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Major lineup shakeup coming for Martin St-Louis as sources say young player will be removed

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David St-Jean
May 3, 2026  (11:49)
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Nov 22, 2025; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; Montreal Canadiens defenseman Arber Xhekaj (72) and teammate defenseman Jayden Struble (47) celebrate the win against the Toronto Maple Leafs at the Bell Centre.
Photo credit: Eric Bolte-Imagn Images

Noah Dobson is expected to return to the Canadiens lineup for Game 7 against the Lightning tonight in Tampa, three weeks after thumb surgery.

The information comes from Marco Normandin, the same reporter who broke the original surgery news in exclusivity earlier in the playoffs.

Normandin says Dobson is not at 100 percent, but the defenseman is insisting on playing in the winner-take-all matchup.

"I can confirm this information. Noah Dobson is expected to be in the lineup for Game 7 Sunday, three weeks after the thumb surgery I reported on exclusively. It usually takes 4–6 weeks to fully recover from this type of surgery.

I’m told he’s definitely not 100%, but it’s a do-or-die game and he’s insisting on playing."

- Marco Normandin

Thumb procedures of this kind typically need four to six weeks to fully heal. He is at three.

That timeline alone tells you everything about how this Montreal locker room is approaching a do-or-die night on the road.

Martin St-Louis now has a real decision on his hands, and not just about whether to dress him.

"Update: Unless there's a major change of plans, Dobson is in Sunday."

How much ice time can Martin St-Louis trust him with

The bigger question is deployment. Dobson posted 47 points in 80 games this season with 12 goals and 35 assists.

He also ran the second power play unit before the injury. Without him, that group lost its main puck-mover from the blue line.

The Canadiens went 48-24-10 in the regular season. Their offense averaged 3.5 goals per game, fueled in large part by transition from the back end.

That style takes a hit when your top right-shot defenseman is missing, and Montreal felt it across the series.

Tampa won the regular season series too, going 2-2 against the Canadiens but holding home ice through most of it.

Game 6 ended in a 1-0 overtime loss for Montreal at the Bell Centre. The offense went scoreless through 60-plus minutes when it mattered most.

That is the offensive jolt St-Louis is hoping Dobson can provide tonight, even at less than full health.

But there is risk here too. A defenseman playing on a healing thumb in a Game 7, against Jon Cooper's team, is not a small ask.

One bad pinch, one missed handle on the breakout, and the conversation flips fast.

Dobson is 26 years old and carries a $9.5 million cap hit. The Canadiens did not bring him in to watch from the press box during the most consequential game of the year.

If he plays and produces, this becomes a defining chapter of his Montreal story. If he plays and gets exposed, the second-guessing starts before the final horn.

Tampa knows. Cooper will test that thumb early, and often.