
Cowan: Canadiens prospect Florian Xhekaj really is a unicorn
Laval Rocket head coach Pascal Vincent described Florian Xhekaj's rookie season as 'remarkable.'
It really was — especially for a 20-year-old forward who was selected in the fourth round (101st overall) at the 2023 NHL Draft. The Xhekaj name on the back of his sweater — and the tough-guy reputation his older brother Arber has established in the NHL with the Canadiens — made things even tougher.
'Especially with his last name — there were expectations,' Vincent said about the younger Xhekaj last Friday when members of the Rocket met with the media for the last time this season after getting swept by the Charlotte Checkers in the Eastern Conference final. 'He hasn't played a game yet and the referees are already telling him: 'Relax.''
It was sort of like being a Hanson brother in the classic Slap Shot movie from 1977.
Vincent said he didn't have a lot of expectations for Xhekaj as an AHL rookie and added that nobody expected him to score 24 goals.
But that's what 6-foot-4, 195-pounder did, to go along with 11 assists, a league-leading 175 penalty minutes and a plus-10 differential. Xhekaj was also learning to play centre after being a left-winger in junior with the OHL's Brantford Bulldogs, posting 34-31-65 totals in 63 games during the 2023-24 season to go along with 81 penalty minutes and a plus-17.
'He scored a lot of goals,' Vincent said about Xhekaj's rookie season in the AHL. 'His shot is amazing. He's got a quick release, accurate, too. But I didn't know about his brain and, to me, that's the thing that intrigues me the most. How they (young players) manage expectations. How they manage and how can they apply info that we give them and to do it right away on the ice or how long does it take for you to gather the info and execute on the ice at a very high speed. For me to see Flo gathering those informations and teachings and to do it on the ice and to execute at the speed he did in his first year with his last name — because the other teams on the other side, they know — this kid has this confidence and he's walking the line. He's not cocky, but he's confident that he can be the man. He's still physically not there yet, but in his mind ... so I was quite impressed with him.
'We know about the toughness and all of that,' Vincent added. 'But for him to play the way he did in a position that's really hard to learn as a centre to improve. Early in the season he couldn't win a draw, or it was really hard, and then he got better. He's a thinker and he's a great teammate. Guys love him. We're very fortunate to have him. Very impressed with him. Not so much the goals and stuff, but how he executed the details that we talked about. And because of that I think he scored goals.'
The Xhekaj brothers lived together this season in Montreal — but they probably weren't playing with toy cars like the Hansons in Slap Shot. Arber spoke this season about how he was hard on his brother, who is three years younger, while they were growing up in Hamilton along with sisters Sophia and Dominika.
'For me, I was the hardest guy on him because my dad was hard on me and then my dad was not hard on the youngest child,' Arber said. 'So that pissed me off. I'm like, OK, if you're not going to do it, I'll do it.
'It's all love at the end of the day,' Arber added. 'I'm the first guy there for him. I think I saw his potential and I knew what he had and I knew I just had to dig deep for it. So I was hard on him and he pulled it off. He's a good player.'
Another person who saw the younger Xhekaj's potential was Nick Bobrov, the Canadiens' co-director of amateur scouting. Bobrov described Xhekaj as a 'unicorn' ahead of the 2023 NHL Draft. Xhekaj was ranked 131st among North American skaters by NHL Central Scouting heading into the draft.
'To me, I'd personally like to walk away with that guy,' Bobrov said about Florian in a behind-the-scenes video the Canadiens released of a scouting meeting held ahead of the 2023 draft in Nashville.
Xhekaj showed his versatility and why he is a 'unicorn' by playing on all four lines this season with Laval while making the adjustment to playing centre.
'I can score goals, I can make plays,' he said. 'But I'm also a physical kind of in-your-face player. I think those are good tools to have to be put in any line, any role.'
Xhekaj said his main goal this summer is to add more weight and muscle.
