Latest news with #Canadiens
Yahoo
a day ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Seth Jones Finds Himself In Stanley Cup Final Following Trade From Blackhawks
Former Canadiens Player Might Have Played His Last Game With The Hurricanes Since the Carolina Hurricanes signed Montreal Canadiens former player Jesperi Kotkaniemi for a $6.1 million offer sheet in the Summer of 2021, plenty has been written about the centerman, but it has rarely been positive. Earlier in the Eastern Conference final, the soon-to-be 25-year-old was scratched for a couple of games.


New York Post
2 days ago
- Sport
- New York Post
The Connor McDavid free agency question that hangs over the Oilers' Stanley Cup run
This isn't quite the Canadiens attempting to save the hockey world from the marauding two-time defending Cup champion Flyers nearly five decades ago in the 1976 Final, but it kind of a fits the narrative. Because here is the posse from Edmonton, led by the luminous Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl, matched up against the varmints from Florida who have stayed one step ahead of the law since capturing the chalice a year ago. The Panthers transformed themselves into carnivores after being chosen by Matthew Tkachuk. They have embraced their villainy and protected status in the Department of Player Safety's favored nation treaty, under which 'head shots' are defined as 'accidental contact.' Advertisement 4 Oilers center Connor McDavid (97) reacts after scoring a goal against the Dallas Stars during the second period in game five of the Western Conference Final of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect See, it's right there in the section about Sam Bennett that was apparently authored by Chris Pronger when he was moonlighting for the league while getting paid by the Flyers.


New York Times
2 days ago
- Business
- New York Times
Lane Hutson's next contract with Canadiens is minefield that might need to wait
As the Montreal Canadiens work on organizing their financial structure for the coming seasons in a rising salary-cap world, there are two players' contracts they will need to plan for that are somewhat abstract. The first is Lane Hutson, and the second is Ivan Demidov. The Canadiens are still a year away from needing to worry about Demidov's contract, and he still has a lot to prove. But in Hutson's case, he could sign a new contract as of July 1, and he has already proven a lot at the NHL level. Advertisement He is the type of play-driving, puck-moving defenceman the modern game requires, but he also doesn't fit the archetype of the big, bruising defenceman that playoff hockey requires. To be fair, there aren't really any defencemen who fit both categories, and there are few in the NHL who fit the first category as well as Hutson. But the second category is something that will also surely come into play in the Canadiens' evaluation of what Hutson's next contract looks like, and there are different examples of how to approach his second contract across the NHL. Hutson mentioned in his exit interview with the media that he would like to have his contract settled sooner rather than later, and part of that is because he is frankly uncomfortable talking about it. The longer his next contract remains unsettled, the longer he will have to answer questions about it. But when general manager Kent Hughes was asked about Hutson's contract at his end-of-season news conference, he didn't make it sound like it was an urgent matter that necessarily required immediate attention and made a point of mentioning that this administration waited for the end of Cole Caufield's entry-level contract before negotiating an extension, while Juraj Slafkovský and Kaiden Guhle each signed as soon as they were eligible last summer. 'For sure we'll talk to his agent,' Hughes said. 'I saw that he mentioned he'd like to get his contract settled sooner rather than later. So we'll call his agent and we'll see. But it's not like it's a priority. I find it's important to communicate, to learn what's important to Lane, and from there we'll see if there's a way to agree on a contract. With Cole, we waited to the end of his (entry-level) contract. With Slaf and Guhle, it happened with a year left. So, I think we'll start talking and see where it goes.' Advertisement What happened with Slafkovský and Guhle was that they accepted contract terms that were viewed as somewhat team-friendly by the Canadiens. They were comfortable with the annual average value for Slafkovský ($7.6 million) and Guhle ($5.55 million), even if it represented a bit of a risk. So when Hughes mentions learning 'what's important to Lane,' this is surely what he means. Is Hutson willing to work with the Canadiens on accepting less money and falling in line with their internal salary structure in exchange for the security of a long-term contract? Or will he look to be paid what his production in his rookie NHL season demonstrated he is worth, particularly in the context of a rising salary cap? Looking at this in the most basic terms possible, it is not very difficult to find a group of comparable players to Hutson that we can use as a basis for this exercise. Filtering NHL defencemen who are 26 years old