Yardbarker
x
Canadiens Proven Justified Keeping Primeau over Allen
Eric Bolte-USA TODAY Sports

All on its own, winning the Molson Cup  for a single month doesn’t mean much. Just ask Montreal Canadiens forward Josh Anderson, who won it for December, but has otherwise been mired in a season-long slump. However, in goalie  Cayden Primeau’s case, it reinforces how the Habs made the right decision when they gave him a vote of confidence, trading backup Jake Allen instead.

It’s a testament to Primeau’s impressive play that he won the award as a backup with limited ice time, but also far from indicative he can keep up the pace, based on the small sample size. So, things can admittedly still go downhill from here. However, for the time being Primeau is rocking an incredibly respectable stat line: 8-7-2 with a 2.75 goals-against-average (GAA) and .913 save percentage (SV%), on the strength of a 3-1-1 March (1.97 GAA, .939 SV%), for which he won the aforementioned Molson Cup. It’s at least an indication Primeau’s season as a whole is the furthest thing from a write-off. It’s a sustained sign of progression.

With Allen gone, Primeau is going to play more  and more. That is a certainty, after having suffered through being relegated to third-string status to start the season, only getting the scraps of the former and de facto No. 1 goalie Samuel Montembeault. It should come as no surprise that, after being given the chance to play in the NHL on the regular for the first time since being drafted in 2017, Primeau is finally, consistently, realizing the potential at the NHL level he displayed in college, winning the 2019 Mike Richter Award, and in the American Hockey League with the Laval Rocket.

Allen Saves Face with Devils

Truth be told, Allen himself has displayed a significant statistical rebound since joining the New Jersey Devils. With the Canadiens, he was 6-12-3 with a 3.65 GAA and .892 SV%. He started off his Devils tenure with a 3-1 record and .946 SV%, perhaps leading some to argue the Canadiens should have kept him instead. Not true.

It isn’t even that Allen’s performance has since regressed to the mean somewhat. Overall with the Devils, he’s now 4-4 with a .909 SV%. Even had Allen still been turning back the clock on his career, two facts remain:

Ironically, No. 2 immediately above doesn’t take away from how logic dictates the Canadiens had re-signed Allen to be their No. 1 during these lean years. Hence the raise general manager Kent Hughes gave him despite the statistical decline. Expectations were simply lower without the need to make the playoffs during the rebuild. It became hard to justify his $3.85 million cap hit once Montembeault started stealing his starts, though.

Primeau vs. Allen

In contrast, Primeau is significantly cheaper ($890,000), younger (24) and under team control for the foreseeable future, as a restricted agent in 2025. It’s not that Primeau is playing lights-out hockey right now. That’s just a bonus. It’s that it just made sense to go with him instead of Allen behind Montembeault on so many different levels. Now that he’s taken his game to another one, it’s easier to fully appreciate what he has to offer.

No, Primeau may realistically never hit the heights some had hoped he may one day reach, as Carey Price’s eventual heir apparent, but all he needs to do is prove to be a greater investment than Allen for the Canadiens to justify first failing to expose him to waivers at the start of the season and then choosing him come the trade deadline. That was always the case though based on how much more of a future with the organization he potentially had, making his success from this point on gravy.

In a way, seeing as Primeau’s established himself as being more critical to the organization than Allen, he’s already vastly exceeded expectations. You don’t sign Allen to the extension they did, if you legitimately see Primeau stepping up like he has. It stands to reason they would have been satisfied riding it out with Allen. Now they don’t have to, with Primeau serving as a way better option.

While Montembeault has proven himself to be a better option too, Primeau deserves credit. He’s long since demoted (and perhaps claimed by another team) if he doesn’t show the flashes of brilliance he has this season. They’re becoming more and more frequent. Don’t sell him short, figuratively speaking. His stock is on the rise, along with his stats at least for the time being.

This article first appeared on The Hockey Writers and was syndicated with permission.

More must-reads:

Customize Your Newsletter

+

Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.