Montreal Gazette

Could Price still get name on Stanley Cup with Habs?

Former star goalie still under contract to the team through 2025-26 season

- STU COWAN scowan@postmedia.com X.com/stucowan1

If you have a question you'd like to ask for the weekly Habs Mailbag, you can email it to montrealca­nadiens@postmedia.com

I rewatched the Canadiens' 2021 playoff run and fan reaction videos on Sportsnet. Such joy. Magical run. If the Habs win the Cup before Carey Price's contract runs out, does he get his name on the Cup? Mick Chow (Cheers! Love the Hockey Inside/out show)

Cheers to you, Mick, and happy to know you enjoy our weekly HI/O Show on hockeyinsi­deout. com.

The answer to your question is no.

Price's eight-year, Us$84-million contract runs through the 2025-26 season and while he will continue to get paid, he will remain on long-term injured reserve and won't play. In order for a player to get his name on the Stanley Cup, he must have played in at least 41 regular-season games with the team or one Stanley Cup final game.

Here's a cool story to go with that.

When the Canadiens won their last championsh­ip in 1993, head coach Jacques Demers dressed defenceman Donald Dufresne for the fifth and final game of the Stanley Cup final against the Los Angeles Kings so he could get his name on the Cup. Dufresne, who took Kevin Haller's spot, played only 32 regular season games that year and had appeared in only one playoff game before suiting up for Game 5 of the final.

“My fondest memory is when I gave Donald Dufresne the chance to play the fifth game of the final,” Demers recalled in 2018 on the Canadiens website. “If he had not played, his name would not have been written on the Cup. He was a seventh defenceman and one of the best people I've ever met in my life.

“When I was able to give him the opportunit­y to win the Cup at the Forum and have his name on the Stanley Cup for the rest of his life, that for me is an incredible memory.”

Mike Matheson excluded, who is the fastest and who is the best-skating defenceman with the Canadiens?

Steve Lunney

Well, it certainly isn't David Savard — LOL.

I'd say the best-skating defenceman after Matheson would be between Kaiden Guhle and Jordan Harris, with Guhle getting my vote. Off the top of my head I thought it would also be a race between Guhle and Harris to see who would be the second-fastest after Matheson.

I decided to go to the Nhl.com/ edge stats to see who, in fact, are the fastest-skating Canadiens defencemen and Jayden Struble surprising­ly came in third, ahead of Harris. Here were the results before Thursday's game against the Tampa Bay Lightning with their top skating speed in parenthese­s: Matheson (22.94 m.p.h.), Guhle (22.72), Struble (22.50), Harris (21.92), Arber Xhekaj (21.42), Johnathan Kovacevic (21.37), Savard (20.88).

The New Jersey Devils' Luke Hughes has the top skating speed of any NHL defenceman, according to Nhl.com/edge, at 24.19 m.p.h. The fastest player is Philadelph­ia Flyers winger Owen Tippett at 24.21 m.p.h.

What's happening to Cole Caufield? He isn't scoring this year. I know his game is better in other ways, but he's paid to put the puck into the net.

Chairman (@Yardmover) on X

When Caufield scored 26 goals in 46 games last season, his shooting percentage was 16.5. Heading into Thursday night's game, Caufield had 21 goals in 74 games and his shooting percentage was 7.6. He also ranked ninth in the NHL in shots with 275. Every player ahead of Caufield in shots had at least 33 goals.

It's hard to explain why the puck isn't going in for Caufield this season, but I wouldn't expect him to have a 7.6 shooting percentage next season.

 ?? JOHN KENNEY FILES ?? Carey Price makes a blocker save during his last game in the Canadiens' net in 2022. The star goalie is being paid through the 2025-26 season but that doesn't mean he'd get his name on a Stanley Cup.
JOHN KENNEY FILES Carey Price makes a blocker save during his last game in the Canadiens' net in 2022. The star goalie is being paid through the 2025-26 season but that doesn't mean he'd get his name on a Stanley Cup.

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