He doesn’t want to leave by March 3… and his wish should come true → https://t.co/VxBS0Nqg9H
– DansLesCoulisses (@DLCoulisses) February 22, 2023
Josh Anderson isn’t exactly having the season of his career. The Canadiens’ power forward, in fact, is having his worst season since joining the Habs organization.
It’s already been established that Anderson, who plays very North/South, is one of the players who is least accustomed to Martin St-Louis’s style of play… but this year, it’s worse than worse.
He went four games without scoring after that… and he exploded. Between December 16 (his two-goal game against the Islanders) and December 28, the first game back from the holidays, he scored five goals in five games.
In other words, the man who often plays in sequence is doing so more than ever this season. After all, he’s only scored two goals since the holidays, which isn’t enough.
In 51 games this season, he has just 15 points. In Montreal, he used to get close to the 0.5-point-per-game mark, but that’s not the case at all this season. He’s closer to a point every three games than anything else.
Even so, it looks like the man who earns $5.5 million a year until 2027 is spared. We’ve seen him criticized far too infrequently by fans or the media since the start of the season.
In fact, quite the opposite: he’s sometimes warmly applauded by fans, who still seem to believe in him.
Mind you, I’m not saying he should be booed instead. If the fans at the Bell Centre want to applaud him when things are going well and ignore him when things are going badly, that’s fine. A little love can go a long way.
But there’s one thing to be said for Anderson: compared to others, he’s been spared.
Yet he doesn’t play like a guy who should be spared. He got a point in October, a point in November, two points in January and two points, so far, in February.
That means that, in addition to his nine points in December, he’s been downright useless on the ice for no less than four of the five months of the season so far. You’ve got to do it.
From December 29 to January 24, for example, he had just one point in nine games. That’s not much.
And when you look at his playing time recently, you realize that he hasn’t exactly been punished by his coach. On Saturday, he was his coach’s sixth most-used forward with 14:34 of playing time. #PlayWithMerit
That’s about his average usage for the month. In February, his coach sent him on the ice for an average of 14 minutes and 28 seconds, which is good playing time for what he offers. In January, he averaged 15:47 of playing time per game.
As time goes by, it’s easy to think that the Habs may have missed the boat on trading him.
A year ago, almost to the day, we wrote that Josh Anderson was “the stuff of dreams for good teams” as a third-trio player. Times have changed (a little), haven’t they?
I imagine that a year ago, good teams didn’t necessarily want to take 100% of his salary (I repeat: $5.5M per year until 2027), but he was in demand.
Right now? I’m not afraid to say no, that’s no longer the case.
But the results of the last few months speak for themselves, don’t they? He doesn’t bring much to the rink and he doesn’t help the Habs turn the corner, as they say in the jargon of rebuilding clubs.
In gusto
– One to watch.
“Kevin, if you had it to do over again, would you still change the name?”
We’ll drop the episode tomorrow or Thursday. The answer will please many… https://t. co/ZkK1P4um4O
– Maxime Truman (@MaximeTruman) February 20, 2024
– It’ll be up to him to make his mark.
The surplus of players at shortstop will force the Twins to be creative. https://t.co/KhbBRCQXsk
– Passion MLB (@passion_mlb) February 20, 2024
– Three goalies: the Habs’ plan failed. [BPM Sports]
– Jaromir Jagr: a unique vision of sport and life. [BPM Sports]
– Yes.
Still a lot of unanswered questions from the Canadiens… Who will you be watching between now and the end of the season? pic.twitter.com/iR7c4pcjlD
– L’Antichambre (@Antichambre) February 20, 2024