No, the CH cannot afford to let Patrik Laine leave this summer

In the last week, Patrik Laine has been the subject of much conversation. The forward missed two games due to, officially, the flu… which doesn’t look good when you know the team is in the midst of a playoff run.
And especially when you consider that he’s had a second bout of the flu in two months. That doesn’t look very good either.
And since then, everything has been discussed: a contract buyout, a trade this summer, and more: there are people who no longer want Laine in Montreal.
Earlier today on BPM Sports, Martin Lemay wondered if the Canadiens could afford to let Laine go this summer.
And that’s the point I find interesting: even if Laine can be frustrating at times, the Canadiens can’t afford to start the next season without him.
« I was ready to get rid of Laine, but honestly, I don’t think the Canadiens can afford to lose a 20-goal scorer on the power play! » – @MartinLemay
So, what should the Canadiens do?#ch #Habs #laine #montreal @fxbenard919 pic.twitter.com/oez02MUW5q
— BPM Sports (@BPMSportsRadio) March 13, 2025
When Laine arrived in town last summer, we knew he was rusty. Health issues (physical and mental) had kept him out for a long time, and we suspected he would need time to get back in shape.
And if that wasn’t enough, in training camp, he suffered a knee injury that could have easily ended his season before it even started. The good news is that he returned to play in December…
And now he has 15 goals and 26 points in 35 games.
I see a lot of complaining about Patrik Laine, and it’s true that he’s not the hardest worker on the ice, but he never has been.
He has a nonchalant style and always has.
Still, he’s scored 15 goals and gotten 26 points in 35 games this season. That’s a pace of… pic.twitter.com/z3VRlNX4jh
— Marc-Olivier Beaudoin (@MOBeaudoin1) March 13, 2025
I ask you: if a rusty Laine, coming back from a knee injury, can score 15 goals and 26 points in 35 games, are you really ready to let him go this summer? I’m not saying he’s a perfect player and that the Canadiens should extend his contract, far from it, but the team needs Laine right now.
Letting Laine go would put even more pressure on the first line… and it would remove a talented player that Martin St-Louis could pair with Ivan Demidov, an excellent playmaker, next year to facilitate his arrival.
There’s a world where Laine continues to score at 5-on-5. That being said, even if he’s only there to score on the power play, he still has a use: yesterday, for example, he scored at 5-on-5, but he still allowed the Canadiens to get a point against the Kraken in a game where the team was lifeless.
Do you really think the Canadiens would be in the thick of the playoff hunt without Laine’s contribution? If you answer yes to that question, I invite you to watch a Canadiens game from November, when things were going so badly that we were calling for Martin St-Louis’ head in town.
And in the best of worlds, if Laine can avoid injuries this summer, he might be able to become a force at 5-on-5 again with a full offseason.
Because yes, Laine has already been a force at 5-on-5… and if he can become that again (to some extent, minimally), the Canadiens will be happy to have an option to help Demidov. Already that the team has to be ready to pay for a second center, so it’s not worth voluntarily shooting themselves in the foot by letting a winger go who, at his best, is an important contributor to the top 6.
Laine’s pronounced decline at 5-on-5 makes us forget that in Columbus, he was once as productive as players like J. Hughes and Panarin.
A tough dilemma for Hughes. Should we bet on him coming back? https://t.co/eyk8w7eHss
— Nicolas Cloutier (@NCloutierTVA) March 13, 2025
Rapid Fire
– Incredible.
LINUS ULLMARK MAKES A SAVE OF THE YEAR CANDIDATE
pic.twitter.com/Ka4G3WBHlx
— TSN (@TSN_Sports) March 14, 2025
– Good read on Pierre-Luc Dubois, who is back in Los Angeles tonight.
“That’s on me. I was not good in that challenge.”
As he returns to L.A., Pierre-Luc Dubois talks about his struggles with the Kings, his rebirth with the Capitals, and a win-win trade that’s materialized.#GoKingsGo #ALLCAPS https://t.co/Y4bSOWKV5v
— Eric Stephens (@icemancometh) March 13, 2025
– Well done.
Sergei Bobrovsky has moved into the top 10 for most career wins in NHL history!
pic.twitter.com/bA0SUQ9Fdj
— BarDown (@BarDown) March 14, 2025
– Wow!
By winning 3-0 in Cape Breton on Thursday, the Moncton Wildcats (49-9-2) have reached the 100-point plateau in the standings.
Not only that, but they are guaranteed to be the only team to do so in the QMJHL. What a season for Gardiner MacDougall’s men!… pic.twitter.com/q7n9aqyYb1
— RDS (@RDSca) March 14, 2025
– Good for the Blue Jays.
The handling of the offseason in Baltimore has been a disaster. https://t.co/YZ6e8GTxig
— Passion MLB (@passion_mlb) March 14, 2025