Canadiens Quietly Set Up A Bigger Summer Battle Than Fans Expected

The Montreal Canadiens invite fans to catch a glimpse of the future as they unveil a diverse roster for their open-to-the-public development camp at the CN Sports Complex.

The Montreal Canadiens’ development camp is set, and the list is packed with names fans will want to track closely when the group hits the ice at the CN Sports Complex in Brossard from Tuesday, June 30 to Thursday, July 2.

The club has already had a busy day, also announcing its qualifying offer decisions and making trades involving Joshua Roy and Brendan Gallagher. Now the focus shifts to the next wave of prospects, with on-ice sessions open to the public throughout the camp.

Tuesday is reserved for physical testing, and the players won’t be available to the media that day. Wednesday brings the first full look on the ice: the goaltenders skate at 9:15 AM, the defensemen at 10:15 AM, and the forwards at 11:00 AM, followed by media availabilities beginning at 13:00. On Thursday, the goaltenders are back on the ice at 10:00, with a scrimmage set for 11:00 AM.

In goal, Montreal has six invitees: Alexis Cournoyer, Emmett Croteau, Max Lacroix on a tryout, Quentin Miller, Arseni Radkox and Mikus Vecvanags. Lacroix brings an interesting family name to camp, as the son of former NHLer Eric Lacroix and grandson of Hall of Fame builder Pierre Lacroix.

The blue line group checks in at 12 players: Rasmus Bergqvist, Cooper Cleaves, Jean-Samuel Daigneault, Aiden Dubinsky, Carlos Handel, Brayden Klimpke, Andrew MacNiel, Bryce Pickford, Owen Protz, Timofei Runtso, Nolan Stevenson on a tryout, and Maxon Vig. Stevenson arrives with his own note attached, having served as captain of the Penticton Vees before moving to the NCAA last season.

Up front, the Canadiens will have a larger group of 19 forwards at camp: Dillan Bentley, TylerDeakos, Donovan Frias on a tryout, Remi Gelinas on a tryout, Michael Hage, Aleksandr Legkov on a tryout, Giacomo Martino on a tryout, Ben Merrill, L.J. Mooney, Reid Morich on a tryout, Nikita Ovcharov on a tryout, Hayden Paupanekis, Gleb Pugachyov, Thomas Rousseau on a tryout, Wesley Royston, Logan Sawyer, Parker Trottier, Braidy Wassilly on a tryout, and Alexander Zharovsky.

A few names stand out as first-time campers worth watching. Paupanekis missed last year because of mononucleosis, while Zharovsky and Pugachyov will also be making their debuts at this event. Among the returnees, Mooney drew attention last time with his play despite his small frame, and Protz impressed enough at both development camp and rookie camp to earn a call to the main camp.

The Canadiens are also bringing in nine coaches for the on-ice work. The group includes Kori Cheverie, Caroline Ouellette, Noemie Marin and Alex-Andre Perron from the Montreal Victoire, former Hab Mike Condon, now a performance consultant, Olivia Cook, Bruno Pierre Guillemette, Yanick Jean and Olivier Latendresse.

For anyone with time on Canada Day or a free Thursday, Brossard will have plenty going on.

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