- The Montreal Canadiens have signed assistant general manager John Sedgwick to a multi-year extension, also promoting him to general manager of the AHL’s Laval Rocket. This is a big step for Sedgwick, who’s been with the Canadiens since 2013, serving in a variety of roles that included Director of Hockey Operations, Director of Legal Affairs, and now Assistant General Manager. Sedgwick worked in the NHL’s head office for seven years, prior to joining Montreal.
Canadiens Rumors
Canadiens, Ducks Swap Jan Mysak For Jacob Perreault
The Canadiens and Ducks have exchanged forward prospects Jan Mysak and Jacob Perreault, both teams announced. It’s a one-for-one swap of U-22 prospects whose development has stalled with their respective minor-league clubs.
Perreault, 21, is a Montreal native and was a first-round pick of the Ducks in 2020 after scoring 39 goals and 70 points in 59 games with the OHL’s Sarnia Sting. Concerningly, his production has declined after a strong rookie season with AHL San Diego in 2020-21 (17 points in 27 games), and he’s tallied seven goals and 18 points in 31 games this season with a -3 rating. He made his NHL debut in January 2022 but has not seen major league action since.
The son of former Canadien Yanic Perreault and the older brother of Rangers prospect Gabe Perreault, Jacob is a natural right-winger. He still has one season remaining on his entry-level contract with a cap hit of $863.3K, so he won’t be a restricted free agent until the summer of 2025.
Unlike Perreault, Mysak can shift to center. The 21-year-old Czech forward was a second-round pick by Montreal in 2020 and had the rare experience of immediately playing pro hockey. Despite being drafted out of a Canadian junior league, he was permitted to suit up for the AHL’s Laval Rocket in 2020-21 because the OHL had paused game action due to COVID. There, he notched two goals in 22 games before returning to the OHL the following year, where he tallied 34 goals and 64 points in 61 games with the Hamilton Bulldogs en route to a Memorial Cup appearance. He’s on an opposite trajectory to Perreault – slowly heating up in the minors with 20 points in 48 games for AHL Laval this year after recording just nine in 40 games last season.
Mysak is also in the second season of his entry-level deal and will be an RFA in 2025. His cap hit is slightly lower at $828.3K, but as both players are assigned to the minors at the time of the trade, the swap has no salary cap impact for either team.
Canadiens Place Colin White On IR, Activate Rafael Harvey-Pinard
Eric Engels of Sportsnet is reporting that the Montreal Canadiens have placed forward Colin White on the injured reserve, and have activated forward Rafael Harvey-Pinard from it. Earlier reporting suggested that White suffered an upper-body injury in practice, and is only considered day-to-day.
White originally joined the Canadiens organization via waiver claim on February 22nd, coming over from the Pittsburgh Penguins. In 16 games this season, five of which have been in Montreal, White has been unable to register any points so far. He has received more ice time with the Canadiens but is still receiving playing time in the bottom six nonetheless.
Harvey-Pinard, on the other hand, has had his season mired by injuries. With injury concerns limiting him to 24 games on the year, Harvey-Pinard has scored one goal and seven points for the Canadiens this season. Hoping for health moving forward, Montreal will be waiting to see if they can get back last year’s version of Harvey-Pinard, who scored 14 goals and 20 points in 36 games.
Canadiens Shopping Multiple Depth Wingers
The Canadiens’ offense hasn’t done much this year outside of their top line of Cole Caufield, Juraj Slafkovsky and Nick Suzuki, ranking 27th in the league. As such, Montreal GM Kent Hughes is open to moving out multiple wingers – a group highlighted by two-time 20-goal scorer Josh Anderson – ahead of the March 8 trade deadline, reports David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period.
According to Pagnotta, Hughes is also shopping solid shutdown winger Joel Armia and pending UFA Tanner Pearson. It’s not like the Canadiens have a bunch of youngsters chomping at the bit to take their spots—prospects like Sean Farrell and Emil Heineman need some more minor-league development time—but it does behoove them to free up some roster space and gain some assets as they continue their rebuild.
The Canadiens still need de facto retired goaltender Carey Price’s $10.5MM LTIR relief to remain cap-compliant, although their cap hit has been exacerbated by some injuries this season. Still, contracts like Anderson’s (a $5.5MM cap hit through 2027) aren’t ideal for a rebuilding squad, especially for his level of dwindling production.
