By now, you’ve surely heard that the Montreal Canadiens will spend approximately the next two months without the services of centers Alex Galchenyuk (9G, 23PTS) and David Desharnais (3G, 9PTS) after both suffered knee injuries during the five-game road trip that concluded on Tuesday night in St. Louis against the Blues.
MEDICAL UPDATE: Alex Galchenyuk & David Desharnais (knee injuries) are expected to miss 6-8 weeks. DETAILS-> https://t.co/inFJXTdMKo pic.twitter.com/vBpzAmclls
— Canadiens Montréal (@CanadiensMTL) December 7, 2016
There is a silver lining, according to Eric Engels:
Just to be clear: neither Galchenyuk nor Desharnais are having surgery. Just got that confirmed. #Sportsnet
— Eric Engels (@EricEngels) December 8, 2016
While there are countless articles available to readers regarding what the Habs should do next to address this issue, it’s hard to imagine the organization will necessarily try to sign replacements for both players. Despite their holding onto the first overall spot in the National Hockey League, centers are not only exceptionally hard to acquire but the order is a tall one in that management would be negotiating from a position of weakness. Other franchises will inflate the value of their assets knowing the Habs are desperate, so I believe it’s safe to say that a trade is not in the works. The issue with these injuries becomes more apparent when you take a look at the (virtually nonexistent) depth down the middle both within the Canadiens’ and St. John’s IceCaps’ rosters.
As it stands, Tomas Plekanec (four points in his last six games), Phillip Danault (pointless in his last 11), Andrew Shaw (eight points in his last 12 games), and Torrey Mitchell (pointless in his last 12) will have to carry the load and continue to improve their performances in order to keep the team afloat.
They might have to do without Danault, who is reportedly ill and is not practicing with the team:
Phillip Danault missing practice this morning (sick)
— Renaud Lavoie (@renlavoietva) December 8, 2016
The two main AHLers that could make the jump are Michael McCarron (3G, 11PTS) and Nikita Scherback (9G, 17PTS), although both are injured yet should be ready to return to game action shortly:
Lots of red currently on the #Habs organizational depth chart. https://t.co/kI1XoysvWD pic.twitter.com/liMjj0B05j
— Eyes on the Prize (@HabsEOTP) December 8, 2016
For now, the Habs have sent Charles Hudon (3GP, 2A) back to St. John’s for what I presume to be a conditioning stint and recalled Sven Andrighetto, who will need to showcase significantly more than he has in order to prove he belongs in the lineup for an extended period of time. He will not feature at the center position, and as the Habs hit the ice for practice in Brossard, I will continue to update this blog with the lines and defensive pairings.
Les Canadiens ont cédé aujourd'hui l’attaquant Charles Hudon aux IceCaps / Canadiens assigned forward Charles Hudon to St. John's today.
— Canadiens Montréal (@CanadiensMTL) December 7, 2016
Les Canadiens ont rappelé ce soir l’attaquant Sven Andrighetto des IceCaps / Canadiens recalled Sven Andrighetto from St. John's tonight.
— Canadiens Montréal (@CanadiensMTL) December 7, 2016
Moreover, defenseman Mark Barberio has been sent down as Nathan Beaulieu appears ready to come back:
Canadiens assigned defenseman Mark Barberio to the St. John's IceCaps today. DETAILS -> https://t.co/C0IgFuQTXQ pic.twitter.com/nHQcoAOIty
— Canadiens Montréal (@CanadiensMTL) December 7, 2016
Mark Barberio returned to IceCaps. Should signal Nathan Beaulieu's return.
— Eric Engels (@EricEngels) December 7, 2016
The Habs host the New Jersey Devils (12-7-6) tonight at the Bell Centre, as they’ll look to shut down former Canadiens star Michael Cammalleri who has five points in his last five games and an outstanding 14 in his last nine. As it stands, the Devils are three points away from the final Wild Card playoff position yet only seven points short of first place in the Eastern Conference, so expect a very hungry team to throw everything it has at head coach Michel Therrien’s troops.
Carey Price gets the nod, while Greg Pateryn is also missing from practice:
Carey Price vs Devils #lavoiedubé
— Renaud Lavoie (@renlavoietva) December 8, 2016
Another missing in action is Greg Pateryn this morning.
— Renaud Lavoie (@renlavoietva) December 8, 2016
Finally, former enforcer John Scott officially announced his retirement yesterday and penned a great article in the Players’ Tribune that you can read below:
A decade in hockey filled with unforgettable memories.
— The Players' Tribune (@PlayersTribune) December 8, 2016
Welcome to @JohnScott_32's one-of-a-kind journey. https://t.co/cO0MOQY2in
He also wrote a memoir, which you can order starting on December 27th:
Proud to announce my memoir, #AGuyLikeMe! On sale Dec. 27, pre-order here: https://t.co/doxwh42Yj4 pic.twitter.com/9NCHpYIAfG
— John Scott (@johnscott_32) December 7, 2016
