The Ongoing History of New Music, encore presentation: Mighty managers of rock

If you’re a musical artist and start to do well, the point will come when you need a manager.

The manager is the person who looks after all the business stuff so the musician can get on with the business of making music. Managers deal with booking gigs, marketing, promotions, promoters, publicity, support staff, and road crews.

They collect the money and pay the bills. And they oversee all the infrastructure of your career: lawyers, accountants, and all the other people involved in running the business that is you and your music.

But it doesn’t stop there. Managers can also function as advisors, sounding boards, fixers, father and mother figures, referees, bail bondsmen, bouncers, psychologists, and even amateur physicians and pharmacists—for good and not-so-good reasons.

They need to be on top of trends, have all the right connections, understand audiences, be able to navigate record companies, and translate contracts. It is a 24/7 job.

They are incentivized by their commission, which is usually somewhere around 15%, so the more you make as an artist, the more they make. If they’re good at their job, your career grows and the money rolls in for everyone.

The bottom line is that a manager can make or break a career. These are the stories of nine managers who have had an impact—mostly good, but also, you know, not-so-great.

Song heard on this show:

    • David Bowie, Rock’n’Roll Suicide (Live)
    • Malcolm McLaren, Buffalo Gals
    • The Specials, Gangers
    • Ramones, Sheena is a Punk Rocker
    • U2, Pride (In the Name of Love)
    • New Order, Fine Time
    • Alice in Chains, Man in a Box
    • Foo Fighters, My Hero
    • Cage the Elephant, Ain’t No Rest for the Wicked.

The Ongoing History of New Music can be heard on these stations. Don’t forget that there’s a podcast version, too, in case you miss any episodes. Get them for free wherever you get your podcasts.

    • 102.1 The Edge/Toronto – Sunday night at 7pm
    • Q107/Toronto – Sunday night at 9pm
    • Live 88-5/Ottawa – Saturdays at 9am and Sundays at 6pm.
    • 107.5 Dave-FM/Kitchener – Sunday nights at 11pm
    • FM96/London – Sunday nights at 8pm
    • Power 97/Winnipeg – Sunday nights at 10am and 10pm
    • 107-3 The Edge/Calgary – Sundays at 10am and 10pm
    • Sonic 102.9/Edmonton – Sunday at 8am and 8pm
    • The Zone/Victoria – Sunday at 8am and 9pm
    • The Fox/Vancouver – Sundays at 10anm and 10pm
    • The Goat Network/Interior BC
    • Surge 105/Halifax – Sunday at 7pm
    • WAPS/WKTL The Summit/Arkon, Canton, Cleveland, Youngstown – Mon-Fri at 9pm
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© 2026 Corus Radio, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Ongoing History Daily: Drugs in lyrics

Artists and their vices often go hand in hand, so it’s no surprise that drugs often find their way into lyrics. But if you had to guess who sang about the drugs the most, which genres would win? That’s what Addictions.com wanted to find out in a recent study.

By analyzing the lyrics of over 1.1 million songs and scrubbing for phrases or slang that referenced specific drugs (outside of alcohol, by the way), Addictions.com discovered something interesting. The genre that mentions drugs most often is country, with an average of 1.6 mentions per song. Jazz and pop follow closely behind, while rock takes fourth place. And rap? Believe it or not, rap actually mentions drugs less often than even folk, at less than 1.3 references per song.

And, if you were curious, the most mentioned drug is consistently marijuana, with over 30% of drug references across all genres sticking to pot.

© 2026 Corus Radio, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Ongoing History Daily: Soo Catwoman

If you’re a fan of the early days of British punk, you might remember a character named Soo Catwoman who was often seen hanging around with The Sex Pistols.

You couldn’t miss her. Her hair was shaved really short on top and had tuffs of hair sticking up on either side, making it look like she had the ears of a cat. When punk rock burned out, she faded into the background and lived quietly until she died in late 2025 at the age of 71. But before she died, her look had a sizeable influence on the fashion world. Fashion houses like Chanel took cues from here, and Keith Flint, the late dancer and frontman for The Prodigy, styled his hair on Soo Catwoman.

