The Montreal Canadiens' run to the Eastern Conference Final in the Stanley Cup Playoffs opened a lot of eyes around the NHL. It appears to have opened the eyes of Canadiens management as well. General manager Marc Bergevin had a busy day Tuesday on the opening of the NHL free agent market, but the most important thing he feels he accomplished was to turn over the leadership of his club to his young veterans. Bergevin allowed captain Brian Gionta to leave as an unrestricted free agent and traded defenseman Josh Gorges and his $3.9 million salary-cap charge for the next four seasons to the Buffalo Sabres, where Gionta eventually signed a three-year, $12.75 million contract. The Canadiens signed Florida Panthers defenseman Tom Gilbert to a two-year, $5.6 million contract to replace Gorges, saving $1.1 million in salary-cap space per season in the process. They also brought in center Manny Malhotra on a one-year, $850,000 contract and re-signed defenseman Mike Weaver for one year at $1.75 million. The moves came a day after Bergevin traded center Daniel Briere to the Colorado Avalanche in exchange for right wing PA Parenteau. That is a big chunk of the Canadiens' leadership corps now playing in Buffalo, and Bergevin said he and his management team felt during the playoffs that some of the team's young veterans were ready to take on bigger leadership roles.
"You're losing [Gionta] and Josh, great
people. They've been great for the Montreal
Canadiens," Bergevin said. "We have to make
tough decisions; it's part of my job. Sometimes you make decisions
that are not popular. But I'm not here to be popular; I'm here to
make decisions. Sometimes it's hard, I understand, but that's what we
needed to do and we felt that by doing that we changed the look of
our team a bit. But it's time for the young people to take a bigger
role. There's always a rotation and we're at that crossroads now."
Two big shifts happened to the Canadiens' roster
on Monday and Tuesday. The first and most significant was that
Gorges, a left-shooting defenseman, was traded and replaced by
Gilbert, who shoots from the right. Along with Weaver and restricted
free agent P.K.
Subban, this gives the Canadiens three right-handed defensemen.
Bergevin said this will allow hard-hitting, left-shooting defenseman
Alexei Emelin
to move from the right side, where he has played his entire NHL
career, to his natural left side. It also opens a spot on the left
side for Nathan
Beaulieu or Jarred
Tinordi, two former first-round draft picks who are ready to make
the jump to the NHL. Replacing Gorges with Gilbert also adds more of
a puck-moving presence to the Canadiens' defense, one that can play
on the power play. Montreal has long struggled to find a defense pair
for the second unit of the man advantage, with Andrei
Markov and Subban receiving the bulk of the minutes on the first
unit and often times spending the entire two minutes of a power play
on the ice. With Gilbert and perhaps the skilled Beaulieu potentially
on the second unit, the Canadiens' power play will not be nearly as
dependent on Markov and Subban as it was last season. At even
strength, Gilbert has an established history of being able to drive
possession in his team's favor and get the puck moving toward the
offensive zone quickly, something that was not necessarily a strength
of Gorges' game. The second major shift for the Canadiens is
replacing Briere, an offensive-minded center not known for his
strength in the defensive zone, with Malhotra as the team's
fourth-line center. Malhotra won 59.4 percent of his faceoffs last
season with the Carolina
Hurricanes and is a strong penalty-killer, making him someone
that fits the role of a fourth-line center far better than Briere
did. Gilbert and Malhotra signed shortly after the market opened at
noon Tuesday, and both mentioned they did so because they felt they
had a chance to win in Montreal and because the idea of playing in a
rabid hockey market appealed to them. The acquisition of Parenteau
the day before free agency opened filled a need at right wing the
Canadiens knew they would have because Bergevin had already said
Thomas Vanek
would not return to the team (he signed with the Minnesota
Wild on Tuesday). Bergevin was still talking to Gionta as late as
Tuesday morning, but his departure leaves a hole on right wing that
went unfilled. But the Canadiens did beat out a number of other teams
to sign Czech forward Jiri
Sekac and Bergevin said he could potentially compete for a spot
on the team in the fall. As it stands, the Canadiens could allow a
prospect like Sven
Andrighetto or Jacob
De La Rose fill the hole vacated by Gionta's departure, or
Bergevin could sign another free agent. According to CapGeek.com the
Canadiens have approximately $16 million left under the salary cap,
but Bergevin needs to re-sign restricted free agents Subban and Lars
Eller this summer. But the most important spot that needs to be
filled will be done by players that were already on the Canadiens'
roster; players like Subban, Carey
Price, Max
Pacioretty, David
Desharnais and Brendan
Gallagher, all in their mid-20s, who will be asked to step
forward and become leaders on the team in the absence of Gionta and
Gorges.
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