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Chris Nilan's heartbreaking reaction after Claude Lemieux tragedy hits hard

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Skyler Walker
May 29, 2026  (7:46 PM)
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Chris Nilan
Photo credit: Sportsnet Screenshot

Chris Nilan's reaction hit hard, and Martin St-Louis knows Montreal never really lets go of names like Claude Lemieux.

The story here isn't a game or a lineup shuffle. It's the shock that ripped through the hockey world after news of Claude Lemieux's death at age 60.

Nilan won a Stanley Cup with Lemieux in Montreal and had seen him just days earlier.

That's what made Nilan's reaction hit even harder.

He said it was difficult to understand after seeing Lemieux at the Bell Centre on Monday, looking well and enjoying the night with his family.

It all points to one detail that keeps sticking. Lemieux had been celebrated in front of 21000 fans, and nothing about the scene hinted at what was coming next.

Nilan's words also turned the focus away from hockey stats and toward something bigger.

He said people often hide what they're carrying, even from those closest to them.

Chris Nilan's message went beyond hockey

Nilan wasn't speaking like a former winger revisiting old seasons. He sounded like a stunned friend.

"It's really hard to understand, you know, after seeing him Monday night and having a good time with him before he went out with the torch and his two sons. He looked great. We had a great conversation. We were laughing. We were talking about 1986," Nilan told CTV News.

"We don't know what people are going through, and it's really hard sometimes when someone experiencing difficulties like that protects themselves, remains discreet, and doesn't let anyone into their life."

Lemieux's resume still matters because it shows how much he meant to the sport. He won 4 Stanley Cups and captured the Conn Smythe Trophy in 1995.

A public hockey figure with a huge legacy was smiling at a major event, then suddenly became the center of devastating news.

It also underlines something players, coaches, and locker rooms still wrestle with. Toughness has always been part of hockey culture, and that can make private pain even harder to spot.

Nilan drove that point home better than anyone else in the piece. His reaction wasn't polished, and that's exactly why it felt real.

For Montreal fans, this lands as more than a headline. It's a brutal reminder that even the biggest names can leave people blindsided, heartbroken, and searching for answers.