Do a quick Google on her, and you’ll see what I mean.

© 2026 Corus Radio, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Ongoing History Daily: The bar bill that almost broke up The Cure

Like a lot of young bands, The Cure could get crazy when on the road. Back in 1982, while on tour for the Pornography album, they were touring with the all-female trio, Bananarama. Both groups were serious drinkers, with the women of Bananarama often putting The Cure to shame.

One night, Robert Smith and bassist Simon Gallup were part of a crew that rang up a huge bar bill, something that the barman wanted to settle up before anyone left. Gallup got into a fight with the bartender. Then Smith joined in on the bartender’s side. The result was a full-on fistfight between the two of them over what turned out to be a giant misunderstanding over who was supposed to pay for whose drinks. When the two were separated, Smith quit the band, right in the middle of that tour.

When he went home, his father wouldn’t let him in. “You sold tickets. You must honour them. Get back out there.” Not wanting to argue with his dad, that’s what he did. The Cure was saved.

© 2026 Corus Radio, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Oilers get total team effort to beat Sharks 5-3

EDMONTON – The Edmonton Oilers knew the challenge was to come together as a unit after learning their star forward Leon Draisaitl will be out for the remainder of the regular season.

They did just that on Tuesday.

Adam Henrique picked up a pair of assists and 12 other players each had a point as the Oilers were able to rally to earn a huge 5-3 win over the San Jose Sharks.

“We talked about that no one guy is going to be able to replace (Draisaitl),” Henrique said. “It’s something that collectively we’re going to have to do right from here to the end of the season and see where that takes us.

“I thought tonight we did a good job responding at times through the game and chipping in like that offensively is big.”

Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, Connor Murphy, Vasily Podkolzin, Max Jones and Zach Hyman scored for the Oilers (34-26-9), who have won two straight to improve to 5-2-1 in March. Edmonton moved into a points tie with Anaheim atop the Pacific Division standings.

The Oilers went up 5-3 with 11:48 to play in the third period as Hyman picked up a rebound in front and lifted a backhand shot into the net from his knees for his 29th goal in just 50 games this season.

Hyman has an NHL-best 27 goals since Dec. 11.

“We’re not going to be able to score five every night, but it’s nice when guys are feeling a part of it,” Hyman said. “Nobody is going to be able to replace Leon, he’s one of the best players in the world. Collectively, as a group, everybody’s got to raise their game and be a little bit better. We got contributions all through the lineup.”

The Oilers were without the services of Draisaitl, who is fourth in league scoring, after it was announced earlier in the day that he is expected to miss the rest of the regular season with a lower-body injury.

“Right now the timeline we’re using is the end of the regular season,” said Oilers head coach Kris Knoblauch. “And once the playoffs start, we will re-evaluate. That’s where we’re at.”

Jones scored the game winner, leaving him beaming to be able to contribute so soon after being called up from the farm after spending the majority of the season in Bakersfield of the AHL.

“It’s nice to be able to come up and help the team win. Pretty special,” he said before being asked about his good fortune. “Yeah, good fortune and maybe good karma. I was waiting for the good karma, I kept losing card games and stuff.”

Murphy recorded his first goal since coming over to the Oilers in a trade deadline deal with Chicago.

“Any time a star player goes out, there’s minutes to be had that get dispersed to other players,” he said. “So it’s everyone’s time to shine, really. To step up and take those minutes in a positive way.”

Henrique was pleased to be able to chip in a pair of assists after a tough season that has seen him fail to score since Oct. 23.

“I’d love to fill Leo’s spot and just go out there and be Leo, but that’s not how it works,” he said. “I thought tonight was a good step for us and that’s something we should continue to build on.”

Connor Ingram recorded 27 saves to earn the win in the Edmonton net.

The Sharks fell to 1-13-2 this season when Macklin Celebrini failed to collect a point, as he saw a nine-game point streak come to an end.

