Handshakes for Marc-André Fleury: Chris Nilan “would have hit him in the face”

On Thursday night, at the Bell Centre, the Minnesota Wild defeated the Canadiens by a score of 4-0. It was a fourth consecutive loss for Martin St-Louis’s men… but that was not the story of the evening, far from it.
In fact, the story of the night was in front of the Wild’s net. Marc-André Fleury, the last of the great Quebec goalies, was playing his final career game at the Bell Centre.
And the fans made sure to show him some love for the occasion.
Montreal pays tribute to Marc-André Fleury
pic.twitter.com/gPcSHpVoAf
— Sportsnet (@Sportsnet) January 31, 2025
And after the game, when the goalie completed his shutout, the players from the Canadiens all stayed on the ice to shake hands with the goalie. They wanted to show him their respect.
That said, even though it was praised everywhere, it did not make everyone happy either. During an appearance on Tony Marinaro’s Sick Podcast, former Canadiens player Chris Nilan admitted that he would probably have reacted differently if he had seen such a thing happen as a player:
I would have punched him in the face. — Chris Nilan
Things have changed since @KnucklesNilan30 was playing
«I would’ve punched him in the head. Are you sh*tting me? Did you ever see that before in a hockey game where another team comes out and hugs the goalie?»#GoHabsGo #thesickpodcast pic.twitter.com/eVbrK8yHGD
— The Sick Podcast with Tony Marinaro (@thesickpodcasts) January 31, 2025
We know that Knuckles is never one to hold back, and he explains his point by saying he has nothing against Fleury in particular. In fact, what he didn’t like was seeing the Canadiens show love to a guy who had just made the club look bad on the ice.
He explains that in his time, that didn’t happen… and it clearly shows how things have changed.
We know that Nilan always gave his all to defend the Canadiens logo when he played for the team, and he would clearly have preferred to see the team respect itself a little more.
In essence, we understand his point… but we know how respected Fleury is in the NHL, especially in Montreal. A strong reaction from the fans was to be expected, and I think the Canadiens players felt the same way because they hold the goalie in high regard.
But indeed, it is true that this is not something we could have seen when Nilan was jumping on the ice. Yes, the NHL has really changed in that respect over the past forty years.
In brief
– The atmosphere seems good at the Canadiens.
comment ç’a commencé, puis comment ça s’est fini
how it started vs. how it ended#GoHabsGo pic.twitter.com/hyDR3D1rOA
— Canadiens Montréal (@CanadiensMTL) February 1, 2025
– J.T. Miller did not take long to make his presence felt with the Rangers.
GUESS WHO?!
J.T. MILLER SCORES IN HIS FIRST PERIOD BACK WITH THE RANGERS
: ABC & @ESPNPlus
https://t.co/S5tPrXCygm
: @Sportsnet or stream on Sportsnet+
https://t.co/4KjbdjVctF pic.twitter.com/2nO7YKCUNg
— NHL (@NHL) February 1, 2025
– Positive words for Jakob Pelletier.
Flyers GM Daniel Brière loves Jakob Pelletier’s offensive potential!
https://t.co/ahj10cNsTT pic.twitter.com/mXSfDAQFbT
— RDS (@RDSca) February 1, 2025
– Things are going well for the Canadiens prospect in Russia.
Habs prospect Yevgeny Volokhin delivered another stellar performance for HC Sochi today, stopping 45 of 47 shots for an impressive .957 SV%!
This marks his second win of the season in the KHL, and he’s been on a strong run over his last two games, posting a 1-0-1 record…
— HABS NATION (@CoachFrenchy10X) January 31, 2025
– The Stars have a lot of resources.
Dallas lines when healthy:
Robertson-Hintz-Johnston
Marchment-Seguin-Duchene
Benn-Granlund-Stankoven
Bourque-Steel-DadonovHeiskanen-Harley
Lindell-Lundkvist
Dumba-Ceci
LyubushkinOettinger
DeSmithDid Dallas become the deepest team in the league again? pic.twitter.com/vZUhaMuUZS
— Big Head Hockey (@BigHeadHcky) February 1, 2025
– To be continued.
En tant que frappeur de choix, ce n’est pas toujours simple de se trouver de l’emploi. https://t.co/mIBvE0GvwT
— Passion MLB (@passion_mlb) February 1, 2025