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Canadiens and Evans at Crossroads with 1 Year Left Under Contract – The Hockey Writers – Montreal Canadiens

Jake Evans Montreal Canadiens

Decimated down the middle in 2023-24, the Montreal Canadiens relied on centre Jake Evans to take on increased responsibility and he responded in kind. If there was any justice in the world, Evans would be rewarded for coming through, but, as it stands, he’s more likely to be an odd man out once the dust settles.

As unfair as it sounds, the NHL is a business and the only game that matters come contract time is the one of numbers. Nick Suzuki is firmly entrenched as the Canadiens’ No. 1 centre. Kirby Dach is set to return (and hopefully stay healthy), having earned the No. 2 spot out of training camp last season. Finally, Alex Newhook has made a case to similarly be played down the middle. With Joshua Roy having emerged as a top-six option on the wing, there’s a good case to be made the Canadiens should push Newhook to the middle of the ice permanently to add to the team’s depth and make them more competitive overall.

Jake Evans vs. Christian Dvorak

So, it could come down to Evans and Christian Dvorak for the fourth-line spot. Neither one is necessarily a bad option, but Evans’ $1.7 million cap hit probably makes Dvorak ($4.45 million) the ideal one to get traded this offseason. Regardless, neither one is a long-term solution at the position, each projected to hit unrestricted free agency in 2025.

Related: Canadiens Must Solve Christian Dvorak Conundrum at Centre

Between the two, primarily by virtue of Dvorak’s cap hit and his inability to find his niche over his three seasons in Montreal, Evans is clearly the better bet to be re-signed. That doesn’t mean anyone should be rushing to put money on the possibility, general manager Kent Hughes least of all.

Evans is Dvorak’s mirror-universe counterpart in more ways than one. They have the same build for all intents and purposes, but one’s Canadian. One’s American. Taken at opposite ends of the 2014 NHL Entry Draft, Dvorak has failed to live up to expectations, especially with the Canadiens, while Evans has risen to the occasion more than once. 2023-24 is a great example. Evans played 82 games on a team ravaged by injury (including to Dvorak). One unfortunate byproduct of those injuries is Evans was forced to play above his weight.

Montreal Canadiens forward Jake Evans – (Photo by Francois Lacasse/NHLI via Getty Images)

To his credit Evans responded with seven goals and 28 points. The problem is, at times he served as the team’s de facto second-line centre, playing between Sean Monahan and…

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