Canadiens Still Have 3 Free Agent Options Fans Will Want To See

With several intriguing free agents still on the market, the Montreal Canadiens have a strategic opportunity to bolster their lineup and elevate their scoring potential.

A week into free agency, the Montreal Canadiens still have room to make a move - and if they’re going to dip back into the market, the smart play looks to be up front.

Montreal hasn’t done much this offseason beyond bringing in a few players who are likely headed for Laval for most of the year. The roster still has a hole or two, and while the blue line could use another right-handed defenseman, the bigger need is a forward who can bring some offense. The ideal target is a middle-six scorer, someone who can help without forcing the club into a long-term commitment it may regret later.

Three unrestricted free agents still on the board fit that description in different ways.

Anthony Mantha is the biggest name of the group, and maybe the most surprising one still available. He just put together a career year with the Pittsburgh Penguins, finishing with 33 goals and 31 assists.

In a thin market, that kind of production stood out. The reasons he remains unsigned aren’t clear, though contract demands could be part of it, along with teams weighing his injury history.

He stayed healthy last season and appeared in 81 games, but that was only the second time he reached 80 or more regular-season games. If Montreal could land him on a two- or three-year deal at around $3.5-$4 million per year, he’d make a lot of sense as a possible answer on the left side of the second line.

If the Canadiens prefer a shorter commitment, Vladimir Tarasenko is another name that fits. He’s set to turn 35 this season, but he still produced with the Minnesota Wild, scoring 23 goals and adding 24 assists.

That kind of one-year veteran option could appeal to Montreal, especially with a prospect pool deep enough that the team doesn’t need to force a long-term solution. The Canadiens also don’t want to block young players when they’re ready, including Alexander Zharovsky or their most recent first-round pick, Gleb Pugachyov, who could be ready as early as 2027-28.

Tarasenko also changed agents right before free agency and is now represented by Dan Milstein, an agent Montreal knows well because he also represents those two prospects, along with Ivan Demidov and Alexandre Texier.

Then there’s Eeli Tolvanen, a player who brings a different kind of value. He has been durable, playing 75 or more games in four of his eight seasons.

He isn’t a huge forward, but he plays with edge, piling up 175 or more hits in each of those seasons and setting a career high with 237 in 2024-25. He’s not likely to be a major point producer, but he has still posted 35 or more points in each of the past three seasons.

Tolvanen may not be the second-line answer, but he could fit nicely on the third line while Alexandre Texier and Alex Newhook battle for that second-line spot.

The Canadiens have been relatively quiet in free agency, but any one of these three could give the lineup a useful jolt heading into next season.

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Hutsons value only looks better against that backdrop. His production has already separated him from Mintyukovs, and the contract gap feels even wider when the market is pushing upward around them. For the Canadiens, it is the kind of development that makes an already favorable deal look even sharper, even if the broader defenseman market is still leaving plenty of room for more expensive decisions elsewhere. [Read more 🡒]