Montreal Gazette

Habs don’t have much trade bait

Playoffs are only a dream at this point and team’s best players are needed for future

- PAT HICKEY Hickey on Hockey

With the trade deadline less than a month away, it’s becoming clear that, if the Canadiens aren’t going to be sellers, they are certainly not going to be buyers. With each loss, they become less likely to reach the playoffs and the focus has to be on the future.

But there is one team which has emerged as a surprise seller. The New York Rangers are only one point out of a wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference, but reports from the Big Apple indicate the Rangers are willing to trade some of their key assets. There are some obvious candidates like 30-something forwards Rick Nash, Michael Grabner and former Canadien David Desharnais. But the rumour mill says that captain Ryan McDonagh and leading scorer Mats Zuccarello could be had if the price is right.

The Rangers have reached the Stanley Cup final in the past decade (losing to the Los Angeles Kings in 2014), but the feeling is that they have wasted the best years of goaltender Henrik Lundqvist’s career — he’s 35 — and it’s time to retool.

As for the Canadiens, there are any number of rumours concerning Max Pacioretty and Alex Galchenyuk, as well as free-agentto-be Tomas Plekanec, who is the perfect fit for a team that needs a short-term rental on a shutdown centre.

Pacioretty probably has the most value, but he’s a proven 30-goal scorer on a team that struggles to score and it would be insane to trade him unless the player coming back is John Tavares. But Pacioretty and the Canadiens should sit down and discuss his role as a captain. It’s an honour to be a captain but in Pacioretty’s case, it’s a distractio­n he doesn’t need.

Galchenyuk should be an untouchabl­e because he’s still young, has a reasonable contract and has some potential even if he isn’t the centre everyone wanted him to be.

If the Canadiens do make a deal, they should be looking for NHL-ready bodies in return. It makes no sense to trade for a first-round draft pick unless it figures to be a top-five lottery pick and those aren’t available if you’re dealing with a contender.

KUCHEROV BEST TO DATE

After a 50-year hiatus, the Profession­al Hockey Writers Associatio­n has revived the practice of polling its members on the top players at mid-season and Nikita Kucherov of the Tampa Bay Lightning gets the nod as the Hart Trophy favourite over Nathan McKinnon and John Tavares.

Not surprising­ly, there are no Canadiens in the top three (or the top 10 for that matter) in any of the categories.

In the categories where PHWA members vote for the season-end awards, Victor Hedman (Norris Trophy), Patrice Bergeron (Selke Trophy), Matt Barzal (Calder Trophy) and Johnny Gaudreau (Lady Byng) are the mid-season picks.

The writers also selected choices for coach of the year (Vegas’s Gerard Gallant), Vézina Trophy (Tampa’s Andrei Vasilevski­y) and top GM (Vegas’s George McPhee). They also created two new awards — the Rod Langway Award for best defensive defenceman (Drew Doughty) and comeback player of the year (Steven Stamkos).

POULIN TO LEAD CANADIAN WOMEN

It should come as no surprise that Marie-Philip Poulin has been selected as the captain of the Canadian women’s hockey team that will compete in the Winter Olympics next month in South Korea. She succeeds Caroline Ouellette, who retired from internatio­nal competitio­n after winning four Olympic gold medals. Poulin, a Beaucevill­e native, has already made Olympic history by scoring the winning goal at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver and the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi. The alternate captains are Brianne Jenner, Meghan Agosta and Jocelyne Larocque.

HEAVY DEMAND FOR HABS TICKETS — AT A DISCOUNT

The folks at ticket reseller StubHub report that the Canadiens remain a popular ticket although there are a couple of reasons for the popularity and neither of them is good.

StubHub reports that demand for Canadiens tickets is No. 2 in Canada behind the Toronto Maple Leafs and that’s because (a) ticket holders are willing to part with their seats and (b) prices for Montreal games are reaching historic lows. Reds have been available for less than $100 at many games. There are Canadiens games in the second half of the season that rank in the top 10 in demand for Canadian teams, There was the Jan. 17 home game against Boston, the March 3 home game against Boston and the Canadiens’ Feb. 17 visit to Las Vegas.

CWHL ADDS USA CASTOFF

Kunlun Red Star, the Chinesebas­ed team which is pushing Les Canadienne­s for first place in the Canadian Women’s Hockey League, has added some offence in Alex Carpenter, the 2015 winner of the Patty Kazmaier Trophy as the top player in the U.S. women’s college hockey while playing at Boston College. Carpenter joined Red Star after being cut from the U.S. Olympic team. The decision to join Kunlun was a no-brainer because her father, former NHL player Bobby Carpenter, is the coach of the Red Star men’s team in the KHL.

 ?? JOHN MAHONEY ?? Tomas Plekanec might bring the most value to the Montreal Canadiens if the team decides to do a trade-deadline deal because he is the type of shutdown centre many teams desire as the playoffs approach.
JOHN MAHONEY Tomas Plekanec might bring the most value to the Montreal Canadiens if the team decides to do a trade-deadline deal because he is the type of shutdown centre many teams desire as the playoffs approach.
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