Arber Xhekaj’s future has become one of the trickier questions facing the Montreal Canadiens, and it’s not hard to see why. The 23-year-old defenseman is a restricted free agent, did not elect for arbitration, and that leaves the door open for another team to step in with an offer sheet.
That possibility matters because Xhekaj has carved out a steady role without ever becoming a full-time fixture on the Canadiens’ blue line. Over the past four seasons, he has appeared in 230 games and built a reputation as one of the club’s most physical players, piling up 642 hits along the way. He has spent time on the third pair and as the seventh defenseman, but the path to something bigger in Montreal looks crowded.
The issue, as Marco D'Amico recently explained on an episode of The Starr and D'Amico Show, is the way the roster is built on the left side. Montreal already has three left-handed defensemen under contract for the foreseeable future, and that creates a real squeeze.
"If you're Arber's camp, you want to work it out in Montreal absolutely, but you also have to look at the way the roster is built. Can you afford to continue playing Hutson on his off-side?
Can you play Kaiden Guhle on his off-side?" D'Amino said.
If the Canadiens want to keep Hutson, Kaiden Guhle and Mike Matheson on the left side, there may not be much room left for Xhekaj to climb the depth chart. In that scenario, Montreal has to weigh whether a trade return could be more useful than keeping him in a seventh-defenseman role.
Still, this is not a simple call. Xhekaj brings a different element to the back end, and the source material makes clear that none of the other six defensemen on the roster provide that same package on a regular basis.
"He brings a unique skillset that the rest of the six defensemen on the team don't necessarily bring on a regular basis. So these are all the factors that are being taken into account right now, but at the same time, teams are going to be interested, especially teams that aren't very deep on defense."
For now, Montreal does have some leverage. As a restricted free agent, Xhekaj’s rights can be discussed in trade talks, and the Canadiens could move those rights to a team he would be willing to join while working out a return of their own.
But the clock is part of the story too. If the Canadiens wait too long, Xhekaj could sign an offer sheet. At that point, Montreal would have to decide whether to match it or accept draft compensation tied to the offer sheet tier.
In Other News...
Canadiens Just Added A Young Defenseman Fans Will Want To Track
The Canadiens have quietly added another name to their defensive pipeline, with Kent Hughes signing Konyushkov and keeping the young blueliner on loan in the KHL for another year before he makes the jump to North America. It is the kind of move Montreal has leaned into as it tries to stock the blue line with players who can grow into NHL roles without being rushed, and this one comes with a profile that has already started to draw attention.
Konyushkovs game and offensive touch have drawn comparisons to Alexandre Carrier, which gives Canadiens fans a pretty clear idea of the type of defender Montreal thinks it may be getting down the road. If he develops the way the organization hopes, he could eventually fit into a similar role on the right side of the blue line, giving the team another mobile, puck-moving option to track closely over the next year. [Read more 🡒]
Canadiens May Have Already Drawn A Hard Line With Kirby Dach
Peyton Krebs new four-year, $18 million deal in Buffalo has quickly become a useful marker in the Kirby Dach negotiations, and it gives Montreal a pretty clear reference point as the sides head toward arbitration. Krebs had the healthier, fuller season, playing all 82 games with 39 points and a plus-13 rating, while Dachs year was interrupted by injuries and produced 15 points in 37 games with a minus-2 mark.
The Canadiens have already put down a $4 million qualifying offer, and the July 30 arbitration hearing is now looming as the next real checkpoint. For Montreal, the hard part is balancing Dachs upside against what he has actually been able to deliver lately, and the comparable on Krebs suggests the club may not be inclined to budge much from its current line. [Read more 🡒]
Canadiens Still Feel The Sting Of One 2007 Draft Decision
The Canadiens 2007 draft class still stands as one of the franchises most consequential, and not just because of the names they kept. Montreal came out of that year with Max Pacioretty and P.K. Subban, but the decision that continues to linger is the one that sent Ryan McDonagh away before he ever played a game for the team. It was the kind of move that looked like a roster shuffle at the time and has only grown heavier with hindsight.
McDonagh went on to become a fixture in the NHL, later wearing the captains letter with the Rangers and helping Tampa Bay win two Stanley Cups, while the Canadiens return in the deal never delivered the same kind of stability. Scott Gomez arrived with plenty of pedigree, but his time in Montreal never matched the expectations attached to the trade, and the organization eventually moved on. For a franchise that got so much right in that draft year, this one still reads like the missed branch in the road. [Read more 🡒]
