Home Feature A Look Back: Brian Gionta’s Tenure as Habs Captain

A Look Back: Brian Gionta’s Tenure as Habs Captain

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A Look Back: Brian Gionta’s Tenure as Habs Captain

By J.D. Lagrange, Senior Writer, All Habs Hockey Magazine

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When a player is acquired by trade or signing as a free agent, everyone has an opinion on the value of that player and the acquisition. Much is said, and then often forgotten, just like water under the bridge, as the player’s novelty with the team wears out.

PENTICTON, BC. – It took the Canadiens one whole season without a captain to evaluate who would be the best candidate to replace Saku Koivu.  He was not re-signed when his contract ended, with the organization deciding that a change in the core leadership was needed. It took one season with rotating alternate captains in order to determine the new leadership, much like we will be given to see in this upcoming 2014-2015 season.

Just like we’ve been reading since Canadiens’ General Manager Marc Bergevin and head coach Michel Therrien announced that the team would be going without a captain this upcoming season, fans and media were surprised and somewhat offended that such a storied franchise, guided by some of the best captains in NHL history, would forgo an entire season without an ultimate leader with a “C” on his jersey. Just like we’re reading and hearing now, people questioned the organization and read too much into the decision into thinking that management felt like there was no leadership in the room. Whether it was back then or like it is now, it’s far from being the case.

It takes a special quality to be the Montreal Canadiens’ captain and whether some want to admit it or not, the captaincy is not without coming with much added pressure not only to perform, but to live to be an example, both on and off the ice. Just like the Canadiens have some very good candidates today, they did back then as well. Brian Gionta was one of them. He had won the Stanley Cup, he was known as a leader in New Jersey, he was a relentless worker with excellent work ethic. Married with children, he was working with charities and was very well respected in the NHL and in New Jersey. But could he handle the pressure of being captain in Montreal, after signing a five-year, $25 million deal with the club?

It did not take long for the diminutive winger to play a big role on the team, to adapt to Montreal and to show that the pressure did not affect him, tallying 28 goals in 61 games in his first regular season with the Canadiens.  Gionta helped take the team on a deep playoff run, contributing another nine goals in 19 games in the process.

In five seasons in Montreal, Gionta has played 303 regular season games. His 97 regular season goals place him third on the team for that five year span, just behind Max Pacioretty (104, including 39 last year) and one behind Tomas Plekanec (98). He has also played 45 playoff games in a Habs’ uniform, adding another 13 goals (best on the team) and 28 points, leading the Canadiens to two Stanley Cup Semi-Finals and missing the playoffs only once in five years.

Known as a solid leader, Gionta is a character player, in line with what Marc Bergevin sees in his team.  Rest assured that both Bergevin and Gionta wanted to get a deal done this past summer. Gionta was even willing to accept a diminished role and salary in order to stay, but the Buffalo Sabres were very high on him, a local product, and they made him an offer both in dollars and term that the Canadiens chose not to match. That’s why he’s gone, and don’t listen to anyone claiming otherwise. Don’t be shocked if Brian Gionta is named the Sabres team captain in the next few days, as he is one of the league’s best leaders. Quiet, but a leader none the less.

Now what?

In a recent interview, Gionta was asked whom he would see as his successor as team captain for the Canadiens. The teams former number 21 surprised many by naming rugged winger Travis Moen, who, recovering from a concussion, was a healthy scratch a few times in last year’s playoffs. It would be a huge mistake to underestimate Gionta’s opinion on the matter as he was in the room and he knows almost everyone there. He knows what it takes to wear the “C” in Montreal and he did it with pride.

It only goes to show that those in the media and among the fan base claiming that management doesn’t see any leadership in the room are way off base. The fact is that there is a lot of leadership in that room. Some older leadership with guys like Moen, Andrei Markov, Brandon Prust and Plekanec, and also some younger, newer leadership blossoming into their own in Carey Price, Max Pacioretty, P.K. Subban and Brendan Gallagher.

Some like to make fun of Marc Bergevin and his quest to get character players but when you look at this line-up, you quickly realize that many of those players were leaders on their respective teams at one point or another in their career. Remember back in 2012 when we showed that Trevor Timmins was on a mission to find character? Gallagher, Michael Bournival, Jarred Tinordi and Alex Galchenyuk were all captain of their junior team while Nathan Beaulieu and Greg Pateryn were alternates (Pateryn in the NCAA.)

Bergevin not only signed an excellent faceoff man in Manny Malhotra, but he is a guy known for his leadership. How much more character do you want than a guy who was told by Vancouver GM Mike Gillis, to go home, that he would never play hockey again? Guess what Mike? He proved you wrong!

As we can see, there is plenty of leadership on this team and rest assured that while Brian Gionta and Josh Gorges will be missed as great individuals, the Canadiens had the luxury to be able to let them go because they have quality in the wings, waiting to show what they can do.

Go Habs Go!

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J.D. is a Senior writer for All Habs as well as Associate-Editor for the French version Le Magazine All Habs, while one of three Administrators of the fan forum Les Fantômes du Forum. He has created the handle Habsterix as a fictional character for the sole purpose of the internet. It is based on the cartoon Asterix of Gaule and his magic potion is his passion for the Montreal Canadiens. How old is he? His close friends will tell you that he’s so old, his back goes out more than he does! He was born when Béliveau lifted the Cup and remembers the days when seeing the Habs winning was not a wish, it was an expectation. For him, writing is a hobby, not a profession. Having moved to beautiful British Columbia in 1992 from his home town of Sherbrooke, Quebec, he started writing mostly in French to keep up his grammar, until non-bilingual BC friends pushed him into starting his own English Blog. His wife will say that he can be stubborn, but she will be the first to recognise that he has great sense of humour. He is always happy to share with you readers his point of views on different topics, and while it is expected that people won’t always agree, respect of opinions and of others is his mission statement. || J.D. est Rédacteur-Adjoint sur Le Magazine All Habs et il est un Rédacteur Principal sur le site anglophone All Habs, tout en étant un des trois Administrateurs du forum de discussion Les Fantômes du Forum. Il a créé le pseudonyme Habstérix comme caractère fictif pour l’internet. Celui-ci est basé sur Astérix de Gaule et sa potion magique est sa passion pour les Canadiens de Montréal. Lorsqu’il est né, Jean Béliveau soulevait la Coupe Stanley et il se rappelle des jours où gagner n’était pas un espoir, mais une attente. Pour lui, écrire est un passe-temps, pas une profession. Ayant déménagé dans la superbe Colombie-Britannique en 1992 en provenance de sa ville natale de Sherbrooke, Québec, il a commencé à écrire en français pour garder sa grammaire, jusqu’à ce que ses amis anglophones ne réussissent à le convaincre d’avoir son blog en anglais. Son épouse vous dira qu’il est têtu, mais elle sera la première à reconnaître son grand sens de l’humour. Il est toujours fier de partager avec vous, lecteurs et lectrices, ses points de vue sur différents sujets, et quoi que les gens ne s’entendent pas toujours sur ceux-ci, le respect des opinions et des autres est son énoncé de mission.

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