TORONTO - The next chapter of the Ottawa Senators' incredible story is a matchup against the rival Montreal Canadiens.

The Canadiens beat the Toronto Maple Leafs 4-3 in a shootout Saturday night at Air Canada Centre to clinch the Atlantic Division title and the second overall seed in the Eastern Conference. That, combined with a victory by the Detroit Red Wings, set the playoff picture with the Habs opening up against the Senators.

"It's going to be a test," Canadiens forward Brendan Gallagher said. "It's always scary playing a team full of confidence, and certainly they are right now."

Ottawa went 23-4-4 in its final 31 games to charge from 14 points out to a playoff spot. Goaltender Andrew Hammond, defenceman Erik Karlsson and rookie Mark Stone keyed the Senators' turnaround.

Game 1 is expected to be Wednesday at Bell Centre.

"It's going to be a demanding series," Montreal coach Michel Therrien said. "It's going to be a good series, really demanding. The Sens certainly deserve to be in the playoffs with that push that they did, pretty impressive."

After the Senators beat the Philadelphia Flyers on Saturday afternoon and the Red Wings beat the Carolina Hurricanes at night, the Habs needed a regulation loss and a victory by the Tampa Bay Lightning if they wanted to avoid Ottawa. Montreal went 1-3-0 in four games against the Senators this season, and Ottawa won the intense 2013 playoff series between the teams.

Therrien said there were so many playoff scenarios that his team showed up with its best lineup and tried to win. Just a point was enough to seal another series against the Senators.

"We're not afraid of anybody," forward Lars Eller said. "We haven't been wishing for anybody to play us. There's no sense of there's somebody we wanted to face. It's really all about what we're going to do."

Defenceman P.K. Subban said it didn't matter who the Habs played and added that they're "going to have to go through everyone to win a Cup this year."

The Tampa Bay Lightning will face the Detroit Red Wings in the other Atlantic Division semifinal. A victory by the Pittsburgh Penguins, who will face the top-seeded New York Rangers, eliminated the Boston Bruins a year after winning the Presidents' Trophy.

The Washington Capitals face the New York Islanders in the other Metropolitan Division series.

David Desharnais, Tomas Plekanec and Jacob De La Rose scored for the Canadiens (50-22-10), who got 19 saves from likely Vezina Trophy-winner Carey Price. Alex Galchenyuk and Desharnais scored in the shootout for Montreal's 50th victory.

"It's not something we really talked about at all, but it is impressive, I think, when you look back at just the parity in the league, how tough it is every single night," Gallagher said. "Where we are, we're proud of the year we had."

Subban called it a "successful season" for the Habs, who finished with 110 points. The same couldn't be said for the Leafs (30-44-8), who turn their attention to an off-season of change.

"It's evident that there's lots of changes that have to happen, and the direction has to be in a different direction," said interim coach Peter Horachek, who is not expected to return.

Phil Kessel, Casey Bailey and Tyler Bozak scored for Toronto in the regular-season finale. Players will clean out their lockers Monday.

“When you finish the season you know there's going to be change," captain Dion Phaneuf said. "There's always change in pro sports. With the way that the year has gone and the season that we've had there will be change."

The only change coming for the Habs is stepping up to a playoff level of intensity.

"It's the playoffs," Subban said. "This is the best time, the most fun time of the year."

Notes — Canadiens forward Max Pacioretty (upper-body injury) skated Saturday morning in Montreal, but his status for the start of the playoffs is unclear, Therrien said. ... Leafs defenceman Eric Brewer left the game after taking a low hit from Alexei Emelin and did not return. The 35-year-old is set to be an unrestricted free agent this summer.

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