Kirby Dach’s contract situation has turned into a revealing one for the Canadiens.
Montreal submitted a two-way qualifying offer to Dach, a move that gives him $4 million in the NHL but just over $100,000 per year if he winds up in the American Hockey League. That detail immediately stood out, because it meant the Canadiens were protecting themselves in the event Dach played so poorly that he had to be assigned to the Laval Rocket.
Today, it became clear that this was no accident. Nicolas Cloutier confirmed that the Canadiens could have qualified Dach with a one-way offer instead. The collective bargaining agreement allowed both paths, but Kent Hughes deliberately went with the two-way format, which offers the player less protection.
That choice says plenty about how the organization is looking at Dach right now, and it is not encouraging for his supporters. It is a striking drop in the way the Canadiens appear to value him.
There is another layer here, too. If Dach truly believed in himself, he would sign and trust that another team would claim him off waivers. By holding off, he is showing some concern about the possibility of clearing waivers without any club stepping in.
After putting up 15 points in 37 games last season, it would be tough to persuade an arbitrator to push his salary well beyond $4 million. So Dach is taking a real risk, and the situation suggests he is not exactly betting on himself.
For now, there is no guarantee that Kent Hughes and Jeff Gorton still view Dach as part of their lineup for the 2027-28 season.
In Other News...
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 🡒]
