Home Feature Gauthier, Martin Make Habs Good, not Great

Gauthier, Martin Make Habs Good, not Great

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Gauthier, Martin Make Habs Good, not Great

By Stevo, AllHabs.net

MONTREAL, QC. —  We all know John.  We work with John.  John is that colleague that does pretty much does the bare minimum. He never outdoes himself on anything, but he manages to do a good job none the less.  John is not flashy or extroverted, he manages to fly under the radar, and is seen as a good employee.

Maybe you know Jane?  Jane is that student that rarely studies or does her homework.  She manages to pass her tests and classes but is never top of her class.  She doesn’t strive to be excellent, but is rather comfortable with just being good and getting by in this manner.

Meet John and Jane.

The Montreal Canadiens currently sit in sixth place in the eastern conference with 69 points, one less than the Washington Capitals who sit in fifth, and four less than the Boston Bruins, their division rival who sit in third with 73 points, and lead the northeast division.

This is especially good considering the Canadiens have had so many man games lost due to injury  this season, notably Andrei Markov and Josh Gorges who are out for the season.

The defence has been specifically plagued this season, as Thursday’s game in Edmonton ended with Roman Hamrlik being the sole veteran d-man in the lineup for the Canadiens.  The Habs got a scare when James Wisniewski headed to the hospital with a bloody face after receiving a puck to the cheekbone.  He and Cammalleri are scheduled to play in the Heritage Classic game in Calgary on Sunday.  (See Carey Price’s Heritage Classic mask here)

Much of the Canadiens’ success this season can be attributed to the play of young goaltender Carey Price.  Price leads all NHL goaltenders in ice time, and is second in the league in wins with 27.  His goals against average (GAA) of 2.39, and save percentage (Sv%) of 0.920 both put him ninth in the league for goalies having played 30 games or more this season, and he’s third amongst all goaltenders with six shutouts.

Jacques Martin’s system of play has lead to the Canadiens having to count on Carey Price, a little the same way they had to do so with Jaroslav Halak last season.  Their inability to produce offense, as so well explained by friend of AllHabs.net Habswatch has them sitting 25th in the league in average goals scored per game with 2.55, and they sit 26th in the league when it comes to 5-on-5 scoring, even the Leafs are better in this area.

Jacques Martin’s continued emphasis on defense first hockey has the Habs in a good position, but not great.

So what can be expected out of Pierre Gauthier with a little over a week left until the trade deadline?  So far, the acquisition of James Wisniewski has helped provide some offense from the blue line, on the defensive side, things are far from perfect.  I like to think the good outweighs the bad, and hopefully the Habs can resign him at a price that doesn’t empty the bank.

I have trouble understanding the latest acquisition of Paul Mara.  Yes the defense is plagued with injuries, yes the Canadiens did not have to give up much (fifth round pick) for him, but he did little while he was in Montreal during his first visit, injured for a large part of it.  During his stay with the Ducks, he was a healthy scratch for almost a month before being traded to the Habs.

I’m not so sure that those in favor of this move will be thinking the same after he’s played a few games, but time will tell.

Many of you have told us what you think Pierre Gauthier should do going into the trade deadline,  many have strongly reacted to recent trades stating that Pierre Gauthier is not doing enough to help the Canadiens.

The fact of the matter is, Pierre Gauthier is not in a position to do much.  In order to get tangible assets, you need to have something to give in return, the Canadiens don’t have much of that.

“Gauthier should have went after Chris Stewart and Kevin Shattenkirk” I saw some people say on Twitter.  (Traded with a conditional second round pick from Colorado to St. Louis for  Erik Johnson, Jay McClement and a conditional first round pick.)  It essentially cost the Blues two first round picks (including a first overall in Johnson) and a second pick to acquire those players.  I don’t see how this deal could have been done with the Habs without them giving up P.K. Subban, Max Pacioretty and a first round pick for example.  Would you have given all of this up?

I fear many Habs’ fans will be disappointed on trade deadline day, because I simply feel not much will happen on the Gauthier front.  He simply doesn’t have much to do with.  Rental players are simply not worth it as this point.

The Habs should still make the playoffs, they pretty much always do, but I fear it could be a short playoff appearance this year, they are simply not a cup contender, there’s only so much Carey Price can do.

So the Canadiens continue to be good, that they are, but I’m not ready to call them any differently, because under Gauthier and Martin, they are simply not great.

If that makes me a lame pessimist, then so be it.

