David Reinbacher is heading into a pivotal season with the Montreal Canadiens, and the pressure around him is louder than ever.
The fifth overall pick in 2023 has spent the last two years trying to get out from under the weight of the debate that followed Montreal’s selection. With Matvei Michkov, Ryan Leonard, and Zachary Benson still available, plenty of people wondered whether the Canadiens should have gone best player available instead of taking a defenceman. Reinbacher then arrived in North America and ran into a string of injuries that kept interrupting his progress before it could really get rolling.
That has made the road longer than anyone in Montreal probably wanted. Reinbacher will turn 22 in October, and this will be his fourth year in the organization. At this point, the Canadiens need him to start looking like the player they believed they were getting.
His first stretch with the Laval Rocket gave a glimpse of what the organization hoped for. After finishing his season in the National League in 2023-24, Reinbacher joined Laval and played 11 games, putting up two goals and three assists. The start was encouraging enough, but the next season quickly went sideways.
In a preseason game against the Toronto Maple Leafs, Reinbacher took a hit from Marshall Rifai and left the game. He ended up needing surgery for a knee injury and did not return until February.
That left him with only 10 regular-season games in 2024-25, though he still managed two goals and three assists. He was available for Laval’s playoff run, and the Rocket pushed all the way to the Eastern Conference Final.
The following year finally brought something close to a normal season. Reinbacher entered Canadiens training camp healthy and had an outside shot at cracking the opening-day roster.
Then the Maple Leafs were involved again. In another preseason game against Toronto, he broke a bone in his hand and missed a month.
He made his season debut for Laval on October 31st and stayed mostly healthy after that.
That healthier stretch mattered. Reinbacher got into 57 games for the Rocket this past season and produced five goals and 19 assists.
Then, in April, he was called up for his NHL debut and played in the Canadiens’ final two games while the blue line was dealing with injuries. He averaged just over 13 minutes a night and picked up an assist.
Now the conversation changes. Reinbacher is no longer just a prospect with upside and bad luck attached to his name. He is a player who has to prove he belongs in the NHL right now.
The draft context only adds to the urgency. Every player taken in the first 15 picks of 2023 has already played more NHL games than Reinbacher.
Defencemen usually take longer to develop, and that part of the argument still applies. But two other blueliners went in that same range, and both have already played significantly more than he has.
The injuries have clearly slowed him down, but the Canadiens have now seen a mostly healthy season and a late-season NHL look. That should be enough to push him toward the next step. If it is not, Montreal may eventually start viewing him as a trade chip, especially if the club is trying to land a top-six centre or winger.
Training camp is still a ways off, but the Canadiens’ defensive picture already points to an opening. The core should look largely the same, with Arber Xhekaj’s contract extension still unresolved. Even if Xhekaj returns, his play last season, along with Jayden Struble’s, was not strong enough to hand either of them a guaranteed spot.
That gives Reinbacher a real path. He is a right-shot defenceman, and only Noah Dobson and Alexandre Carrier were right-handed shots among the Canadiens’ regular blueliners last season. That matters for a team looking to tighten up its depth and find a more dependable option.
The chance is there. Now Reinbacher has to take it.
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