When asked to assess his rookie AHL season, he said: 'I think it was pretty good. My first year pro and everyone was so great, so welcoming. I feel like I've grown a lot as a person and a player, so a lot of positives.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Winnipeg Free Press
24 minutes ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
A pair of Makars on the Avalanche roster? Taylor hopes to one day join brother Cale
DENVER (AP) — Should Taylor Makar someday make the roster, big brother Cale needs to consider altering the back of his Colorado Avalanche sweater. That's the running joke of Taylor, anyway — a 'C. Makar' modification from simply 'Makar' to make room for 'T. Makar.' One Makar on the blue line and another at forward is something they've thought about since they were growing up in Calgary. Because of their age difference — Cale is more than 2 years older — the tandem has never really been on the same elite team. If it happens with the Avalanche, they could join the likes of the Hughes brothers, who have Jack and Luke suiting up together with the New Jersey Devils (brother Quinn plays for Vancouver). Cale, of course, is already well-established as one of the league's top defensemen and coming off a season in which he won the Norris Trophy. Taylor keeps working his way toward the NHL. He started last year at the University of Maine before joining the Avalanche's American Hockey League affiliate, the Colorado Eagles, for the remainder of the season. When big brother speaks, Taylor carefully listens. 'I learn a lot from him,' said Taylor, who's taking part in the Avalanche's development camp this week but not skating as he rehabs from an upper body injury. 'Obviously, we train together. Do everything. It's just cool.' He cracked: 'Hopefully, he has to put a 'C' (for C. Makar) on his (sweater).' Although, it's not a requirement by the league. Sibling rivalry The Makar brothers are highly competitive in whatever hobby, activity or sport in which they challenge each other. By Taylor's scorecard, he reigns over Cale in cribbage, basketball, board games and video games. He gives Cale the edge on the golf course and sometimes in tennis. To hear Cale tell it, though, the rules sometimes get bent. 'He's the feisty little brother that would cheap-shot you when everything was said and done,' Cale recently said. 'I'd usually win and then for some reason I'd call it quits and he kind of gave me cheap shots. As kids, we had a lot of fun like that. It definitely brings back a lot of memories. I think it's helped us later in life in competitiveness.' Cale made his NHL debut in the 2019 Stanley Cup playoffs and has been a goal-scoring, puck-defending force ever since. He's coming off a season in which he had 30 goals as he became the first NHL defenseman to reach that mark since Mike Green scored 31 for Washington in 2008-09. No surprise, Cale was awarded the Norris Trophy as the league's top defenseman (he also won the award in 2022, the season Colorado captured the Stanley Cup). Now this was a surprise — the secret celebration his younger brother helped spring to commemorate the achievement. Taylor played a role in organizing a golf outing for the unsuspecting Cale as family and friends gathered in the backyard for the trophy presentation. When the group stopped by during their round, everyone was waiting. 'It turned out well, and he was pretty excited,' explained Taylor, a seventh-round pick by Colorado in 2021. 'It was a cool, special moment for all the people that are really close to him and our family to share together.' The Makar name For Taylor, there's no added pressure having 'Makar' on the back of his sweater given his brother's success. In fact, it's 'pretty cool,' he conceded. Big brother's biggest piece of advice? 'Just be myself,' Taylor said. Cale, 26, certainly is proud of his younger brother. The 24-year-old Taylor is coming off a season at Maine where he scored 18 goals and had 12 assists in 38 games. He then signed an entry-level deal and joined the Eagles, scoring a goal in five regular-season games. 'I think he's got a lot of intangibles that once he puts them all together he's got a really bright career ahead,' said Cale, who was the fourth overall pick by the Avalanche in 2017. 'It's cool to be able to have family this close now.' Watching little brother In April, Cale ventured up to Loveland, Colorado, to watch his brother play for the Eagles. Of course, there were extenuating circumstances — Avalanche captain Gabriel Landeskog was with the Eagles on a conditioning assignment in his recovery from a serious knee injury. It marked Landeskog's first professional game since Colorado's Cup run in 2022. Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. 'First time I've seen (Taylor) play live at least since (youth hockey),' said Cale, who along with teammate Nathan MacKinnon was part of Team Canada's first six players chosen to take part in the 2026 Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics. Taylor's road to making the Avalanche roster to start the season figures to be difficult. Colorado is a bona fide title contender and stacked at forward. 'Just keep working hard, keep learning,' Taylor said. 'Got a ways to go, but just put everything out there.' ___ AP NHL:


