Waterloo Region Record

Sergachev’s return has a silver lining for Habs

- Bill Beacon

MONTREAL — As much pain as Montreal Canadiens fans may feel over Mikhail Sergachev’s impressive rookie season, they may take some solace from his return to the Bell Centre with the Tampa Bay Lightning.

By playing his 40th game of the season, which happened to be in Montreal, the Canadiens get to keep the second-round draft pick they initially sent with Sergachev to Tampa Bay on June 15 for forward Jonathan Drouin.

The Lightning asked for the draft pick because, while they planned on the 19-year-old Sergachev being with the National Hockey League club this season, they didn’t know how much he would play or how effective he would be.

The Russian not only made the squad, he’s on a regular defence pair with veteran Anton Stralman and had put up eight goals and 17 assists going into the Montreal game. His 25 points, tops among National Hockey League rookie defencemen, were seven more than Drouin produced while adapting to a new position at centre.

“When you look at that trade, there was an unknown,” Lightning coach John Cooper said. “That’s why there was a second-round pick.

“You’ve got to protect because, I’ll be honest, I didn’t know he was going to have the year he’s having now and I don’t think any of us did. We were hoping for this to happen, but to stand here and say in training camp Sergachev is going to have 20plus points and running our second power play and playing almost 20 minutes a night now, I don’t think we would have envisioned that,” he added.

“It’s a tribute to the kid for just grinding, finding a way and adapting to the league. I’m just really happy with his developmen­t,” he said.

The deal gave the resurgent Lightning the left-side defenceman they were seeking. But the Canadiens, who drafted Sergachev ninth overall in 2016, will probably end up liking it, too.

Drouin is a highly skilled playmaker whose addition would likely have boosted the attack had veteran winger Alexander Radulov not unexpected­ly left as a free agent for the Dallas Stars. Most of Montreal’s thin forward group has struggled to produce goals this season, but 22-year-old Drouin should be an offensive leader for many years.

Meanwhile, the talentstac­ked Lightning have been able to bring Sergachev along in a winning environmen­t, getting 15:25 of ice time per game while rarely having to go up against opponents’ top lines. It makes for ideal conditions to develop a big skilled player who many see as a future top-pair defenceman.

“The one big thing we did was we paired him with Stralman, and if I was going to grab a couple of defencemen in the league I’d want to learn from, he’d be right there at the top of the list,” said Cooper. “We’re not going to leave him on an island.

Sergachev also has a Russian teammates to learn from in league scoring leader Nikita Kucherov, winger Vladislav Namestniko­v and goalie Andrei Vasilevski­y.

Sergachev, who played four games for the Canadiens last season before returning to the junior Windsor Spitfires, played down his return to Montreal as just another game. It is more than that, of course. By playing a 40th game, he also uses up a year of eligibilit­y for free agency.

 ??  ?? Mikhail Sergachev
Mikhail Sergachev

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