(Photo: André Pichette, La Presse)

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Born and raised in the Montreal area, Steve is an Associate Editor and Senior Writer at All Habs. Steve started playing hockey at the age of four, played as a goaltender as high as Junior AAA and was drafted to the QMJHL. When he isn’t writing about the Canadiens or twiddling with HTML code on the website, you can usually find him sharing his sarcasm on Twitter where he enjoys the never-ending hockey arguments. Steve also works as an analyst for Rogers Communications and enjoys the fact that his downtown office is only a five-minute walk from the Bell Centre. On the personal side; Animal Planet, poutine, the colour blue, the word ‘weaponized’ and Pepsi are just a few of Steve’s favourite things.

8 COMMENTS

  1. Hey Stevo,

    Great article, I agree on the trade front, the Habs do not have many options at their disposal, so a mega transaction is clearly out of the picture.

    Like the Mara deal, Gauthier will only pull the trigger on a trade if it’s truly in demand. The only players I see coming to Montreal before the 28th are Kovalev and Souray (maybe Huselius if Gauthier’s feeling frisky).

    That’s it, that’s all. Low risk, low reward transactions as per usual.

    -Peace
    Johnny Bertolo
    @JohnnyBertolo

    • kovalev and souray are both too much of a cap hit…and both have their best years well behind them…no chance of either wearing habs jerseys again…and thank god for that

  2. potential Habs-Sens trade in the works: Scott Gomez, Andrei Kostitsyn, Lars Eller, Yannick Weber, Ben Maxwell, Mathieu Carle and Habs 1st and 5th round pick in 2011 to Ottawa for Jason Spezza, Chris Neil, Chris Phillips & Filip Kuba

  3. Thanks for the comments Johnny, although i don’t think we will see either of the two players you mentioned in Montreal, I do agree that if anything happens, should not expect anything more then low risk/reward.

    Boris, I’ve decided to have fun with your reply, let’s compare this “trade rumor”

    Habs:
    C : $7,357,143 + 3 / Gomez
    LW : $3,250,000 + 0 / Kostitsyn (RFA)
    C : $1,270,833 + 1 / Eller (EL)
    D : $875,000 + 0 / Webber (RFA)
    C : $850,000 + 0 / Maxwell (RFA)
    D : $660,000 + 0 / Carle (RFA)
    1st round pick.
    5th round pick.

    FOR

    Sens:
    C : $7,000,000 + 4 / Jason Spezza
    RW : $2,000,000 + 2 / Chris Neil
    D : $3,500,000 + 0 / Chris Phillips (UFA)
    D : $3,700,000 + 1 / Filip Kuba

    THEREFORE:

    Habs would be trading $11,877,976 of NHL salary in return of $16,200,000. Doesn’t fit the cap.

    Habs would be trading 3 Centers and 1 Left Wing, and in return would get 1 Center and 1 Right Wing, doesn’t make sense.

    Habs would trade 2 defensemen with pretty much no NHL experience for 2 established NHL defensemen, doesn’t make sense.

    I don’t think it’s necessary to keep going, you get the point.

    • if you’re counting cap for this year, you have take to into account extra funds from Markov and Gorges being out on long-term injuries… this allows for the four new salaries from Sens to fit Habs cap with them sending their other four NHL salaries to Ottawa….

      as for next year, the Habs have cap room since a number of big contracts, Hamrlik, Gill, Markov (about $14 million off cap with just these three) etc. will be off the books and the Habs won’t resign any or all of them …

      teams can always adjust roster to fit under the cap, from lending players to Europe (Huet), sending to the AHL (Redden etc.) or buyouts, let alone trades or setting RFAs free by not qualifying them…

      while the trade may be unlikely for various reason, you arguments against it are not very sound…

      for instance, the Sens are in a rebuilding mode, they already traded a couple of veterans, Fisher etc., for picks, so getting two young D-men in exchange for two older players makes sense in that matter…

      the fact the Habs are trading 3 centres (one who plays in the AHL and another who has played mostly wing this year) for one 1st line centre back, isn’t a deal breaker, teams trade a forward for defencemen or whatever fits their need, the Habs need a big centre, though Spezza isn’t physical, he has the size they need down the middle

      as for centremen next year, the Habs would just need to resign Halpern (or someone like him at about the league minimum) to have four NHL centres next year, to play behind Spezz, Pleks, and Deharnais

      they would need to resign one UFA d-men, say the Wiz, and two RFAs, say Gorges & Picard, to complete roster (to compliment Subban, Spacek, Kuba) & give a chance to someone like Nash to be 7th guy etc.

      BB

  4. Boris, I had no idea you were serious, now let me ask you, is this an actual rumor from an actual source, or this a deal that you would like to see happen?

    Trades of this magnitude simply don’t happen, even less so within your own division. I’m sorry but there’s really no reason to discuss the potential of this happening any further.

    Thanks

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