Once a highly sought-after developing power forward, the 6-foot-3 Anderson has tanked this season with eight goals and 17 points in 57 games despite still seeing some top-six minutes, averaging 16:05 per game. He is shooting far below his career average at 7.1%, but his possession metrics are also among the worst on the team – no Canadien has a worse expected rating than Anderson’s -9.7.
Given his low shooting percentage, though, there is hope for some positive goal-scoring regression, which was always one of the more attractive aspects of his game. Anderson may still have some trade value if the Habs are willing to slash his cap hit down to $2.75MM by retaining 50% of the remainder of his deal. That’s much closer to what he would earn on the free-agent market if he were a UFA this summer.
While Montreal would also likely need to retain some of Armia’s $3.4MM cap hit through 2025, he probably has the highest trade value out of their three forward assets. After being buried in the minors to start the year, injuries re-opened an NHL opportunity, and he’s responded well. His 11 goals on the campaign make him the only active non-first-line player with double-digits on the year, and he’s managed a 48.2 CF% at even strength (sixth among full-time Habs forwards) while logging first-unit minutes on their penalty kill. Add in his solid postseason performance with Montreal on their run to the 2021 Stanley Cup Final, and he appears a solid pickup for any contender looking to add some defensive acumen to their fourth line.
Theoretically, Pearson’s expiring deal makes him the easiest to move, but it’s hard to imagine much interest in the 31-year-old’s services. Now relegated to a fourth-line role with the Canadiens, he has five goals and 11 points in 42 games with a -11 rating. Hughes would again need to retain some of his $3.25MM cap hit to move him out.
Those retention caveats highlight a crucial problem with the Canadiens’ deadline plans. They’re still retaining salary on the contracts of Joel Edmundson and Jeff Petry, meaning they only have one slot left for an additional retained salary transaction. With none of these players likely to get moved at full price in-season, the Habs will likely only be able to move one or enlist a third party to retain 50% of a contract on another.
Jayden Struble Questionable For Tuesday
- Canadiens defender Jayden Struble is questionable for tomorrow’s tilt against the Coyotes after what he called a “pinch” in his back during a game last week, Sportsnet’s Eric Engels says. He was a full participant in practice today and will likely re-enter the lineup Thursday against Florida at the latest. The 2019 second-round pick missed Saturday’s loss to the Devils but has otherwise put together a solid rookie season, notching three goals and seven points through 39 games while boasting some of Montreal’s best possession numbers, albeit in limited minutes (15:52 per game).
Jean-Guy Talbot Passes Away
Longtime Canadiens defenseman Jean-Guy Talbot passed away Thursday, per an obituary from NHL.com columnist Dave Stubbs. Talbot was 91 years old.
Born in Cap-de-la-Madeleine, Québec, in 1932, Talbot was the second-last surviving member of the group of 12 players who remained with the Canadiens during their NHL-record five consecutive championships from 1956 to 1960. Those were the first five full seasons of Talbot’s NHL career – he would go on to win the Cup twice more with Montreal in 1965 and 1966.
Talbot was among the Habs’ many key figures of the late Original Six era, playing over 800 games in a Montreal sweater between 1955 and 1967. While his career-best 1961-62 campaign didn’t result in an eighth Stanley Cup win, Talbot’s five goals, 42 assists, 47 points, and +30 rating in 70 games placed him third in Norris Trophy voting behind the Blackhawks’ Pierre Pilote and the Rangers’ Doug Harvey. He was also named to the year-end All-Star team for the only time in his career.
His Montreal tenure ended when the Canadiens left him unprotected in the 1967 Expansion Draft, where the Minnesota North Stars selected him. He was traded to the Red Wings just four games into the 1967-68 season, though, and switched teams for a second time that year when the Blues claimed him off waivers from Detroit in January. Talbot remained in St. Louis for most of the remainder of his career, closing out his playing days briefly with the Sabres after a trade in 1970-71.
After retirement, Talbot stayed in the game as a coach, taking over behind the Blues bench in 1972-73 after the team fired Al Arbour, who would win four straight Stanley Cups with the Islanders between 1980 and 1983. Talbot resigned from his post with the Blues late in the 1973-74 season and would coach the WHA’s Denver Spurs in 1975-76, which relocated to Ottawa mid-season before folding. He returned to the NHL as the coach of the Rangers in 1977-78 but only spent one season behind the bench.