Vancouver Sun
an hour ago
- Vancouver Sun
Canadiens Notebook: Kirby Dach skating after second knee surgery
Canadiens forward Kirby Dach , who had surgery on his right knee for the second straight year in late February, was on the ice Wednesday at the CN Sports Complex in Brossard. Dach skated with Adam Nicholas, the Canadiens' director of hockey development, and Jack Gorton, the son of Jeff Gorton, the team's executive vice-president of hockey operations. Jack Gorton plays at Boston University. After Dach had his second knee surgery, the Canadiens said they expected him to have a full recovery before the start of next season. Canadiens' Kirby Dach - recovering from knee surgery - on the ice now in Brossard #Habs Dach, 24, was limited to 57 games last season, posting 10-12-22 totals and a team-worst minus-29, before the knee injury ended his season. The previous year, Dach suffered a knee injury in the second game of the season and required surgery to repair torn ACL and MCL ligaments. The first surgery was performed in New York by Dr. Robert Marx. The second surgery was performed in Montreal by Dr. Thierry Pauyo. When Jeff Gorton was asked about Dach's status ahead of last Friday's NHL Draft, he said: 'Kirby Dach's summer has been really good. We saw him … he came into town about 10 days ago. He was here for a week working out and seeing the doctors. He looks great and ahead of schedule. So, so far so good.' In a perfect world for the Canadiens, Dach would fully recover from his second knee injury and become the team's second-line centre next season. Dach struggled on faceoffs last season, winning only 40.3 per cent of his draws. In 2022-23, when Dach played 58 games with the Canadiens and posted 14-24-38 totals, he won only 38.3 per cent of his faceoffs. The Canadiens lost veteran centre Christian Dvorak to the Philadelphia Flyers on Tuesday when he signed a one-year, US$5.4- million contract as a free agent. Dvorak won 55.8 per cent of his faceoffs last season and was also a key player on the penalty-kill. When general manager Kent Hughes met with the media on Tuesday he said he asked all the Canadiens forwards to work on faceoffs during the off-season, regardless of what position they play. 'As much as anything in the modern game, I feel centres, it's about faceoffs,' Hughes said. 'Because they switch positions, first guy back defends, those types of responsibilities are shared. The one thing that's not (shared) is faceoffs. So we're beating the drum with all of our guys that it's an important thing to work on in the off-season when you have time.' Hughes also said Tuesday that he expects Alex Newhook to start next season as a centre. Newhook won only 42.8 per cent of his faceoff last season. Jake Evans won 52.9 per cent of his faceoffs last season, while Nick Suzuki won 51.6 per cent. The Canadiens announced Wednesday that they have signed forward Sean Farrell to a one-year, two-way contract. Farrell, 23, was selected by the Canadiens in the fourth round (124th overall) of the 2020 NHL Draft. He played six games with the Canadiens at the end of the 2022-23 season after leaving Harvard University, scoring one goal, and has been with the AHL's Laval Rocket ever since. Last season, the 5-foot-9, 175-pound left-winger had 20-24-44 totals in 67 regular-season games with the Rocket and added 3-7-10 totals in 13 playoff games. The Canadiens also announced Wednesday that they have signed defenceman Marc Del Gaizo to a one-year, two-way contract. The 25-year-old played 46 games last season with the Nashville Predators, posting 2-7-9 totals. The right-shot defenceman, who is 5-foot-11 and 188 pounds, also played 30 games with the AHL's Milwaukee Admirals, posting 8-4-12 totals. Rafaël Harvey-Pinard's days with the Canadiens are over. The Pittsburgh Penguins signed the 26-year-old left-winger to a one-year, US$775,000 contract as a free agent on Wednesday. Harvey-Pinard only played one game with the Canadiens last season. In 40 games with the Rocket, he posted 5-14-19 totals. Un gars d'ici avec du coeur au ventre. Merci pour tout, Raf, et bonne chance à Pittsburgh! A hometown kid who left it all out there. Wishing RHP all the best in Pittsburgh! Harvey-Pinard missed the start of last season after requiring surgery to repair a fractured leg he suffered playing softball last July. He was playing centre-field when another player collided with him. The Canadiens selected Harvey-Pinard in the seventh round (207th overall) of the 2019 NHL Draft. During the 2022-23 season he scored 14 goals in 34 games with the Canadiens after getting called up from the Rocket and then cashed in by signing a two-year, US$2.2-million contract. He only scored two goals in 46 games over two seasons with the Canadiens after signing that contract. Former Canadiens forward Michael Pezzetta is thrilled to be a Toronto Maple Leaf after signing a two-year, US$1.63-million contract as a free agent on Tuesday. Pezzetta is from Toronto and grew up as a huge Maple Leafs fan. 