or younger, played at least 50 games and had at least 0.5 points per game last season (remember, Hutson had 66 points in 82 games as a rookie in his age-20 season) gives us a list of 14 players. Of those, three were still on their entry-level contracts: Hutson, Luke Hughes and Jackson LaCombe. That leaves 11 defencemen playing on their second or third contracts to use as a basis for comparison: Rasmus Dahlin, Cale Makar, Moritz Seider, Mikhail Sergachev, Miro Heiskanen, Owen Power, Jake Sanderson, Quinn Hughes, Noah Dobson, Thomas Harley and Evan Bouchard. That might seem like a random order in which to list those players, but it's not. They are listed in order of the cap hits on their current contracts, from a high of $11 million for Dahlin to a low of $3.9 million for Bouchard. That list represents three different approaches to a second NHL contract. The bottom three names on the list — Dobson, Harley and Bouchard — as well as Dahlin and Sergachev, signed two- or three-year bridge contracts out of entry-level, with Dobson and Bouchard due for new contracts this summer and Harley up next summer. All three of them are about to become very rich men. Sergachev signed his third contract in 2022 for eight years at $8.5 million per coming off a three-year bridge deal at $4.8 million a year. Dahlin signed his eight-year, $88 million contract in 2023, also coming off a three-year bridge at $6 million a year. Dobson, Harley and Bouchard each signed bridge deals at or just below $4 million a year, with Dobson signing for three years and the other two for two years. Advertisement Both Makar and Hughes signed six-year deals out of entry-level a couple of months apart in 2021 that walked them right to unrestricted free agency, with Makar's contract buying one UFA year and Hughes' none. They signed for $9 million and $7.85 million a year, respectively, and both can hit the UFA market in 2027. Their next contracts will be monsters, but they also demonstrate a mechanism to keep the cap hit reasonable while locking in prime years. The trade-off is the stress in Vancouver about what Hughes will choose to do when his contract expires, and the Avalanche having to trade away Mikko Rantanen in anticipation of Makar's next contract. The rest of the players on that list — Seider, Heiskanen, Power and Sanderson — signed long-term right out of entry-level. For many reasons aside from this very rudimentary exercise, Sanderson's eight-year contract worth $8.05 million a year signed in 2023 can serve as a basis for comparison here, and demonstrates why this could be a complicated negotiation between Hutson's camp and the Canadiens. It would be easy for Hutson's representatives to argue he is a more productive player than Sanderson and is therefore worth more than him. That's not a knock on Sanderson, of course, since only three defencemen in NHL history had a more productive rookie season than Hutson's 66 points this season. But it would be just as easy for the Canadiens to argue Sanderson fits both categories of defencemen described above, merging a play-driving puck-mover with a big body who can drive playoff success. For instance, no defenceman who played at least 75 minutes at five-on-five in these playoffs had a higher offensive zone start percentage than Hutson's 87.5 percent, according to Natural Stat Trick. In fact, only two skaters were higher, Washington's Dylan Strome and Alex Ovechkin at 97.3 (!) percent. The next highest defenceman was Carolina's Shayne Gostisbehere at 78.6 percent. Sanderson, however, only started 47.62 percent of his shifts in the offensive zone in the playoffs, suggesting his value to the Senators goes beyond his production, which is also evident in Sanderson's predominant role on both the power play and penalty kill. The same argument could be made about Seider ($8.55 million) and Power ($8.35 million), though neither of them played in the playoffs. The reality of the NHL, however, is that offence gets you paid, and Hutson's offence is truly special. Combine that reality with the new financial landscape of the NHL with the salary cap expected to rise to $113.5 million by 2027-28 — which would be the second season of Hutson's next contract — and the conditions are ripe for Hutson to seek a big payday based on what he's already demonstrated and also what he is expected to do offensively in the future. Advertisement Sanderson was in the first year of his new contract this season, and it took up 9.15 percent of the $88 million salary cap. That same percentage in 2026-27 — when the cap is expected to be set at $104 million — would represent an AAV of just over $9.5 million on a long-term contract, and that's assuming Hutson's camp doesn't feel he should be paid more than Sanderson. It should also be noted that of the 11 defencemen we are looking at here, Sanderson was one of only two — Power is the other — who signed his second contract before the entry-level deals expired. So if the Canadiens and/or Hutson decided to wait until next year, it would hardly be unprecedented. Something else Hughes said at his end-of-season news conference seems to apply, when he evaluated Slafkovský's season coming off his big contract extension last summer. 