It’s hard not to be optimistic about the future of the Montreal Canadiens
They have a number of young difference-makers at every position, which gives them plenty of flexibility to continue to rise up the standings in the Eastern Conference. That makes it a little puzzling that they haven’t done very much this summer
Advertisement
They made a few minor-league deals and a pair of nice contracts that will keep some very good young players — goalie Jakub Dobes and Ivan Demidov — in town for years to come. They also ate some salary to send veteran Brendan Gallagher to Vancouver. But that’s it
For a team that just went on an unexpected, exciting run to the Eastern Conference final, that’s pretty surprising
The Habs have the ninth-most cap space in the league right now, nearly $13.4 million. That’s a ton of room to add talent if they want to
Of the RFAs who are still unsigned, it’s hard to envision Kirby Dach, Zack Bolduc or Arber Xhekaj collectively costing even half their remaining cap space
Advertisement
Supposing, then, that they have about $7 million to spend, why aren’t they spending it? It could be that they’re working on a trade, or that they just don’t see anyone worth pursuing at the price point that makes sense for them
Even with basically all of their core locked up for years to come, there’s a clear need to upgrade
The reason is simple: they didn’t have a ton of difficulty in the first two rounds, but the Carolina Hurricanes pushed them around without a ton of difficulty in the conference final
Young teams need to learn some lessons, and young players get better individually. That’s clearly in the cards for the Habs, but you don’t make up the gap we saw between them and Carolina, or other elite, experienced teams in the East, through maturation alone
Advertisement
Montreal was not a particularly good 5-on-5 team last season, either. Like a lot of young teams with elite burgeoning talent, they showed flashes of it, but on the whole, their underlying numbers don’t grade out especially well. They beat their all-situations expected-goal differential by about 33, and a lot of that was buoyed by strong special teams
While it’s easy to see them as a better-than-average team from a talent perspective, even a little thinning of that number (perhaps because we can’t expect them to have the third-highest power-play shooting percentage in the league again) could cost them more than a couple of wins
There is a risk, too, in their goaltending situation
Dobes and Jacob Fowler were very good last season and might still have more growth in their games — especially Fowler, who’s only 21. But it’s rare that teams roll two 25-or-younger goalies all season, and Sam Montembeault’s 2025-26 campaign (.872 save percentage, 4.9 goals allowed below expected) gave them very little reason to trust him going forward. Any regression for those two younger options might be a problem

The Hockey News Big Show: Who Will Make Up The Canadiens’ Goalie Tandem Next Season? Andrew McInnis, Ryan Kennedy and Michael Traikos discuss the Canadiens’ contract extensions, the Flames and Wild’s trade, the status of the Blue Jackets, Red Wings and Rangers, and more
Advertisement
Florida will no doubt improve, Tampa and Boston still have elite goaltending, Buffalo has a clear interest in — and perhaps an inside track on — Connor Hellebuyck, Ottawa might still be in the mix, Toronto could improve (not that you should hold your breath), and it feels like the Islanders or Capitals should take a step back toward playoff contention. So, suddenly, the playoff path isn’t quite the wide avenue it was last season
Adding some talent to the top six, like Elias Pettersson or Anthony Mantha, helps raise the floor for this team, which, thankfully, is their goal
It is clear from GM Ken Hughes’ public comments that he understands he can’t be done quite yet. But the longer he waits to get the help he knows he needs, the louder the questions get about the team’s next steps

See more of The Hockey News on Google and save us as a preferredour newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting below the article on THN.com or creating your own post in our community forum

