The Canadiens have begun to softly position themselves in the market for a right-winger to complement Cole Caufield and Nick Suzuki on the top line ahead of the trade deadline, David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period said on Daily Faceoff’s “The Sheet with Jeff Marek” podcast last Friday. Pagnotta speculatively tied them to the Blues’ Jordan Kyrou, who the Habs were more firmly linked to last offseason, but didn’t have any other specific targets to offer.
For the past several seasons, the second-line center slot has been viewed as both a long-term and short-term position of need for Montreal as it transitioned from rebuilder to playoff contender. As Pagnotta mentioned, Oliver Kapanen‘s emergence this season has largely quieted that noise. The 22-year-old rookie is beginning to flourish between fellow youngsters Ivan Demidov and Juraj Slafkovsky, on pace for 26 goals and 45 points. They’ll want more scoring out of him long-term, but it’s a promising first step for a second-round pick still at the midway point of his development curve.
Slafkovsky had spent his first couple of seasons up with Caufield and Suzuki. Moving him down the depth chart to give Montreal a formidable secondary scoring line hasn’t affected his production much and has been a net positive for the club this season, but they’ve yet to find a stable solution to replace him on the top unit.
Since Slafkovsky’s early-season “demotion,” it’s largely been an alternating mix of Zachary Bolduc and Alexandre Texier riding shotgun on the right side. Together, they’ve averaged under half a point per game this season. They haven’t been a huge drag on the line’s possession impacts – in fact, they’ve controlled 61.6% of expected goals when Texier’s the third man – but it’s not the type of production they need from a top-line winger if they have serious aspirations of cutting through a crowded Eastern Conference field in the playoffs.
If Kyrou is amenable to a move, it could be a fit. He’s hit the 70-point mark three times in the last five years. A down year in 2025-26 means his $8.125MM cap hit through 2030-31 might be tough to swallow at first glance, and he has to waive his no-trade clause to facilitate it. There’s also the question of how the Habs would facilitate such a deal with just $1.5MM in projected cap space on deadline day. Moving out pending UFA Patrik Laine and his bloated $8.7MM cap hit is the clear path forward, but whether St. Louis would be open to taking it back in the deal or if they’d have to shed him in a separate transaction remains to be seen.
Montreal was tied to the Flames’ Blake Coleman last month. He would be a slightly longer-term solution as he’s signed through 2026-27. A respected all-around versatile winger, his offensive ceiling isn’t as tantalizing as other options, though. He’s only hit 50 points once in his career. Giving him premier minutes would obviously give him a better shot at being productive, though, and it would allow the Habs to throw out a more formidable bottom-six group as a result.
Of course, there’s also the option of not making any move at all. They still have some tantalizing names on the come-up, like 2025 second-rounder Alexander Zharovsky, a 6’1″ right winger who’s broken out for 36 points in 44 KHL games this season with a couple of weeks still to go before his 19th birthday. The hold-pat outcome is something Pagnotta relays general manager Kent Hughes remains comfortable with as the Habs carry a comfortable seven-point cushion on a playoff spot.

Love Bolduc, but wow all of his shots tend to go dead center on the goalie’s mass.
Hab’s 1st, Laine, Alexander Zharovsky and a 6th for Kyrou
Laine is one of the worst contracts in the league. Montreal is going to have to give up assets just to get rid of him.
You’re going to have to do a lot better than that to get Kyrou.
We’ve been listening to these trade ideas from the Montreal fans more than any other team since last year and it just seems to me like a typical fan base you guys want our best players but all of your best assets are off the table.
St. Louis Blues management should have no interest in trading a Dollar for 4 quarters with the Canadiens.
Kyrou is certainly not worth that much, Montreal would be much further ahead to stay the course than give up that many assets for a marginal upgrade.
Laine is not an asset, trade or otherwise. Part of a perceived overpay is to offset that negative value and get a team to make the mistake of taking him on.
Laine for besser or ep40. or both with picks
Montreal is 24th in defense, And their goaltending will fail them miserably if they make the playoffs, So, Yah! Go out and overpay for a scoring winger at the deadline.
DHIK
Habs are significantly better, and management is significantly smarter, than your opinion of them.
Think maybe a Robertson type trade makes more sense? Put Slaf back on the 1st line and put Robertson with Kappenen and Dem. Trade out Liane half retained to someone looking for a PP specialist
Who isn’t? Duh
I’m fine with Hughes trading picks, but they should really hold on to Zharovsky. Eating Laines contract wouldn’t be the end of the world