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The Canadiens are preparing a blockbuster trade for an elite center, per Murphy

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David St-Jean
June 2, 2026  (5:58 PM)
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May 29, 2026; Raleigh, North Carolina, USA; Montreal Canadiens left wing Juraj Slafkovsky (20) skates toward goaltender Jakub Dobes (not pictured) with center Nick Suzuki (14), right wing Cole Caufield (13), right wing Josh Anderson (17) and left wing Alexandre Texier (85) after losing to the Carolina Hurricanes in game five of the Eastern Conference Final of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Lenovo Center.
Photo credit: James Guillory-Imagn Images

Jimmy Murphy reignited the rumor this morning, tagging Martin St-Louis and the Habs as likely suitors for Blues center Robert Thomas again.

The whisper isn't new. Montreal kicked these tires last summer, walked away, and now Murphy says the door is cracking open one more time.

Thomas just wrapped a 64-point season in 64 games. Twenty-five goals, 39 assists, a plus-22 rating in a Blues group that finished 23rd overall.

He scorched the back half too. Nine goals and 16 points in his last 10, plus a four-game win streak that pushed St. Louis up the standings before the schedule ran out.

The fit is obvious on paper. Kent Hughes already runs a roster with Nick Suzuki, Ivan Demidov, and Juraj Slafkovsky locked in. Adding a legitimate 1B center pushes Kirby Dach down the depth chart and turns Montreal into a real matchup nightmare.

But Thomas carries an $8.125 million cap hit. So does Jordan Kyrou. Doug Armstrong isn't moving his best center for a third-round flier and a hope.

What it actually costs Hughes to land Thomas

That's the part no one in Montreal wants to say out loud. The Blues want NHL-ready talent back. Not picks. Not prospects three years out.

Try this on for size. A package starting with Dach, a top-six wing piece, and a first-rounder doesn't even start the conversation in St. Louis. Armstrong wants a roster swap, not a rebuild kit.

And Thomas comes with term. Five more years at that number, a no-trade clause kicking in, and a contract that bleeds straight through Suzuki's prime window.

Montreal owned the Blues 0-2 this season, dropping a 3-4 home decision in December and getting blanked 2-0 in St. Louis in January. Thomas was on the ice both nights.

Could Hughes really pull the trigger after watching that group push his team around twice? That's a strong middle finger to send your own locker room.

The Habs finished 48-24-10 with 106 points. They don't need a savior. They need a closer for the third period and someone who wins draws in March.

Thomas does both. Whether Armstrong actually picks up the phone is a different question entirely.