Dmitry Orlov, Pavol Regenda and Kiefer Sherwood scored for the San Jose (32-28-6), which has lost two in a row and five of its last seven.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 18, 2026.

© 2026 The Canadian Press

Oilers ‘offence by committee’ sinks Sharks 5-3

EDMONTON – Adam Henrique earned a pair of assists as the Edmonton Oilers were able to rally without star forward Leon Draisaitl to pick up a huge 5-3 win over the San Jose Sharks on Tuesday.

Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, Connor Murphy, Vasily Podkolzin, Max Jones and Zach Hyman scored for the Oilers (34-26-9) who have won two straight to improve to 5-2-1 in March and moved at least temporarily into a tie with Anaheim atop the Pacific Division standings.

The Oilers were without the services of Draisaitl, who is fourth in league scoring, after it was announced earlier in the day that he is expected to miss the remainder of the regular season with a lower-body injury.

Dmitry Orlov, Pavol Regenda and Kiefer Sherwood replied for the Sharks (32-28-6) who have lost two in a row and five of their last seven.

Connor Ingram recorded 27 saves to earn the win in the Edmonton net, while Alex Nedeljkovic made 32 stops for San Jose.

TAKEAWAYS

Sharks: Teenage phenom Macklin Celebrini had his nine-game point streak halted and was held without a point for the first time since the Olympic break. He had 14 points during the streak and remains five points from becoming just the sixth teenager in NHL history to ever register 100 points.

Oilers: Leading scorer among NHL defencemen Evan Bouchard picked up an assist to give him 26 points and a plus-22 rating in 18 career games against the Sharks. He has 32 points in his last 21 games overall.

KEY MOMENT

The Oilers went up 5-3 with 11:48 to play in the third period as Hyman picked up a rebound in front and lifted a backhand shot into the net from his knees for his 29th goal in just 50 games this season.

KEY STAT

Edmonton now has nine consecutive home wins over the Sharks.

UP NEXT

Sharks: Host the Buffalo Sabres on Thursday.

Oilers: Host the Florida Panthers on Thursday.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 17, 2026.

© 2026 The Canadian Press

Winnipeg Jets rally late before falling to Nashville 4-3 in shootout

The good news for the Winnipeg Jets is that they were able to secure a single point Tuesday night thanks to a 4-3 shootout loss to the Nashville Predators.

The problem is, the Predators are ahead of the Jets in the standings and as a result were able to make up more ground than Winnipeg in the wild card race.

The Predators scored the go-ahead goal with six minutes left to break a 2-2 deadlock before Jonathan Toews tied the game with the goalie pulled with just a minute to go, but the Jets were stopped on all three attempts in the shootout to end their brief two-game win streak in the finale to the eight-game homestand.

“It was a big game,” said Jets forward Gabriel Vilardi. “It’s frustrating. We had a lot of good opportunities to score, but we lost.”

In their third game in just four days, the Jets had a ton of scoring chances and controlled the play for much of the contest. They outshot the Predators in all three periods and in overtime as the shots finished 39-23.

“We had 70-80 shot attempts,” said Jets head coach Scott Arniel. “Their goaltender was outstanding. I mean, that second period, some he saw, some he didn’t see, some we hit a couple crossbars and posts, and missed the net a few times. We had tons of opportunities and (Juuse) Saros made some big stops.”

The Jets now have just a 1-3 record in shootout games this season.

Toews, Vilardi, and Josh Morrissey had the markers for the Jets, while Kyle Connor registered three assists.

Toews’ third period goal ended a 20-game goalless drought.

“It’s nice to score in a situation like that,” said Toews. “I think going down the stretch you’re gonna be in some tight games. So, it’s nice to have some confidence when you go out there and whether it’s a power play or six-man unit to score one late and get back in the game like that.”

The game was played with only referee due to travel issues.

“I just told our team just before the game that look it, it’s gonna be a three-man referee situation,” Arniel said. “Let’s not get all bent out of shape if a call gets missed or anything happens.”

The single point leaves the Jets four points out of the final playoff spot pending the outcome of a late game between Seattle and Tampa Bay.

