Mikhail Grigorenko didn’t just notice Alexander Zharovsky - he came away convinced the Canadiens may have landed a real bargain.
The veteran forward, who faced Zharovsky several times last season in the KHL, had strong praise for Montreal’s early second-round pick in 2025. Grigorenko said the Canadiens got a player with a much higher ceiling than where he was selected.
“He is excellent, a very, very good player.
He'll spend another season in the KHL, and after that, I don't know if he'll be ready to make the jump directly to the NHL,” he said.
Grigorenko also suggested Zharovsky may need a stop in the AHL before reaching Montreal, but he still sees a player with real top-six potential.
“He might need a year of experience in the American Hockey League, but I think he has the potential to become a top-six player in the NHL,” he added while attending the Celebrity Open on Thursday.
His biggest point was that Zharovsky’s draft position may have been dragged down by where he plays, not by what he can do.
“If he hadn't played in the KHL, he would have been drafted in the first round,” said the former teammate of Ivan Demidov with SKA St. Petersburg.
“It's difficult for people to know just how good he is because they can't watch him at the World Junior Championship and compare him to the other players.
He's a steal for the Canadiens,” he emphasized.
Grigorenko’s view carries some real weight here. This wasn’t a casual take from someone watching clips online. He saw Zharovsky up close in league games and knows the skill set firsthand.
There’s also a small but interesting Montreal connection in Grigorenko’s own life. Even though he continues to play in Russia, he spends his summers in Lac-Beauport and bought a home there in 2019.
At 32, he’s in a very different place professionally. He just put together the best offensive season of his career with Traktor Chelyabinsk, finishing with 59 points in 62 games.
He also spoke plainly about where he stands with the NHL after his stint with the Columbus Blue Jackets in 2020-21 didn’t go the way he wanted.
“In the KHL, I'm an impact player and have a bigger role than I did in the NHL.
Financially, it's also very good,” he explained.
And he doesn’t sound like someone expecting another shot across the Atlantic.
“I think I'm starting to get too old for the NHL.
You never know, but I'm trying to be realistic.
I don't think I'll receive another contract offer,” he concluded.
For Montreal, the takeaway is simple: if Zharovsky develops the way Grigorenko believes he can, the Canadiens may have found themselves a legitimate top-six forward with their second-round swing.
In Other News...
Canadiens Face A Tough Call On Two Veteran Forwards
Phillip Danault and Josh Anderson are both heading into the final year of their contracts, which puts the Canadiens in a familiar spot: weighing present value against the long view. Danault has been one of Montreals most useful all-around forwards since arriving, carving out a role as a penalty-kill and faceoff presence, while Anderson has given the club speed, size and a steady dose of physical edge since coming over from Columbus.
The tricky part is timing. Montreals center depth is getting more attention, and any decision on Danault could hinge on whether younger options are close enough to push for bigger minutes. Andersons case is different, but no less complicated, since his role has been tied closely to the penalty kill and his offensive ceiling in Montreal has remained a moving target as the team keeps trying to balance veteran reliability with the next wave of talent. [Read more 🡒]
Canadiens Fans Are Starting To Wonder About Kent Hughes Again
With the offseason still unfolding, the Canadiens are again being viewed as a team that could wait out the market before making its next move. Jim Biringer, speaking on TSN Radio, said Montreal has shown patience in past summers and expects management to be calculated rather than aggressive for the sake of activity, with any deal tied to the needs of the roster and the conditions around it. He also pointed out that the broader NHL landscape can shape what becomes available, especially when other clubs are squeezed by the cap.
For Montreal, that means the next step may not come quickly, even if fans are already scanning for signs of action from Kent Hughes. Biringer suggested the Canadiens are likely to do something later in the offseason, but the timing could be the sort that catches people off guard. If the right player becomes available from a cap-strapped team, the fit could make sense, but for now the picture remains open and the waiting game continues. [Read more 🡒]
Canadiens Just Landed In A Scoring Debate Fans Know Well
The Canadiens keep showing up in the kind of trade chatter that usually follows a team with cap room and a growing need to turn promise into production. According to David Pagnotta, Anaheim is looking to move a veteran forward and is even willing to attach a second-round pick to the deal, which is the sort of extra incentive that can make a player with a pricey contract suddenly feel a lot more realistic for a club like Montreal.
For the Canadiens, the appeal is obvious enough. The player in question has a track record of putting the puck in the net, even if the recent numbers have been more modest than his peak years, and his deal runs only through next summer. Montreal has been mentioned as a possible fit because it can absorb money and because its recent progress makes this the kind of swing a front office at least has to consider, even if the final price tag is still the part everyone is waiting to see. [Read more 🡒]
