2023-06-12 23:00:00
It is fashionable in Montreal to look up at Pierre-Luc Dubois. An astonishing reaction, considering his profile.
Dubois, 24, is a giant format forward. He produces as much as Nick Suzuki. The advanced stats show that his defensive game is more effective than that of the captain of the Canadiens. In addition, he is from Quebec, and he wants to play in his native province. The jackpot, what.
So why so much disdain for him?
Because despite his young age, Pierre-Luc Dubois has already claimed two transactions. The first at the Columbus Blue Jackets in 2021. The second at the Winnipeg Jets last week. Of course, that looks bad. To read the comments of certain supporters of the Canadian, there are as many red flags next to his name as in the streets of Moscow during the congress of the Soviet Communist Party of 1961. However, does Pierre-Luc Dubois really deserve his child-king label?
Non.
Let’s put the two requests in context.
Let’s start with the most recent. Pierre-Luc Dubois is currently without a contract. He is a restricted free agent, and will be entitled to full free agency in a year. He’s already told the Jets he won’t sign a long-term deal. It is his right, enshrined in the collective agreement. He’s not the only Jets player in this situation. Star goaltender Connor Hellebuyck, winner of the Vezina Trophy in 2020, has also informed the Jets that he will leave Winnipeg when he obtains full autonomy, at the same time as Dubois.
Except that Dubois went further. Last week, he asked the Jets to trade him as soon as possible. Again, he is not the only player on his team to make this request. Defenseman Logan Stanley, a first-round pick, expressed the same wish late in the winter. Their names are just the latest in a long list of unfortunate players in Winnipeg.
Before them, Dustin Byfuglien, Jacob Trouba, Evander Kane, Jack Roslovic and Andrew Copp have all demanded to be traded. The first two even went on strike.
The more time passes, the more we discover a dysfunctional organization, which has tolerated negative leaders in its locker room for too long.
Des indices?
Captain Blake Wheeler and star forward Mark Scheifele were making life difficult for franchise gem Patrik Laine, a Finnish newspaper has revealed. This is what would have been at the origin of the Laine-Dubois transaction. Wheeler admitted, following the fact, that he might have communicated better with his young teammate. Too late.
At the end of the season, veteran Paul Stastny interrupted Wheeler’s press briefing to say: “We have to respect each other more [entre joueurs]. When you don’t, when you don’t care regarding the teammate next to you, when you only care regarding what you’re doing or certain individual moves, the effects ripple through your game.”
A few days later, the head coach of the Winnipeg junior club, James Patrick, rekindled the embers of the scandal by relaying the confidences of two recent Jets players, Cody Eakin and Kevin Hayes. They had told him that the Jets’ locker room was the “worst” they had frequented. “It’s a huge problem,” said James Patrick, who himself played 21 seasons in the NHL. “The locker room has been divided for five years. So well before the arrival of Pierre-Luc Dubois in Winnipeg.
The atmosphere was so heavy in 2021-2022 that head coach Paul Maurice tendered his resignation in the middle of the season. The team needs a “new voice”, he said. His successor, Dave Lowry, stayed only six months, before being replaced in turn by Rick Bowness.
One of Bowness’ first moves?
Unstitch the C from Blake Wheeler’s sweater.
Merry mess.
This is the work environment to which Pierre-Luc Dubois has grafted himself, in 2021. And wait. Those are only the known incidents. Imagine all that we might learn, in a few years, if the equipment attendant published his memoirs…
* * *
Pierre-Luc Dubois has just had a good season. His best, in fact: 63 points in 73 games. The Jets were betting heavily on him for the first round of the playoffs, once morest the Vegas Golden Knights. Dubois scored four points in five games. He did, however, finish the series with a minus 4.
After the quick elimination of the Jets, Rick Bowness threw a tantrum. “I’m disgusted,” he said, condemning the lack of aggressiveness of the team’s star players – without naming them.
Several observers in Quebec saw it as a criticism of Pierre-Luc Dubois’ game. It’s a possibility. But a certainty? No. The statistics rather indicate that Dubois and Kyle Connor were the men of confidence of their trainer.
Among the attackers, they are the ones who have played the most minutes at even strength, on the power play and in overtime. Dubois also finished as the Jets’ forwards leader with 130 appearances. If Rick Bowness was dissatisfied with Dubois’ involvement, let’s say he hid his game very well.
According to Jonathan Marchessault of the Golden Knights, Dubois was the Jets’ best player in this series. “He worked hard. He was physically involved. Honestly, I only have good words to say regarding him. I think he was their most dangerous and complete player. He might have had more help from the other teammates,” he told TVA Sports.
That closes the Winnipeg chapter.
And in Columbus, what happened?
At the start of the 2021 season, Pierre-Luc Dubois demanded a transaction. The move upset head coach John Tortorella, who benched him twice in the first four games. It was from this moment that Dubois acquired a reputation as a diva.
Dubois has always denied leaving because of Tortorella. “I grew up with a dad who was a coach,” he told CBC. My dad always told me that if a coach challenges you, it’s nothing personal. He just wants the best for you. That’s how I see Torts. I have nothing but respect for him. Moreover, Dubois has always refused to explain the reasons for his trade request. In hindsight, more transparency would have served him better.
What we do know, however, is that Pierre-Luc Dubois was not the only dissatisfied player with the Blue Jackets. This was the case, in particular, of a player you know well.
Josh Anderson.
It was before the 2017 season. The Ontario forward was then 23 years old. According to Sportsnet and The Athletic, his agent had requested a transaction. The CEO of the Blue Jackets had denied the story. Anderson had still missed all of training camp, before signing in extremis, at the beginning of October. Unless I missed an episode of the soap opera, no one here calls him a child-king.
After the 2019 playoffs, Sergei Bobrovksy, Artemi Panarin and Matt Duchene all refused to stay in Ohio. “There was no way I would sign a contract extension with the Blue Jackets,” Bobrovsky said. “I was suspended by the team. There were conflicts within the club, several meetings, some because of me. I was uncomfortable. »
Panarin wanted to shine on a bigger stage – New York. After their departures, Dubois became the Blue Jackets’ leading scorer, both in the season and in the playoffs. But as the months passed, the prospects for the franchise’s long-term success dimmed. The Jackets have missed the playoffs for the past three seasons. It was in this context that Dubois went to Winnipeg.
* * *
So, Pierre-Luc Dubois in Montreal, yes or no?
Yes. Absolutely. The Canadian needs players with his profile.
Now, is this plausible in the short term? I have doubts. The Canadian has enough prospects and draft picks to present a tempting offer. However, the Jets have expressed their desire to acquire active National League players. And players of the caliber of Dubois, the CH does not have two shovelfuls.
Another point of contention: his salary demands. Dubois can dream of an eight-year contract, with an annual salary of more than 8 million. It would, however, place him slightly above Nick Suzuki. Would I consent to him? Yes. Afterwards, will Jeff Gorton and Kent Hughes dare?
The answer to this question might determine whether Quebec’s top scorer of the past season will continue his career in Montreal – or not.
1686614464
#defense #PierreLuc #Dubois