'I think he came in this year with new expectations, a new contract, and also sometimes, when you have success for the first time, sometimes you get here and you're not ready for what's waiting for you,' Hughes said. 'You hear often about a sophomore slump, and I think that's something we'll need to pay attention to as a team and not expect we'll be back next season and it will be easy.' All of that could easily apply to Hutson, though if we're being honest, it doesn't seem all that likely. Hutson's ability to adjust and find creative ways to not only survive at his size but find new and innovative ways to thrive has defined his hockey career. There's no reason to believe that will change. But one possible reason why Hughes seemed unrushed in talking about Hutson's next contract is the list of defencemen we looked at for this basic exercise. It is a group of the best young defencemen in the NHL, one that doesn't include Adam Fox because he was a year too old to be included, even if he is likely to be Hutson's closest comparable in terms of size, impact and production. Fox, it is worth noting, signed his seven-year deal at $9.5 million a year in November of 2021, in the midst of a career-high 74-point season and before the expiry of his entry-level contract. If Hutson were able to follow up his tremendous rookie season with an even better sophomore season, would those comparables change much? He's already put himself in very select company. Advertisement If we look at the contracts signed by Hughes since he arrived, one theme has emerged: He often gets what he wants. He wanted a short term on Sam Montembeault's contract, and that's what he got. He wanted a certain number for Jake Evans' contract, and that's what he got. But most notably, he wanted Caufield's and Slafkovský's second contracts to come in under Nick Suzuki's $7.875 million cap number, and that's what he got in both cases. If Hughes wants that to happen again with Hutson, it seems rather evident it won't happen this summer because Hutson would be leaving a significant amount of money on the table if he agreed to something like that, perhaps as much as $2 million a year, or even more. And the threat of a potential offer sheet didn't impact nine of the 11 defencemen we looked at here signing their second contracts at the end of their entry-level deals. In other words, as Hughes suggested a few weeks ago, there is nothing pressing, and it would appear to be in the best interests of both parties to wait and let things play out a little longer.


Vancouver Sun
3 days ago
- Sport
- Vancouver Sun
Cowan: Careers of Canadiens' Emil Heineman, Panthers' Sam Bennett intertwined
There will always be a link between the Florida Panthers' Sam Bennett and the Canadiens' Emil Heineman . When the Flames decided to trade Bennett to Florida at the 2021 NHL trade deadline — after selecting him with the fourth overall pick at the 2014 NHL Entry Draft — the player they wanted in return was Heineman, who had been selected 43rd overall by the Panthers at the 2020 draft. Brad Treliving — general manager of the Toronto Maple Leafs — was the Flames' GM at the time and he dealt Bennett to the Panthers, along with a sixth-round pick in the 2022 draft, in exchange for Heineman and a second-round pick in 2022. Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. Flames scout Bobbie Hagelin was really high on Heineman. 'Going into the draft last year (2020) I remember Bobbie saying: 'You want this guy to put a Calgary Flames jersey on,' ' Craig Conroy — who was the Flames' assistant general manager at the time and is now GM — told reporters in Calgary after acquiring Heineman on April 12, 2021. 'But when we got to our pick (in the second round), he was obviously gone. 'As far as work ethic and compete (level) Zach Hyman would be a comparable,' Conroy added about Heineman. 'That's the type of compete he has. When you watch Emil, that's what he looks like to me on the video and a lot of the highlights. He has good hands, too. He protects the puck. He finishes checks. He's a dog on the bone on the backcheck. That's what we really like about him. And when you talk to Bobbie and Hakan (Loob) and any of our European scouts about him, everyone is the same — they felt like this would be a huge asset to get into the organization and someone to grow with.' Heineman never played a game for the Flames. Treliving traded him to the Canadiens (along with a first-round draft pick in 2022 that was used to select Filip Mesar) on Feb. 14, 2022 , in exchange for Tyler Toffoli , who is now with the San Jose Sharks. Heineman got off to a strong start as a rookie with the Canadiens this season, scoring 10 goals in his first 41 games before being struck by a car in Utah on Jan. 13 and suffering a wrist injury that sidelined him for more than a month. The 23-year-old winger didn't score a goal in his last 21 games with the Canadiens before helping Sweden win a bronze medal at the IIHF World Hockey Championship, scoring a goal and adding two assists in 10 games. Bennett was looking for a fresh start when the Flames traded him to the Panthers and the 28-year-old centre has flourished in the Florida sunshine. After scoring only 67 goals in 402 regular-season games with the