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Shore Has 3 Points, Bishop 34 Saves To Lift Stars Over Habs

MONTREAL (AP) — Ben Bishop turned away Artturi Lehkonen on a potentially game-changing penalty shot, and Devin Shore and the Dallas Stars rolled from there.

Shore had a goal and two assists, Bishop stopped 34 shots and the Dallas Stars beat the Montreal Canadiens 4-1 on Tuesday night.

Esa Lindell and Miro Heiskanen also scored, and Alexander Radulov added an empty-netter for Dallas, which won on the road for the first time this season. This was the second stop on the Stars' six-game road trip.

Brendan Gallagher scored for the Canadiens, and Carey Price stopped 18 shots.

In the second, Lehkonen was awarded a penalty shot after John Klingberg slashed him on a breakaway. Lehkonen tried going five-hole, but Bishop made the easy save.

"I was just trying to read his body language," Bishop said. "I kind of had a sense that he was going to go five-hole. I just had a sense when he was coming down and what he was doing with the puck. I guess I was right that time."

With the Stars leading 2-1 in the third, Shore added a short-handed goal at 9:27 — Dallas' first short-handed score of the season. A bad giveaway by Lehkonen behind his own goal gave the puck right to Shore, who chipped a backhander past Price.

The 24-year-old Shore had five points in 10 games this season before Tuesday.

"I tried to just skate and win as many battles as I could today," Shore said. "In the game of hockey, sometimes you're doing everything right and you can't buy one. Sometimes you play like crap and you get points. You try not to look at your points as a measure of success."

Bishop improved to 12-4-3 against the Canadiens, though he had help from his posts in the first period. Mike Reilly fired a slap shot off the iron just two minutes into the game, fooling even the goal-light operator, before Karl Alzner hit the post later in the period.

"We came out well, hit two posts and we had that penalty shot before they even scored," Canadiens coach Claude Julien said. "That was our chance to play with the lead. ... It's too bad because we worked hard. The effort was there but the result just wasn't."

Lindell made Montreal pay for its missed opportunities when he scored on Dallas' fourth shot of the game at 1:49 of the second. With Phillip Danault in the box for slashing, Shore faked a shot then fed Lindell on an odd-man rush to give the visitors a 1-0 lead.

The Canadiens got caught on a line change and Dallas took advantage at 7:24 of the second. Heiskanen, the third overall draft pick in 2017, found himself unmarked near the blue line before beating Price.

Gallagher scored his team-leading seventh three minutes into the third. Bishop stopped Tomas Tatar's initial shot from the point but Gallagher was on the doorstep to knock in the rebound.

Dallas coach Jim Montgomery challenged the goal for goaltender interference, but the referees determined Klingberg had knocked Gallagher into Bishop.

(© Copyright 2018 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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