'We were a Leafs household,' he told Toronto media in a video conference after posting a photo on social media of him and his brother as young kids wearing Leafs sweaters. 'That was our first Christmas getting our Leafs jerseys. It's hard not to get stoked about playing for the Leafs when you're from Toronto. My mom is super-stoked that I get to stay home. It has been a while.' Meant to be for Michael Pezzetta 🔵⚪️ Pezzetta, 27, only played 25 games with the Canadiens last season and had no points. The previous season, the 6-foot-1, 219-pounder played 63 games, posting 3-9-12 totals and led the Canadiens with 242 hits despite averaging only 7:48 of ice time per game. 'It gives us some more depth and he has a skill set in terms of his physicality,' Maple Leafs GM Brad Treliving told Toronto media about Pezzetta. 'He has good foot speed and is able to get in on the forecheck. Certainly, he's an excellent teammate. Those are the boxes he checks and we're happy to have him.' It will be interesting to see Pezzetta and fellow tough-guy and friend Arber Xhekaj on opposite sides when the Maple Leafs and Canadiens meet next season. Pezzetta realizes he isn't guaranteed a spot with the Maple Leafs. 'They have a great team and I want to earn my roster spot,' he said. 'I know that come (training) camp time, it's not just a given that I have a spot. The style of game I play is different than a lot of the guys and hopefully that can be an 'X' factor.' Michael Pezzetta and Ryan Reaves are both Leafs Pezzetta has 14 NHL fights and has dropped the gloves before with Ryan Reaves , who he will now be battling with for a job in Toronto. 'No hard feelings,' Pezzetta said. 'A few guys have to do their job and any time you meet guys like that off the ice, they tend to be the nicest. I look forward to meeting him and all the rest of the guys.' Hughes made it pretty clear on Tuesday that he's not planning to trade 31-year-old defenceman Mike Matheson, who is heading into the final season of his contract with a US$4.875-million salary-cap hit. When asked about Matheson's value to the team, Hughes said: 'Well, where did he finish in the league in minutes played? Top 10.' Matheson led the Canadiens and ranked seventh in the NHL with an average of 25:07 of ice time per game. 'So, obviously, our coaching staff rely on him,' Hughes said. 'We're young still. We value his experience and value what he does for our team. We have a puzzle to put together and we're going to try to do that, so we'll see where that goes.' Holy moly, Mike Matheson! 🤩 What a stellar shorthanded goal! Last season, Matheson had 6-25-31 totals in 80 games and was minus-6. While he lost his spot on the first power-play unit to rookie Lane Hutson, Matheson led the Canadiens in short-handed ice time with an average of 3:28 per game and ranked second in blocked shots with 168, trailing only David Savard with 180. The Canadiens ranked ninth in the NHL in penalty-killing last season with an 80.9 per cent success rate. Matheson also ranked second on the Canadiens in giveaways with 107, two fewer than Hutson.


CTV News
10 hours ago
- CTV News
Canucks sign Pierre-Olivier Joseph to one-year contract, Pius Suter joins Blues
Pittsburgh Penguins' Pierre-Olivier Joseph (73) skates during the first period of an NHL hockey game against the Philadelphia Flyers Monday, Dec. 23, 2024, in Pittsburgh. (AP Photo/Matt Freed) VANCOUVER — The Canucks signed defenceman Pierre-Olivier Joseph to a one-year contract worth US$775,000, while centre Pius Suter exited Vancouver to join the St. Louis Blues on Wednesday. Joseph had three assists in 47 games split between the Pittsburgh Penguins and the Blues last season. The six-foot-two, 185-pound blueliner played in parts of four seasons with the Penguins from 2020 to 2024 before signing with St. Louis last off-season. The Blues then traded the 26-year-old from Laval, Que., back to Pittsburgh last December for future considerations. Drafted 23rd overall by the Arizona Coyotes in 2017, Joseph has tallied eight goals and 32 assists in 194 career games. He also won gold with Canada at the 2023 world championships. 'Pierre-Olivier has good speed and mobility and will add to our depth on the back end,' general manager Patrik Allvin said in a statement. 'His addition gives us a player with some solid NHL and pro hockey experience, he is comfortable playing both sides, and he won a world championship with Tyler Myers in 2023. We look forward to getting him here to start working with our group.' A day after Vancouver re-signed forward Brock Boeser — and extended goalie Thatcher Demko and winger Conor Garland — Suter changed teams. He heads to St. Louis on a two-year, $8.25-million contract after putting up 25 goals and 21 assists across 81 games last season, his second in Vancouver. The 29-year-old from Switzerland has also played for the Detroit Red Wings and Chicago Blackhawks. This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 2, 2025.