Martin St-Louis goes full Wall Street Wolf as his postgame rant lights up the web 
The cameras caught every second of it, and the clip is already racing around social media. Moments after the Canadiens somehow clinched Game 7, Martin St-Louis turned the dressing room into a movie set. Channeling Leonardo DiCaprio in *The Wolf of Wall Street*, the coach shouted: “WE ARE NOT LEAVING! WE ARE GOING ON!” before pounding his chest in unison with his players. Pure chaos, in the best possible way. It was a reminder that, even behind the bench, St-Louis still burns like a competitor. “It’s hard to get the player out of me,” he admitted with a sly grin after the game.
The stroke of genius after the second-period collapse
Just a few minutes earlier, though, the mood was anything but celebratory. In the second period, the Habs were on the edge of the cliff, getting outshot 12-0. They were completely smothered and looked ready to crack. That was when Martin St-Louis showed why he’s built for this. Instead of blowing his stack, he kept his cool and cut straight to the point: “It was 1-1 in a do-or-die game. We had to forget that awful period and get some rhythm back.” The result? A third period transformed, with Alex Newhook striking right after the puck dropped again to settle things for Montreal.
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Nick Suzuki is blunt: “One of the best coaches in the world”
The respect St-Louis commands in that room is total. Captain Nick Suzuki did not hold back in his praise for his coach, pointing to his rare knack for finding the right words no matter the pressure. “He’s our leader, and every guy would do anything for him,” Suzuki said. To the players, St-Louis isn’t just a tactician. He’s a mentor, and he seems to be learning as fast as they are. The way the group rallied behind Jakub Dobes to shut the door says plenty. The message is landing loud and clear.
The battle of the brains: St-Louis schools Jon Cooper
Beating the Lightning is one thing. Beating Jon Cooper – the veteran of veterans in the NHL coaching ranks – in a seven-game series is something else entirely. St-Louis won the tactical war by shaking up his lines and tweaking his structure as early as Game 5. He loves this chess match, and every adjustment feels like another chance to level up. That appetite is about to be tested again. Next up for Montreal are the Buffalo Sabres of Lindy Ruff, another old hand with more than 30 years in the business. The show is only just getting started.


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