The data reveals how the Canadiens put Game 1 to bed with dominant 4-1 first period

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Written by Nick Slade
Reviewed by Jason Bevilacqua

The Canadiens dominated Game 1, using a massive 4-1 first period to crush the Hurricanes. See how Dimers' live probabilities called the game over early.

Canadiens 4-1 first period, NHL Stanley Cup playoffs.
According to the data, the Canadiens had Game 1 iced midway through the first period.

The NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs debate between "rest versus rust" was answered in brutal fashion on Thursday night during the Eastern Conference Final with a stunning 4-1 first period in Game 1 the Canadiens vs. Hurricanes series. Despite an 11-day layoff, the Carolina Hurricanes looked ready when Seth Jarvis found the back of the net just 33 seconds into the opening frame. However, what followed was an absolute masterclass by the Montreal Canadiens, who flipped the script completely to secure a commanding 6-2 victory at Lenovo Center.

For sports bettors and data analysts tracking live probabilities, the game didn't just swing in Montreal’s favor—it was essentially put to bed before the first intermission.

A stunning 4-1 first period surge by the visitors entirely erased the Hurricanes’ home-ice advantage, leaving live model projections at near-certainty levels remarkably early in the contest.

According to live tracking data from Dimers, Canadiens moneyline bettors were resting easy before the initial 20 minutes were even up.


The 8:47 mark: Where Game 1 flipped on its head

After Cole Caufield tied the game just 27 seconds after Jarvis's opener, the Canadiens didn't let off the gas. Capitalizing on a disorganized and porous Carolina defense, Phillip Danault buried a breakaway to make it 2-1, followed shortly by an Alexandre Texier one-timer at 8:11 to push the score to 3-1.

By the time the clock ticked down to 8:47 remaining in the 1st period, the predictive models had already seen enough.

Canadiens 4-1 first period Game 1

Dimers' live data revealed that with 8:47 left in the first, the Canadiens' chance of winning had skyrocketed to 87.5%. This represents an astronomical probability spike for an away team so early in a playoff game, highlighting just how heavily the ice was tilted.

When Ivan Demidov later exposed an over-aggressive Carolina defense to slot home the fourth goal at 11:32, the live moneyline probability cemented itself. By the time both teams retreated to the dressing rooms under a heavy 4-1 first period scoreline, Dimers marked Montreal’s live win probability at an insurmountable 90.0%.

For all intents and purposes, Canadiens bettors had already cashed their tickets. A brief push by Carolina in the second period to make it 4-2 was nothing more than a minor blip on the radar before Juraj Slafkovsky sealed the game with two third-period goals.

NHL PROPS: Unlock NHL goal scorer prop bets for the Stanley Cup playoffs

Total goals bettors spared the sweat

It wasn't just moneyline bettors who enjoyed a stress-free evening; those holding tickets for the consensus pre-game line of Over 5.5 Total Goals were saved from any late-game sweat.

Often, a heavy first-period output can lead to a sluggish, defensive lockdown in the final 40 minutes, leaving total-points bettors biting their nails. But Game 1’s relentless pace ensured the game total was obliterated long before the final horn.

When Eric Robinson scored for Carolina to cut the deficit to 4-2 in the second period, it marked the 6th total goal of the contest, meaning the Over 5.5 line had officially hit. Dimers' live tracking data reflected this milestone immediately: with 17:22 left in the 2nd period, the Over chance locked in at 100.0%.

NHL Canadiens Hurricanes Over best bet.

While the Hurricanes look to regroup and find their defensive identity ahead of Game 2 on Saturday night, the data from Game 1 leaves no room for interpretation. The Canadiens used an historic 4-1 first period explosion to stun the hockey world, validating live analytical models that recognized the opening game of the East Final was over almost as soon as it began.


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To give you the most accurate and helpful information, this article has been reviewed and edited by Jason Bevilacqua through our fact-checking process.
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Written by
Nick Slade
Chief Content Officer

Nick Slade, with nearly two decades of experience, is the Chief Content Officer at Cipher Sports Technology Group, overseeing content for Dimers. He specializes in soccer, NBA, and NHL betting, leveraging predictive analytics and machine learning to provide accurate betting insights.

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