Montreal Canadiens: In Other News… Series Deficit, Lineup Changes, AHL Signings

Jul 2, 2021; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; Montreal Canadiens Phillip Danault. Mandatory Credit: Eric Bolte-USA TODAY Sports
Jul 2, 2021; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; Montreal Canadiens Phillip Danault. Mandatory Credit: Eric Bolte-USA TODAY Sports /
facebooktwitterreddit
Prev
2 of 3
Next
BLAINVILLE-BOISBRIAND, QC – FEBRUARY 08: Danick Martel. (Photo by Minas Panagiotakis/Getty Images)
BLAINVILLE-BOISBRIAND, QC – FEBRUARY 08: Danick Martel. (Photo by Minas Panagiotakis/Getty Images) /

Laval Rocket Sign Danick Martel to One-Year, AHL Deal

As I stated earlier, the Rocket have made numerous solid AHL-contracted additions over the course of this off-season, and in my opinion, Danick Martel is one of the most intriguing. An undrafted product of the QMJHL’s Blainville-Boisbriand Armada, Martel has primarily bounced around the AHL since being picked up by the Philadelphia Flyers in 2014-15. In spite of posting 48-54-102 totals over 64 games that season, Martel’s small 5’08, 176-pound frame resulted in him getting his start with the AHL’s Leigh Valley Phantoms. Since earning a regular shift in his rookie season, Martel has established him as a consistent, reliable top-six option with some notable offensive upside at times, with four 20-goal seasons under his belt.

After putting up 25-15-40 totals over 59 games in 2017-18, Martel earned his first cup of coffee with the Flyers, subsequently seeing action with the Tampa Bay Lightning in 2018-19 after being claimed off waivers. In spite of injuries limiting him to just 13 games total that season, Martel has managed to rebound with solid 6-8-14 totals over 24 games in 2020-21, playing off his first AHL deal with the Binghamton Devils.

Possessing soft hands, decent skating and a quick release, Martel is your prototypical AHL scorer, and should be a perfect fit into Joel Bouchard’s system with his something to prove mentality, now playing on his second consecutive AHL contract. Should he be able to get a hot start and find some chemistry with fellow AHL additions like Gabriel Bourque and Yannick Veilleux, and I wouldn’t be surprised if Martel finds himself with a league minimum deal with the Canadiens in the near future.

Carl Neill, Charles-David Beaudoin, Signed to Two-Way AHL Deals

Leading on from Martel’s addition, the Rocket have also picked up too less heralded defensive options in Quebec Natives Carl Neill and Charles-David Beaudoin, signing both players to one-year, two-way deals. Neill, a product of the QMJHL’s Sherbrooke Phoenix, was taken as a fifth-round pick by the Vancouver Canucks in the 2014 NHL draft, yet never saw action nor a contract with the Canucks aside from a few training/rookie camp appearances. Posting 13-56-69 totals over 67 games in his over-ager season in 2016-17, Neill brings a lot of intriguing qualities to the table.

With a solid 6’01, 200-pound frame and decent puck moving abilities, Neill has spent the past three seasons with Concordia University’s Men’s Ice Hockey Team, much like former discussed alumnus Anthony Beauregard, before being picked up by Laval out of the Danish league. Continuing his solid offensive production at Concordia, Neill is a toss-up as to where he’ll fit into Montreal’s system. While it’s expected he’ll see time with the Trois-Rivieres Lions first, due to the two-way nature of his contract, his offensive abilities/potential leave me thinking otherwise.

In Laval’s mostly, if not entirely lost initial 2017-18 season, a number of surprise producers came through the grapevine as the Rocket struggled to dress a full roster, let alone win a game. Willie Corrin, a brief addition who put up solid 1-3-4 totals over 7 games, has since found a consistent role in the ECHL and overseas, and in my mind, is a player not too dissimilar to Neill, possessing gifted playmaking abilities and experience as a powerplay quarterback.

On the opposite side of the spectrum is Beaudoin, an undrafted product of the Drummondville Voltigeurs who, like Neill, spent time in U Sports with the University of Trois-Rivieres. A Drummondville native, Beaudoin is a stay-at-home defenseman through and through, having managed to briefly find a stable role in the AHL with the Manitoba Moose, in 2017-18 and 2018-19. Since then, however, Beaudoin has primarily bounced around the ECHL, having spent this past season with Linz EHC of the Austrian league. In spite of a less than ideal 5’10, 180-pound frame, Beaudoin plays much bigger than that and could find an immediate role with the Lions as a fan favorite/captain, not too dissimilar from the St. John’s Icecaps experiment with Julien Brouillette in 2016-17.