Talbot resided in Trois-Rivières, Québec, and is survived by his wife of over 70 years, Pierrette, two sons, a daughter, and five granddaughters. PHR extends its deepest condolences to Talbot’s family and the Canadiens organization.
Canadiens Claim Colin White, Assign Brandon Gignac To AHL
Feb. 23: Gignac cleared waivers Friday, Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reports. The AHL’s Laval Rocket confirmed that Gignac had been reassigned to them by Montreal.
Feb. 22: The Montreal Canadiens have claimed forward Colin White off of waivers from the Pittsburgh Penguins. The team has placed Brandon Gignac on waivers in order to make space for White’s arrival. This move marks a reunion between White and general manager Kent Hughes, who represented White as a player agent before moving into a team role.
White will be moving to his fourth NHL franchise with this move, after just 11 games with the Penguins. The 27-year-old centerman signed a one-year, two-way, $775K contract with the Penguins before the season, earning the deal after signing a professional try-out. But his only scoring this season has come in the AHL, where he’s scored 10 points, split evenly, in 21 games. White was placed on waivers on October 8th and remained in the minor leagues until January 13th.
White has fallen a long way since being drafted 21st overall in the 2015 NHL Draft. He lived up to the high selection quickly, scoring 76 points across 72 games with Boston College before playing his rookie season in the 2018-19 season. And he looked the part in his rookie season as well, scoring 14 goals and 41 points in 71 games. But he has only broken 20 points one time since then, seeing a gradual decrease in his production every season since. He will likely step immediately into the Montreal lineup, in place of Gignac who was operating as the team’s fourth-line center, though injuries to Rafael Harvey-Pinard and Christian Dvorak could offer a chance for White to see expanded opportunity.
Montreal faces the Penguins on Thursday evening, giving White the rare chance for a revenge game on the same day as his team-change. The Canadiens also have Michael Pezzetta recalled to the NHL roster, offering depth in the event that White isn’t ready to go. Either way, he’ll kick off his search for the first point of his season, and his Canadiens career, when he slots into the lineup.
Jordan Harris Cleared To Return From Concussion
- Canadiens defenseman Jordan Harris has been cleared to return, notes RDS’ Luc Gelinas (Twitter link). The blueliner also confirmed that the upper-body injury he was dealing with was a concussion, the second of his career. Harris has played in 31 games so far this season, picking up a goal and five assists while averaging a little over 17 minutes a night.
Trade Deadline Primer: Montreal Canadiens
With the All-Star break in the rearview, the trade deadline looms large and is now just a month away. Where does each team stand, and what moves should they be looking to make? We continue our look around the league with the Montreal Canadiens.
An early season-ending injury to top-six forward Kirby Dach derailed the Montreal Canadiens season nearly as soon as it got started. The mantra has followed Montreal, who have also faced significant injury to Christian Dvorak and Rafael Harvey-Pinard. That’s left the team without much bite this season, destined to spend the year focused on developing young talents rather than pushing for the playoffs. But Montreal is prepared for this, boasting one of the youngest lineups in the league and providing ample opportunity to AHL standouts. This includes calling up top prospect Joshua Roy for the first 10 games of his career, signing Brandon Gignac to an extension after AHL success, and rotating a trio of goalies to find their future fit. In a season of failures on the scoresheet, Montreal is still finding ways to improve, and the Trade Deadline could be their chance to really lean into prioritizing the future.
Record
22-25-8, 7th in the Atlantic Division.
Deadline Status
Sellers
Deadline Cap Space
$5.654 MM on deadline day, 2/3 retention slots used, 45/50 contracts used, per CapFriendly.
