs have leaned on for months. Montreal's 24-9-8 road record was the foundation of their year. They thrive away from the Bell Centre.

The recent form numbers tilt the other way though. Montreal closed the regular season 7-3-0 over their last ten. Tampa was a flat 5-5-0.

Goncalves is the swing piece nobody saw coming. Bottom-six forwards rarely write the script in May. He just did.

Now the question is whether Cooper rides his top group hard or trusts the same depth that hurt him in Game 6.

For the Canadiens, this is the kind of moment St-Louis has built his locker room around. Young team. Road environment. Hostile crowd. He'll take that setup over a Game 7 at home, oddly enough.

The travel angle should not be a footnote. Two charters bounced around Florida the day before the biggest game of the year. Recovery time matters. Pre-game routines matter more.

Tampa's crowd will be loud early. They almost always are. The first ten minutes will tell the story.

If Montreal weathers the opening shift, this becomes a coaching chess match between St-Louis and one of the best bench bosses of the last decade. Good luck picking that one.