The Jets were attempting to sweep the season series with the Predators for the first time since moving to Winnipeg after winning their first two meetings.

Not much happened for the first eleven minutes or so, with just four shots on goal and an almost eight-minute stretch without a whistle.

Nashville earned the game’s first power play at the 11:14 mark when Dylan DeMelo took a tripping penalty, and they eventually made the Jets pay.

The Predators didn’t have a lot going on the power play but just seconds before DeMelo was to step out of the box, Roman Josi sent a wrist shot on net from the point that deflected off Erik Haula and past Connor Hellebuyck to open the scoring.

Winnipeg failed on its first power play look a few minutes later, but in the final minute of the period, they leveled the playing field.

Morrissey started the play by dumping the puck into the Nashville zone from just outside the left point. The puck rimmed around the boards to the right wing where Brady Skjei wasn’t able to handle it, allowing Connor to poke it down low for Vilardi.

Vilardi collected the puck and noticed Morrissey wide-open in the slot, so he fed the star defenceman who was able to beat Saros glove-side for his 12th goal of the season with 40 seconds remaining in the first.

The Jets outshot the Predators 14-7 in the first thanks to a late flurry of shots. The margin was 11-0 over the final six minutes of the period.

Nashville took their second minor penalty of the night 4:59 into the middle frame and it took the Jets all of ten seconds to capitalize.

After Winnipeg won the ensuing faceoff, Connor carried the puck below the goal line and centred it for Cole Perfetti in front of the net. Perfetti wasn’t able to get much of a shot off, but the puck rolled to Vilardi at the other side of the crease where he was able to put it into a fairly open net for his 26th of the season at the 5:09 mark.

The Jets continued to dominate play, outshooting the Preds and controlling the puck for most of the first half of the second period but Nashville was able to even the score at the 10:48 mark.

They broke the puck up the ice from below their goal line, with Matthew Wood sending it to Ryan Ufko at their blue line before Ufko rifled a long pass to Jonathan Marchessault in the neutral zone. He carried it slowly into the Winnipeg zone and delayed before dropping a pass to his left that Filip Forsberg one-timed from a tough angle and beat Hellebuyck high to make it 2-2.

Winnipeg got one more look on the power play before the period expired but did nothing with it as the scored stayed 2-2 heading to the third. The Jets outshot Nashville 11-8 in the second.

The Jets were also handed the first power play of the third period and while it was more productive than their look late in the second, it still failed to produce a goal.

Neither team generated a ton of dangerous looks before Nashville regained the lead with just under six minutes to go.

The play began innocuously with Forsberg floating the puck down the ice. Morrissey mishandled it at his own blueline as he backpedaled into his own zone, giving Marchessault a chance to take it away and drop it to Matthew Wood. Wood skated deep into the Jets’ end before chipping a shot over the shoulder of Hellebuyck.

Hellebuyck went to the bench for an extra attacker with 1:38 left on the clock and with 1:01 to go, Toews had his biggest moment as a Jet.

Steven Stamkos had his stick break during a puck battle and quickly went to the Nashville bench to get a new one. As that happened, the Jets cycled the puck to the other side of the ice with Toews sending it to Mark Scheifele who walked in and fired a shot that was stopped by Saros.

But off the ensuing scramble, the puck came to Scheifele in the corner. He corralled it before passing it to Toews for a one-timer from the faceoff dot that beat Saros to tie the game.

It was Toews’ first goal since Jan. 15, the final game of a four-game goal streak he had going at the time.

The teams took turns with possession in overtime but neither team could solve the puzzle, leading to a shootout.

Vilardi was denied on Winnipeg’s first attempt before Ryan O’Reilly scored for Nashville.

Both Scheifele and Forsberg missed, putting all the pressure on Connor who rang his shot off the post to end the game.

Saros was excellent in net for the Predators, stopping 36 of 39 shots while Hellebuyck turned aside 20 of 23 in defeat.