Upcoming Draft Picks
2024: MTL 1st, WPG 1st, COL 2nd, MTL 3rd, MIN 3rd, MTL 4th, MTL 5th, SJS 5th, MTL 6th, MTL 7th, EDM 7th, WSH 7th
2025: MTL 1st, CGY 1st, MTL 2nd, PIT 2nd, MTL 3rd, VAN 3rd, MTL 4th, DET 4th, MTL 5th, MTL 6th, MTL 7th
Trade Chips
Montreal’s trade chips begins with their goaltenders. General manager Kent Hughes recently shared that the team will need to move out one goaltender, leaving fans to speculate which is likeliest to go. Sam Montembeault seems to have the safest spot, largely thanks to the three-year, $9.45MM contract extension he signed on December 1st. He’s since become Montreal’s de facto starter, setting 12 wins and a .903 save percentage through 26 games. Montembeault is primarily backed up by veteran Jake Allen, who’s set a .894 save percentage in 19 games of his own. Allen likely offers the best trade market value, largely thanks to the experience he’s gathered over 11 years and 414 games in the NHL. Allen also brings championship prowess, winning the Stanley Cup with the St. Louis Blues in 2019. But if teams are dissuaded by the 33-year-old Allen’s $3.85MM cap hit next season, they could also find depth in 24-year-old Cayden Primeau. Primeau – the youngest of any Canadiens goalie – has yet to come into his own in the NHL, totaling 33 games since making his NHL debut in 2019 but managing just eight wins and a .884 save percentage. He does seem to be on good pace this year though, with a .903 save percentage in 12 games of his own. Primeau is signed to a sub-$1MM deal through the end of the 2024-25 season, offering a lot of potential to teams looking for a potential difference-maker.
The Canadiens could also bank on veteran talents, finally finding a trade partner for Josh Anderson or moving away from hometown pro David Savard. Both players have been apart of trade rumors for a while, though Anderson would fetch much, much more of a return than Savard. The 29-year-old winger has just 15 points in 51 games this season, also setting 51 penalty minutes and a -21. It’s a far cry from the 27 goals and 47 points he managed in 82 games in 2018-19. Anderson hasn’t scored more than 32 points in a season since joining Montreal in 2020 but could still offer top-six value thanks to his sturdy frame and drive towards the net. Any trade of Anderson would almost certainly require Montreal to retain salary, using their last salary retention slot. But, with Anderson signed through his age-32 season in 2026-27, any return would be beneficial for the youthful Canadiens lineup.
Team Needs
1) Go Window Shopping – Montreal has the luxury of being able to explore all options at the Trade Deadline. The team is not in a position to win now, but they have all of the draft picks, prospect capital, and role players that a seller could ask for. This could give the Canadiens a lucrative opportunity to go after big names like Pavel Buchnevich or Jakob Chychrun. Both players are under 30 and on generally cheap contracts. While the remainder of their 2023-24 season might end up a bit fruitless, adding a big-market name could be enough to propel the Canadiens into success sooner than they planned for. The NHL is currently witnessing the ascension of the Philadelphia Flyers, who sit comfortably in a playoff spot after the All-Star Break, and Montreal could look to mimic that success next season with a healthy lineup and high-profile additions. The Canadiens likely wouldn’t have to sacrifice much for the additions either – boasting seven picks in the first or second round of the next two drafts. Their wallet is plenty big enough and they shouldn’t be frugal if that means they can bring in a point-per-game veteran forward or an ever-rising young defenseman.
2) Buy Up the Youth – Montreal is, first and foremost, a seller this year thanks to their insistence on a goalie trade and long list of veteran talents. But that position could open them up to sneaky deadline deals. There is plenty of high-profile young talent on the open market, including Trevor Zegras, Arthur Kaliyev, Kaapo Kakko, and Philip Broberg. While each of these players carries with them varying degrees of certainty, they would all make stellar additions to a Montreal lineup that’s already full of young talent. It’s also easy to see the fit that many of them would have with skillful head coach Martin St. Louis. Edmonton’s desperate need for goaltending depth, or New York’s desire for forward depth, could be enough for them to take lesser value in favor of solidifying their lineups now. Montreal could be in the perfect spot to exploit those positions and add major, major value to their future outlook.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.
Jordan Harris Still Not Ready To Return
- Capitals veteran blue-liner Trevor van Riemsdyk draws in tonight against the Canadiens, The Washington Post’s Bailey Johnson reports. The Middletown, New Jersey, native had missed the last four games with an illness and has only played in four of Washington’s last 11 games due to a handful of healthy scratches. He’s fallen down the depth chart after the team picked up Ethan Bear in free agency, a concerning development given he has two years remaining on a deal carrying a $3MM cap hit. He has eight assists and a -11 rating while averaging 18:30 in 40 games.