Canadiens Face A Familiar Free Agency Problem At Center

With limited funds and a competitive market, the Canadiens are eyeing strategic signings to bolster their roster in the 2026 free agency.

The Montreal Canadiens may not have the kind of free-agent market they were hoping for in 2026, but there are still a few names that could fit what they need. A once-promising class has thinned out fast, with most of the big contract-year players already spoken for through extensions or offseason moves. That leaves Montreal looking at a shallower pool, and with only $14.23 million in cap space plus several restricted free agents to sort out, every move has to count.

If Kent Hughes does go shopping, the focus should be clear: help up front, and ideally help at center. That’s where the most realistic options start to emerge.

Mason Marchment stands out first. He’s one of the better forwards still available, which says plenty about the state of this class, and he would fill a clear need for the Canadiens.

At 6'5", he brings the kind of size Montreal could use on the wing, and his 2025-26 season showed both the rough patch and the payoff. He opened with just 13 points in 29 games with the Seattle Kraken, then found his footing after a trade to the Columbus Blue Jackets, putting up 32 points in 39 games.

The problem for Montreal is that he’ll draw plenty of interest, and that could push his price beyond what the Canadiens want to spend. If it doesn’t, he looks like a strong fit for the second line opposite Ivan Demidov.

The center market is even trickier, which is why Boone Jenner makes sense as a bridge option. Montreal doesn’t need to solve the position forever, especially with Michael Hage likely set to reach the NHL by the end of the 2026-27 season.

Jenner could cover that gap if he ever leaves Columbus, though that would be a surprise after spending his entire 13-year career with the Blue Jackets. Still, if he gets to free agency, he’d be exactly the kind of second-line center the Canadiens would want, especially because of his work in the faceoff circle.

Claude Giroux fits a similar lane. The 38-year-old has spent the last four seasons with the Ottawa Senators and is still logging more than 18 minutes per game.

His scoring isn’t what it once was, but he has still averaged just under 50 points per season over the past two years, and he remains elite on draws with a faceoff win percentage just under 60% in Ottawa. Of the center options available, he may be the best one Montreal could realistically land, particularly if the Canadiens can sell him on a one-year deal.

In Other News...

Canadiens Suddenly In Direct Fight With Leafs For Coveted Free Agent

The Canadiens offseason board is getting a little more crowded, and not just because they need help up front. A veteran winger with a physical edge is drawing real attention on the open market, and Montreal is expected to be in the same conversation as Toronto as teams around the league weigh whether his blend of size and scoring touch fits a middle-six role.

What makes the chase more interesting is the price tag, which is being projected at roughly $5.67 million a year over four years. For Montreal, that kind of commitment would signal a real investment in experience and edge, while also forcing the club to decide how far it wants to go for a player whose recent production and style suggest he can fill a useful need, even if the bidding does not come cheaply. [Read more 🡒]

Canadiens Fans Just Got The July 1 Tease They Dreaded

The opening of NHL free agency always brings a flood of noise, but Montreal hockey fans got an especially intriguing one when agent Dan Milstein hinted that something related to the city would surface on July 1. He stopped well short of saying what was coming, which only sharpened the attention around the tease and turned a routine market-opening day into a waiting game for Canadiens followers.

Any announcement tied to a Gold Star Hockey client would naturally draw interest in Montreal, and that alone has the fan base watching closely for the next development. For now, though, it remains exactly what it was at the start: a hint, a bit of buzz, and a whole lot of speculation with no confirmation to anchor it. [Read more 🡒]

Canadiens May Have Found Their Center Fix But Dallas Holds Everything Up

The Canadiens keep circling center help, and Mavrik Bourque has emerged as one of the cleaner fits on paper. The Dallas Stars restricted free agent gives Montreal the kind of young pivot it has been trying to line up, but the path to actually getting him is anything but simple because of the leagues offer-sheet rules and the Habs own draft-pick limitations.

So even with Bourque in view, this feels more like a negotiation puzzle than a straightforward pursuit. Montreal can explore the offer-sheet route only within a narrow band, and the low-end number being discussed is one Dallas would almost certainly match, which is why a trade may be the only realistic avenue if the Canadiens want to keep pressing the case. [Read more 🡒]