A few Montreal Canadiens became UFA when the clock struck noon on July 1, and by the time the clock struck 2:00 PM, they all had found new teams. GM Kent Hughes confirmed that he had negotiated with Christian Dvorak and Joel Armia, but that they couldn’t find any common ground.
Dvorak was the first to be signed; he put pen to paper on a one-year deal with a $5.4 M AAV with the Philadelphia Flyers. The pivot was coming out of a six-year contract with a $4.45 M AAV, meaning that he managed to get a $1M raise after finally playing a full 82-game season in which he put up 33 points in a bottom-six role. He is, however, a good faceoff man and can be very useful on the penalty kill, which will leave a hole in the Canadiens’ special teams.
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Armia was then signed to a two-year deal with a $2.5 M AAV by the Los Angeles Kings. Hughes mentioned that if the Canadiens had matched the offer, he was sure that the Finn would have stayed in Montreal, but L.A. offered more than the Canadiens were willing to pay for his services. The 29-year-old winger was coming off a four-year deal that had a $3.4 M cap hit and posted the second-most productive season of his career with 29 points in 82 games.
Interestingly, Marc Bergevin, who had signed him to his previous contract, is now an adviser to the Kings’ GM, Ken Holland, so it stands to reason that he would have been the one to advise him to sign the Finn. Armia also played on the penalty kill for the Canadiens this past season and, like Dvorak, he will be missed on the special teams, but also by countryman Patrik Laine. The two had struck a friendship as soon as the sniper arrived, and Laine could be the only Finn to play for the Canadiens next season, unless new signing goaltender Kaapo Kahkonen manages to make the team out of camp. Not so long ago, the Canadiens had four Finns rocking the Sainte-Flanelle: Armia, Artturi Lehkonen, Antti Niemi, and Jesperi Kotkaniemi.
Less than an hour after the Armia deal was announced, depth forward Michael Pezzetta was signed to a two-year contract by his childhood team, the Toronto Maple Leafs. The deal carries a $787,500 AAV, a $25,000 pay cut which the gritty forward probably doesn’t mind at all since it brings him back home.
Pezzetta was only dressed for 25 games this season in Montreal, and even when he was dressed, he saw minimal ice time. However, he never complained once and played his 13th forward role perfectly. A gentleman to the very end, he only had nice things to say about the Canadiens’ organization today.
The Canadiens now have only two restricted free agents on their roster: Jayden Struble and Jakub Dobes. Both have arbitration rights and must declare before July 5 at 5:00 PM if they intend to pursue this option. Arbitration hearings will take place from July 20th to August 4th.
Photo credit: Eric Bolte-Imagn Images
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