Canadiens Just Sent A Clear Message About Lavals Role

The promotion of Daniel Jacob as head coach of the Laval Rocket underscores the Canadiens' commitment to fostering talent from within while ensuring seamless continuity in their player development system.

The Canadiens stayed in-house with their latest coaching move, and that says plenty about how they want the Laval Rocket to operate going forward.

On Monday, the Rocket announced that assistant coach Daniel Jacob will take over as head coach after Pascal Vincent left for an assistant coaching job with the Seattle Kraken. Vincent’s run in Laval helped turn the Rocket into one of the American Hockey League’s top teams, so the organization was never walking into an easy replacement decision. Instead of casting a wide net, Montreal went with a familiar face who already knows the room, the standards and the bigger picture.

Jacob’s connection to the Rocket goes back to 2018, when he joined Joel Bouchard’s staff. From there, he moved on with Bouchard to the San Diego Gulls and later spent time with the Syracuse Crunch, adding more experience and a broader coaching résumé along the way. He returned to Laval in 2024 as Vincent’s assistant and quickly became a key part of a staff that guided the Rocket to one of the best seasons in franchise history.

That kind of continuity has become a calling card for the Canadiens. Kent Hughes, Jeff Gorton and the rest of the organization have leaned toward stability over turnover, and this hire fits that approach cleanly. Rather than bringing in someone new who would need time to learn the organization’s identity, Montreal promoted someone who already understands it from the inside.

For the Rocket, the formula doesn’t need a reset. Jacob already knows the systems, the expectations and the players who are likely to return.

That matters in a development-focused environment, where consistency can make a real difference for young players trying to take the next step. The communication stays the same, the standards stay the same and the development path stays intact.

That development piece remains the heart of the job. Winning in the AHL matters, but the Rocket’s main purpose is still to help produce NHL players. Laval is expected to have another strong roster, with Adam Engström, Owen Beck and David Reinbacher all projected to play important roles as they continue pushing toward full-time NHL jobs.

Jacob’s background gives him a clear advantage there. He has already worked inside the system and understands what Martin St.

Louis and the Canadiens coaching staff want from players making the jump to Montreal. That alignment between Laval and the NHL club has become one of the organization’s biggest strengths.

The Canadiens could have chosen a fresh start. Instead, they chose the path that keeps everything moving in the same direction. For a team built around development, that may be the smartest move they could make.

In Other News...

Canadiens Just Sent A Troubling Message About Kirby Dach

The Canadiens latest move on Kirby Dach says plenty about where things stand without spelling everything out. Montreal submitted a two-way qualifying offer to the young forward, a structure that pays more in the NHL but drops sharply if he winds up in the AHL, and it comes after a season in which he managed 15 points in 37 games.

For a player once viewed as a key part of the clubs future, that kind of contract setup is hard to ignore. It suggests Kent Hughes and the front office are weighing Dachs role more cautiously than they once might have, and with the offer still unsigned, there is at least some uncertainty hanging over what comes next. [Read more 🡒]

Canadiens Suddenly Face A Tough Call On Arber Xhekaj

Arber Xhekajs place in Montreal has become one of the more interesting roster questions of the summer. The Canadiens have a crowded left side on defense, and with three left-handed blueliners already under contract, it is not hard to see why his path to a bigger role may be harder to map out than it looked not long ago.

That is where the front offices timing matters. Montreal still controls the conversation around Xhekajs rights for now, which gives the club a chance to explore trade options before the situation turns on them, and it also means every day without clarity adds a little more pressure to a decision the Canadiens cannot really afford to put off for long. [Read more 🡒]

Canadiens Suddenly Have A Net Problem Kent Hughes Cant Ignore

The Canadiens have built a goaltending picture that looks strong on paper, but it comes with an awkward logjam that Kent Hughes will have to sort through before the season gets rolling. Montreal already has three NHL-caliber goalies on the roster, and Samuel Montembeault is part of that mix after signing a three-year extension, while the organization also has a young option in Jacob Fowler who turned heads with his play last season.

Fowlers emergence only sharpens the question of how the Canadiens want to handle the position, because he may be ready for more than another quiet year in the minors. With Montembeault locked in and the depth chart crowded, Montreal has to decide how to balance development, playing time and roster spots without stalling the progress of a goalie it clearly believes can help. [Read more 🡒]