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Montreal didn't have trouble scoring in Game 5. Reuters

The Montreal Canadiens beat the New York Rangers 7-4 in a high-scoring thriller on Tuesday to stay alive in the National Hockey League's Eastern Conference finals.

Needing to win to avoid elimination in the best-of-seven series, the Canadiens won a wild and ill-tempered Game Five to reduce the deficit to 3-2 and retain some hope of reaching the Stanley Cup finals for the first time in 21 years.
The next game will be in New York on Thursday with the eventual winner to play either the Los Angeles Kings or the Chicago Blackhawks for the NHL championship.
Montreal got off to a flying start on home ice when Canadiens forward Alex Galchenyuk tipped in a slap shot from PK Subban to score inside the first two minutes from a power-play after New York's Chris Kreider was sent to the penalty box for tripping.
That goal set the tone for a chaotic slugfest between the two Original Six rivals with the Rangers levelling the game midway through the opening period when Derek Stepan, who was recalled to the New York lineup despite suffering a broken jaw in Game Three, scoring from a wrist shot.
The Canadiens regained the lead two minutes later when Tomas Plekanec snapped a shot past New York's unsighted goaltender Henrik Lundqvist to end the first period 2-1 in front.
There were six goals, three from each team, in a crazy second period that ended with Montreal leading 5-4.
The Canadiens, who lost the first two games of the series at home, extended their lead to 4-1 early in the second period when Max Pacioretty then Rene Bourque both scored.
New York coach Alain Vigneault took the unusual step of replacing Lundqvist, who allowed four goals from 14 shots, with Cam Talbot and the visitors responded with three goals in a four and a half minute blitz.
Rick Nash started the comeback with a power play goal then Stepan beat Canadiens' goalie Dustin Tokarski and Kreider scored his second off a power-play when Plekanec was penalised for diving.
But Montreal regained control when Bourque scored late in the second period then early in the third as New York's frustrations boiled over.
John Moore was given a five-minute major penalty for elbowing Dale Weise before Montreal's David Desharnais finished off the scoring with an empty netter less than five minutes from the end.
(Reporting by Julian Linden in New York; editing by Greg Stutchbury)