The Jets finish this season-long eight-game homestand with a 5-2-1 record and will now embark on a three-game road trip that begins in Boston on Thursday. Pregame coverage on 680 CJOB will begin just after 4 p.m. with the puck dropping shortly after 6 p.m.

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Saskatoon businesses concerned about 1st Avenue rapid transit plan

WATCH: Businesses in the city are concerned about the new rapid bus system and how the proposal for 1st Avenue includes removing parking spaces and having designated bus lanes, pushing regular traffic to a single lane.

The new rapid transit system proposed for 1st Avenue in Saskatoon has some businesses concerned.

The plan includes removing 61 parking spaces on the street and making designated bus lanes.

“They’re turning 1st Avenue into one lane of traffic for motorists and two lanes of traffic each way for the bus lanes. We’re curious as to how snow removal is going to work with this one lane,” said Keith Moen, North Saskatoon Business Association executive director.

“In regards to parking, we all know how much of a sore spot that is when it comes to parking downtown,” said Shawna Nelson, Downtown Saskatoon Business Improvement District executive director.

NSBA and Downtown Saskatoon BID represent a combined 1,700 businesses in Saskatoon.

They are bringing their concerns into the spotlight, saying the city hasn’t considered businesses in the area.

“Why it matters is because the 1t Avenue is a major, critical downtown corridor. It connects obviously businesses, offices, restaurants and services to customers and employees every day. Changes to the traffic flow have real economic impact on businesses operating in this area,” said Moen.

Parking seems to be the main concern with businesses Global News spoke to on 1st Avenue, saying this will heavily impact them.

“We’ve gotten a lot of business through foot traffic, through people parking in front of our storefront and seeing our sign outside and seeing the craft we do once they come inside,” said Miguel Robles, a director of Robles Goldsmith & Jewellery, a business on 1st Avenue.

He said this affects not only their clientele, but delivery as well.

“So, couriers dropping, picking up, we don’t have in our location, at least along this strip, a rear area that we can actually have the depot.”

In a statement to Global News, the city says a design report is currently being worked on for April’s transportation committee meeting and the design team will continue to work with NSBA and Downtown Saskatoon BID in the future.

Watch above for more on what businesses on 1st Avenue in Saskatoon have to say.

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Alberta's Smith says she took private flight on behalf of Saudi government

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says she travelled on a private plane on behalf of the Saudi government last fall.

The premier and a few members of her staff had travelled to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates in late October and early November to discuss potential collaborations on energy development, artificial intelligence and more.

The premier’s office had never discussed the flight publicly before but Smith confirmed it at a legislature committee meeting Tuesday in response to budget questions put to her by Opposition NDP leader Naheed Nenshi.

Smith said the provincial ethics commissioner had signed off on any non-commercial travel ahead of the trip and that it was proposed by the Saudi government for efficiency purposes and to visit places with limited commercial airline services.

She said one of the stops was at a major oilfield that produces over a million barrels per day and that has since been shut down in the wake of the U.S.-Israeli war against Iran.

“Having that perspective was really important for me to have,” Smith said of the oilfield visit.

Smith told the committee that she had met the Saudi energy minister, Abdulaziz bin Salman Al Saud, a few years ago at an energy convention in Calgary. He is a member of the Saudi royal family.

“He and I had a bond over the fact that we believe that we should be reducing global poverty at the same time as we’re reducing global emissions and making sure we have energy security,” Smith said.

The premier said it was the pair’s friendship that led the minister to invite her to visit and to be hosted by the government.

She said she also stayed in accommodation provided by her counterparts, which was social protocol and also approved by the ethics commissioner in advance.

Smith said she had met with a number of other officials as part of the trip, including the U.S. Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum, multiple ministers in the UAE government, and an official with the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, or OPEC.

The premier’s comments came in response to Nenshi asking about apparent receipts missing from the trip and noting that the premier and her staff had flown into Riyadh, the Saudi capital, and flown out of Dubai, in the United Arab Emirates.

Nenshi had said the trip cost Alberta taxpayers some $64,000, and questioned Smith’s claim that there was limited commercial airline services between the two centres, saying it was one of the most popular commercial flight paths in the world.

