MONTREAL - The Flames looked to a few of their youngsters to lead the way against the Canadiens — and they delivered.Prospect Josh Jooris scored twice and Markus Granlund added another to lead Calgary to a 6-2 victory over Montreal on Sunday night at the Bell Centre. Rookie forward Johnny Gaudreau also added two assists.Together, Jooris, 24, Granlund, 21 and Gaudreau, 21, combined for three goals, five points, and nine shots. They were sharp for much of the game, created havoc around Carey Prices net, and were ultimately the difference-makers.All those young players had great training camps, said Flames head coach Bob Hartley. Thats where it starts. Last year we committed to a rebuild, and those kids are jumping in. Right now, were getting rewarded for our efforts.You have to spread the responsibility out there, and theyre responding well. Theyre rewarding us.Coming into Montreal, the Flames were looking to avenge a 2-1 home defeat at the hands of the Canadiens last Tuesday after Pierre-Alexandre Parenteau scored the winner in a shootout.Harleys men felt they deserved two points from that game after outshooting the Habs 38-19, and came into the Bell Centre on Sunday looking for a repeat performance with a different score line.We had a good game against them last game, so we were prepared, said Jooris, who played 73 games with the American Hockey Leagues Abbotsford Heat last year. We knew what to expect. We wanted to play the same way we did against them.Calgary (7-4-2) came into this one — the teams first stop of a five-game road swing — with just five first-period goals in their first 12 games. Jooris and Granlund, however, managed to put two past Price in the opening 20 minutes on Sunday.Jooris, in just his sixth NHL game, got the ball rolling for the Flames at 4:58 of the first period. The Burlington, Ont. native gobbled up a juicy rebound in front of the net from a Dennis Wideman shot from the point, and patiently waited out Price to make it 1-0. Gaudreau was rewarded for an outstanding first period with an assist on the goal.Its a loud building, said Jooris of his first time playing at the Bell Centre. The nerves were there, but it was good nerves. I was really excited to play here. Its an exciting building to play in. Once we got the first shift in, we settled in.Granlund, in is ninth NHL game, doubled Calgarys lead with 27 seconds remaining in the first period when he deflected a shot from Jiri Hudler past Price with his toe.Gaudreau, who was drafted by the Flames in the fourth round in 2011, got an assist on Granlunds goal and now has eight points in his last seven games since being a healthy scratch versus the Columbus Blue Jackets on Oct. 17.Like Jooris, Gaudreau was quick to shake off the early Bell Centre jitters.Theres a lot of history here, said the rookie, who had aunts and uncles make the drive from Vermont to watch the game from the stands. We just looked at it as a great experience. We wanted to make the most out of it. The older guys led by example.After Curtis Glencross and Max Pacioretty traded goals, Jooris added his second of the game at 8:48 of the third period to give Calgary a 4-1 lead. With the Flames on the power play, Jooris took a long stretch pass from defender TJ Brodie and walked in alone on Price, beating him top corner.With TJ, we like to play a fast-paced game, the full length of the ice, said Jooris. So I tried to get out of the zone quickly. With great vision he found me, and I was able to put it past Price. I tried to get it upstairs real quick.The fact that it was against a great goalie was pretty cool.Lance Bouma and Mark Giordano added goals for the Flames, while Jonas Hiller stopped 18-of-20 shots.Lars Eller scored a consolation goal for Montreal (8-3-1) late in the third. Carey Price made 30 saves in defeat.The loss halted Montreals unbeaten run at home. Previously 4-0-0 at the Bell Centre this season, the Habs were looking to match their best start at home since 1979.The Canadiens, who were outshot 19-4 in the first period, have now conceded the opening goal 10 times in the teams first 12 games.Were making it hard on ourselves with those starts, said Tomas Plekanec, who finished the game with a minus-2 rating. When you score first, its a different story, and you get more confidence to play. If you have to chase the score, its not going to happen all the time.Montreal has a tendency of leaving things late, as Michel Therriens men have now scored 14 of their 27 goals in the third period. But there was no comeback in store on Sunday night.Notes: Brendan Gallagher and P.K. Subban finished minus-3 on the night. … Jiri Sekac, Michael Bournival and Jarred Tinordi were left out of the lineup for the Canadiens. Sekac hasnt dressed since Oct. 18 against Colorado, while Bournival has yet to make his season debut. … With Calgarys Joe Colborne out of the lineup with a wrist injury, 22-year-old winger Sven Baertschi got the start on the fourth line. … Prior to the game, Price was awarded the Molson Cup for his stellar play in October. Fausse Air Max Pas Cher . -- Downcast before the final game of what had been a difficult road trip, the Ottawa Senators found a way to dig out a little momentum in the desert before heading home. Fausse Air Max 97 Noir Pas Cher . Johansen scored twice and Derek MacKenzie, Brandon Dubinsky and Cam Atkinson also had goals to lead the Blue Jackets to a 5-2 victory over the Washington Capitals on Thursday night, ending a three-game losing skid. http://www.outletairmaxpascher.fr/fausse-vapormax-plus.html. Al Horford said all he had to do was make the catch near the basket and then shoot a soft jumper. Air Max Pas Cher Destockage . LOUIS -- Julius Randle had 19 points and 15 rebounds, Aaron Harrison finished with 18 points and No. Fausse Air Max 97 Off White . Louis, MO (SportsNetwork.BERGERAC, France -- Ramunas Navardauskas of Lithuania led a late breakaway in a downpour to win the 19th Stage of the Tour de France on Friday after hitching a ride with his Garmin-Sharp teammates. Italys Vincenzo Nibali retained the overall leaders yellow jersey and is expected to take it home with him when the three-week cycling showcase ends Sunday. Navardauskas stole away from the pack late in the 208.5-kilometre (129.5-mile) northward trek from Maubourguet to Bergerac. He looked back over his shoulder, kissed his fingers and raised his arms in victory, with a bunch of sprinters barrelling behind him. They crossed seven seconds later, and the stragglers followed. The 26-year-old Garmin-Sharp rider became the first Lithuanian to win an individual stage at cyclings greatest race, and gave his team its first stage win this Tour. In 2011, he was also part of the Garmin-Cervelo squad that won the team time trial at the Tour that year, and he also won a stage in the Italian Giro last year. Garmin-Sharp made the win a team effort. First, Dutch rider Tom-Jelte Slagter joined a five--man breakaway early in the stage, then sped ahead alone.dddddddddddd. Alex Howes of the United States helped to pull the Lithuanian up front, before Navardauskas went away solo with about 13 kilometres (8 miles) left. "I gave it all. My teammates worked really hard for me," said Navardauskas. "I took a risk -- you have to try -- and it worked." Within the last few kilometres, around a dozen riders crashed together while trying to turn rightward on the rain-slickened roads. Among them were Slovak rider Peter Sagan, who has the green jersey given to the races best sprinter, and Jean-Christophe Peraud, who is third overall. Under course rules, because the crash happened in the last 3 kilometres (2 miles) , nobody who went down lost time in the title chase. The top standings didnt change. The final shakeout comes Saturday with this years only individual time trial. Nibali leads his closest rival by more than seven minutes, but the quest for the last two podium spots is tight. Only 15 seconds separates Thibaut Pinot, Peraud and Alejandro Valverde. ' ' '