Blues Suddenly Have A Center Depth Question Fans Can't Ignore

The acquisition of Connor McMichael shifts the dynamics of the St. Louis Blues' center lineup, sparking competition and strategic flexibility for the upcoming season.

The Blues’ latest move has changed the conversation down the middle, and it starts with Connor McMichael.

St. Louis made what looks like a smart add by signing McMichael, the key piece from the Jordan Kyrou trade.

The catch is that his arrival adds another layer to a center group that already has plenty of moving parts. McMichael is expected to line up on the wing, but he has also played center, which gives the Blues another option if they need it.

At the top, Robert Thomas remains the obvious first-line center. After that, things get interesting fast.

Mason McTavish, acquired from the Anaheim Ducks leading up to the 2026 NHL Draft, looks like the natural fit for the second line. He can handle center duties, but he also has the flexibility to move to the wing if the Blues want to shuffle things around. For now, the cleanest setup has McTavish anchoring the second line with McMichael on the wing.

The third line is where the real uncertainty begins.

Pius Suter is the leading candidate to handle that job, but his first season in St. Louis didn’t exactly pop.

The big 2024-25 year he put together in Vancouver now looks more like the exception than the rule, especially since his numbers in St. Louis were basically in line with what he produced in 2023-24.

He’s entering the second year of a two-year deal, and that makes him a possible trade candidate for teams hunting bottom-six help down the middle, even with his $4.125 million cap hit.

If Suter moves, Dalibor Dvorsky becomes the name to watch for the third-line center spot. That would be a solid fallback, but it also comes with long-term upside.

The 21-year-old was the 10th overall pick, and his ceiling points much higher than a checking-line role. Right now, though, he appears headed for a sheltered middle-six assignment, with the chance to climb if he proves ready for more.

Jim Montgomery can always bump him up later.

Then there’s the fourth line, where the Blues could get creative.

Jack Finley, standing 6’6”, could get a look in camp as the 4C. He’d make for a natural fit next to Ross Johnston, who checks in at 6’5”.

That kind of size on the fourth line would be a problem for opponents, even if the scoring isn’t coming in bunches. It would still give St.

Louis a pair of heavy, useful minutes-eaters between the top-six shifts.

Dillon Dube is the wild card. He signed a one-year deal this offseason for the league minimum, and there’s still a sense that he has something left to offer. He isn’t built like Finley or Johnston, but his gritty game could fit what the Blues want from that group.

And yes, it’s at least worth asking whether Dube could center a fourth line with Finley and Johnston on the wings. That would be a bold setup, but it might also bring some bite and even a little scoring touch. Dube scored 20 goals in 46 AHL games last season, which at least gives the idea some fuel.

So the Blues can probably pencil in Thomas, McTavish, and Suter as the top three centers for now. But the bottom six is where this roster could keep shifting, and Dube may end up being the swing piece that makes the whole thing more interesting.

If he delivers in camp, St. Louis could wind up with one of the league’s deeper center groups.

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