The Montreal Canadiens are still being linked to Pittsburgh Penguins winger Bryan Rust, and the fit, at least on paper, makes sense.
Jim Biringer of NHLRumors.com and Full Press Hockey said Rust’s name has been circling Montreal for a while and called him “an excellent fit” for the Canadiens. Biringer pointed to Rust as the kind of extra piece Montreal could use on its top six, saying the club needs one more forward to push it further after what it showed against Carolina in the Eastern Conference Final.
“His name’s been out there,” Biringer said. “He would be an excellent fit for the Montreal Canadiens.
His name’s been out there for the last couple of years, along with Rickard Rakell of the Pittsburgh Penguins. I know the Penguins want to get back to the playoffs, but he would be an excellent piece.
He’s been linked to Montreal again. What they would have to give up, probably one of their picks, and one of their young prospects that they have tons of. And it would be a great fit for their top line or second line, because they need that one extra piece, like a Bryan Rust, to put them over the top, as you saw against Carolina in the Eastern Conference Final.”
The Canadiens, according to the reporting, are not in a hurry. They’re in a strong spot with the salary cap and are expected to stay patient while they look at all their options.
Montreal had also checked in on Kirill Marchenko, but Columbus said no. The goal remains the same: add another top-six forward or center for another playoff push, and the Canadiens have the assets to make that kind of move.
Kirby Dach’s situation is moving on a separate track, but it doesn’t sound like the relationship between player and team is fraying. Dach filed for arbitration, and Biringer said that should be viewed as part of the negotiation process rather than a sign of trouble.
“No, I don’t think so,” Biringer said. “I think this is just a play for them to just keep negotiating a salary that works for them.
Again, his qualifying offer is around $4 million. They tagged it.
Now they’re going to go to arbitration again.
I think they view Kirby Dach as part of the team, but again, when you listen to Jeff Gorton and Kent Hughes talk, it’s more about, okay, he’s been injured. There have been a lot of injuries.
We really haven’t seen what he can do, but he showed himself this year. Him and Jake Evans that line, they started to put things together in the playoffs.
I think they want to see what he can do on another prove-it deal.
Again, how they get there, they have time before the hearing to continue to negotiate, and I think that was the whole point of just filing for arbitration. Let’s just keep this going, keep the relationship going, because again, if you get to these meetings, things are going to be said.
Feelings are going to be hurt, and the biggest example is Jeremy Swayman in Boston. You open yourself up to criticism that you really haven’t heard from the organization before.
Montreal, the way they handle their business, they’ll be okay. I think Dach probably gets a one-year deal, see what they can do, and move on from there.
I think they view him as a piece of this team moving forward. However, if you look at it, if they can make another big move, maybe he’s part of that package.”
In Other News...
Kirby Dach Situation Suddenly Looks Like A Big Win For Canadiens
Kirby Dachs contract situation has quietly turned into one of those small offseason developments that can matter more than it first appears. After a season in which he was limited to 37 regular-season games and finished with 15 points, the Canadiens have some leverage in the talks, and the latest read is that the two sides are trying to find common ground before things get any messier.
For Montreal, the appeal is obvious: avoid arbitration, settle the file, and move on without dragging the matter deeper into the summer. Dach may be willing to take a salary below $4 million if it comes with the security of a one-way deal, but the details still have to line up, and until they do, there is at least some room for the situation to shift again. [Read more 🡒]
Canadiens Just Added Another Name To A Crowded Bottom Six Battle
The Canadiens have added another forward to the mix, bringing in Brett Berard on a one-year, two-way deal for the 2026-27 season. Montreal already has plenty of bodies competing for bottom-six work, and Berard arrives with the kind of resume that keeps a player in that conversation: NHL experience, AHL time, and a recent stop in New York that showed both his upside and his need to keep pushing.
Berard also came to Montreal in a trade that sent defensive prospect William Trudeau to the Rangers, so this was more than a simple depth signing. The next question is where he fits once the season gets here, because the Canadiens can stash him in Laval with the Rocket or let him battle for a fourth-line opening if he makes enough noise in camp. [Read more 🡒]
