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Evgeni Malkin to the Canadiens would be chaos and insiders say it's possible

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David St-Jean
May 7, 2026  (9:57)
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Nov 2, 2024; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins center Evgeni Malkin (71) moves the puck against the Montreal Canadiens defenseman Mike Matheson (8) during the first period at PPG Paints Arena.
Photo credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

Insider David Pagnotta dropped a line on Evgeni Malkin's future Thursday morning, and the name Montreal showed up in the same sentence as the Pittsburgh Penguins centre.

Pagnotta said on The Sheet he still expects Malkin to stay in Pittsburgh. But he added a wrinkle. If Malkin does leave, Montreal would be the curious fit for one last ride.

His reasoning was simple. The Canadiens already have a couple of Russians in the room. That, in his view, makes Montreal a soft landing spot for a 39-year-old icon if the door ever opens.

Re Evgeni Malkin future: "If I am surprised and he does leave...Montreal, curious if that would be one last one, they got a couple Russians there; I still expect him to stay in Pittsburgh."

- David Pagnotta

This isn't a report. It's a speculation drop from a connected voice. And that's what makes it noisy in May.

Malkin is coming off a season that does not scream done. He posted 19 goals and 42 assists in 56 games. He finished plus-13.

His last 10 told the same story. Six goals, five assists, 11 points. He still drove a power play, with 18 power-play helpers on the year.

Why the Penguins still hold the leverage on the No. 71 question

Pittsburgh sits on a $3.8M cap hit for him. That's a bargain for a top-six pivot who put up 61 points and finished a plus player on a team that ran a minus heat-map down the stretch.

Kyle Dubas didn't move him in-season. Dan Muse leaned on him through a 41-25-16 finish. The Penguins ranked 10th overall, second in the Metropolitan, and Malkin was a load-bearing wall.

That's the part that makes Pagnotta's own caveat the real story. Even the guy floating the Montreal angle is telling you he expects the Russian to stay.

The Canadiens piece is the dangle. Two Russian teammates already in the room, a young core hungry for a veteran centre, and a market that knows how to throw a parade for a Hall of Famer.

Would Malkin actually walk away from a city that retired the script for him? That's the question every Penguins fan wakes up to today.

Pittsburgh dropped its final three before the schedule closed, finishing a -3 stretch that left some bruises. Malkin went minus-2 over his last five.

The cap number is the tell. At $3.8M, Pittsburgh has every incentive to bring him back. A bidding war on the open market would price him higher than that, fast.

So treat this for what it is. A insider planting a flag in May. Not a goodbye. Not a deal. Just the first whisper of a summer that might get loud.