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Martin St. Louis reveals major Game 5 update on Slafkovsky and Anderson

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Skyler Walker
April 28, 2026  (2:29 PM)
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Apr 12, 2026; Elmont, New York, USA; Montréal Canadiens head coach Martin St. Louis before the first period against the New York Islanders at UBS Arena
Photo credit: Alexander Wohl-Imagn Images

Juraj Slafkovsky is in. Martin St. Louis says he and Josh Anderson are both good to go for Game 5 in Tampa Bay.

That's the development Montreal needed after both forwards left Game 4 with apparent injuries and briefly put the lineup picture in doubt.

Instead of dealing with a late playoff shakeup, the Canadiens get two heavy minutes wingers back for a road game that can swing the tone of the series.

Slafkovsky's availability matters because he plays through traffic and contact. When he's in the top six, Montreal looks bigger around the crease and harder to handle along the wall.

Anderson brings a different kind of pressure. His straight-line speed can back defenders off, and when he's driving the forecheck, the Canadiens' bench usually has more jump.

What changed here is the certainty. On Monday, St. Louis told reporters he had not yet spoken to anyone and didn't leave the arena thinking it was an issue. By Tuesday, he had his answer.

Montreal avoids a late lineup problem

That's a big coaching win before puck drop. St. Louis doesn't need to patch together a new wing combination or force depth players into a larger spot on short notice.

It also says something about how both players responded after Game 4. Each left, got checked by the medical staff, then returned, which already hinted the situation might not turn into a longer absence.

Still, the uncertainty lingered into the next day. In a playoff series, that's enough to shift the conversation from matchups and special teams to pure survival.

Now Montreal can stay on its original track. That means less scrambling in the locker room, less guesswork on the bench, and a cleaner plan heading into a hostile building.

For Slafkovsky, this is also a spotlight moment. A young power winger being available for a pressure game matters, especially when every shift is tighter and every puck battle feels heavier.

For Anderson, it keeps a veteran layer in the lineup that St. Louis clearly trusts. When a coach makes the call this directly, the message is simple: both guys are ready, and Montreal is rolling with its regular group.


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