Flames and becoming a fourth-liner, Bennett has 95 goals in 289 regular-season games with the Panthers, including 25 this season, along with 90 penalty minutes. He has been even better in the playoffs with 24 goals in 71 games for the Panthers, including 10 in 17 games this season as Florida advanced to the Stanley Cup final for the third straight season. The Panthers will be looking to win the Cup for the second straight year when they take on the Oilers in the final, with Game 1 slated for Wednesday in Edmonton. Bennett earned US$4.425 million this season in the final year of a four-year contract and might be able to double that amount as an unrestricted free agent on July 1. He would be a great fit with the Canadiens — bringing his mix of skill and grit — but longtime hockey insider John Shannon said this week on the S&P Podcast with Matthew Sekeres and Blake Price that Bennett will only be looking to sign with the Panthers or Maple Leafs. Bennett, who is from Holland Landing, Ont., would also be a great fit with the Leafs. They can definitely use his grit and compete level — especially in the playoffs. Bennett was ranked No. 2 in the TSN Free Agent Rankings this week , behind Leafs winger Mitch Marner. It's interesting to look back at what Treliving said after trading Bennett for Heineman when he was GM of the Flames. 'We came here at the same time — I was hired (as GM) and the draft was a month later, and Sam was our first pick, so we go back,' said Treliving, who became GM of the Leafs two years ago after nine years with the Flames. 'There have been lots of ups and lots of downs. It hasn't gone perfect, but … I try to separate that. He's a good kid. He is a really good kid, but you also have to make business decisions. We made one here. 'We had a good chat and I always told him if there is anything I can ever do for him moving forward. …'


Ottawa Citizen
3 days ago
- Sport
- Ottawa Citizen
Cowan: Careers of Canadiens' Emil Heineman, Panthers' Sam Bennett intertwined
There will always be a link between the Florida Panthers' Sam Bennett and the Canadiens' Emil Heineman. Article content When the Flames decided to trade Bennett to Florida at the 2021 NHL trade deadline — after selecting him with the fourth overall pick at the 2014 NHL Entry Draft — the player they wanted in return was Heineman, who had been selected 43rd overall by the Panthers at the 2020 draft. Article content Article content Brad Treliving — general manager of the Toronto Maple Leafs — was the Flames' GM at the time and he dealt Bennett to the Panthers, along with a sixth-round pick in the 2022 draft, in exchange for Heineman and a second-round pick in 2022. Article content Article content Flames scout Bobbie Hagelin was really high on Heineman. Article content 'Going into the draft last year (2020) I remember Bobbie saying: 'You want this guy to put a Calgary Flames jersey on,' ' Craig Conroy — who was the Flames' assistant general manager at the time and is now GM — told reporters in Calgary after acquiring Heineman on April 12, 2021. 'But when we got to our pick (in the second round), he was obviously gone. 'As far as work ethic and compete (level) Zach Hyman would be a comparable,' Conroy added about Heineman. 'That's the type of compete he has. When you watch Emil, that's what he looks like to me on the video and a lot of the highlights. He has good hands, too. He protects the puck. He finishes checks. He's a dog on the bone on the backcheck. That's what we really like about him. And when you talk to Bobbie and Hakan (Loob) and any of our European scouts about him, everyone is the same — they felt like this would be a huge asset to get into the organization and someone to grow with.' Article content Article content Heineman never played a game for the Flames. Treliving traded him to the Canadiens (along with a first-round draft pick in 2022 that was used to select Filip Mesar) on Feb. 14, 2022, in exchange for Tyler Toffoli, who is now with the San Jose Sharks. Article content Article content Heineman got off to a strong start as a rookie with the Canadiens this season, scoring 10 goals in his first 41 games before being struck by a car in Utah on Jan. 13 and suffering a wrist injury that sidelined him for more than a month. The 23-year-old winger didn't score a goal in his last 21 games with the Canadiens before helping Sweden win a bronze medal at the IIHF World Hockey Championship, scoring a goal and adding two assists in 10 games. Article content Article content Bennett was looking for a fresh start when the Flames traded him to the Panthers and the 28-year-old centre has flourished in the Florida sunshine. After scoring only 67 goals in 402 regular-season games with the Flames and becoming a fourth-liner, Bennett has 95 goals in 289 regular-season games with the Panthers, including 25 this season, along with 90 penalty minutes. He has been even better in the playoffs with 24 goals in 71 games for the Panthers, including 10 in 17 games this season as Florida advanced to the Stanley Cup final for the third straight season. The Panthers will be looking to win the Cup for the second straight year when they take on the Oilers in the final, with Game 1 slated for Wednesday in Edmonton.