He also called on her to table in the legislature any advice she was given by the ethics commissioner on accepting the flight.

Nenshi said in a statement later Tuesday that he was disappointed that Smith “waved off questions about the appropriateness of accepting the flights.”

“I asked her twice to table her correspondence with the ethics commissioner and I expect her to do so.”

Travel expenses were a key theme of the committee meeting, with Nenshi also asking Smith to justify the nearly $20,000 spent on her trip last year to a fundraising gala in Florida where she spoke alongside controversial conservative media personality Ben Shapiro.

“Gosh, I guess that was March of 2025, so not only not this past (fiscal) year, but I guess the previous (fiscal) year. So, it’s two public accounts ago,” Smith said Tuesday about the trip.

She said PragerU, the company that the event was benefiting, has connections to members of U.S. President Donald Trump’s Republican Party and her goal was to discuss how bad the president’s tariff plan was for the economy on both sides of the border.

Smith, responding to Nenshi saying Shapiro has anti-Muslim values and that her appearance with him harmed the community, said her appearance doesn’t mean she agrees with everything Shapiro says.

“At least we agree that tariffs are bad, and I think that that’s a very positive message for him to be getting out.”

© 2026 The Canadian Press

Call of the Wilde: Montreal Canadiens win 3-2 OT thriller over Boston Bruins

RELATED: Call of the Wilde — Habs win three straight.

The Montreal Canadiens are on pace for a 102-point season, but after back-to back losses on the weekend, it almost felt like it was slipping away.

They needed a result against the Boston Bruins at the Bell Centre, and they got it in thrilling fashion with a 3-2 overtime win.

Wilde Horses 

Cole Caufield has done it. Thirty-two years of the Canadiens not having a 40-goal scorer is finally over. Vincent Damphousse’s run as the last man to do it will be quoted no more. Caufield got number 40 in as dramatic fashion as is possible.

It was the last seconds of overtime. Lane Hutson, Nick Suzuki, and Caufield had been on, it seemed, for the entire five minutes. They gave it one last try before a shootout. Hutson won the zone. He and Suzuki were working the high slot.

At the same time, Caufield slid across the crease and parked behind the coverage. He got lost there, until Suzuki found him. It was a tap-in for number 40.

The Canadiens have a true first line. They score at a clip that rivals any line in the entire league. Suzuki has been reunited with Juraj Slafkovsky and Caufield for seven games. The line has a remarkable 13 goals. For a line, this pace is unheard of.

The number one line in the entire league in any given season will finish with about 120 goals. That’s 40-40-40 for the three members. It’s an easy number to see as remarkable. Since Slafkovsky returned, the line is running a clip of 140 goals.

It’s highly unlikely that they can continue a pace as sparkling as that, but they can, at least, make the 100-goal mark. In the first period, the Canadiens were down one and needed a goal badly, and the three came through yet again.

Caufield and Slafkovsky set up Suzuki for his 24th goal of the season. He made a tremendous move in front of the net on Jeremy Swayman. However, the Canadiens need another line to help out, and recently it’s been a struggle.

They needed the Phillip Danault line to contribute and in the second period, they did. Hutson was the primary architect as he was weaving all around the offensive zone before floating one to the net that Josh Anderson deflected.

There were other strong performances: Jake Evans was around the puck a lot. Alexandre Texier is strong on the puck and doesn’t get enough credit for his all-around play. Anderson did a lot more than just score one of the goals.

None of the good vibes of the night happen without the play of Jakub Dobes. He was sensational. The Goals Saved Above Expected was tremendous with a plus 2.85. The Bruins could have won it easily, if not for his work to keep it close.

Wilde Goats

There are a lot of deep statistics in the NHL. For fans who aren’t into analytics, some of the new numbers must seem like calculus. However, for all who love the game, there are some statistics that have been vital since the beginning of the game.

Two of those old reliables are ‘goals against’ and ‘penalty killing success’. They say more than any Corsi or Fenwick could. They speak simply. They say it all.

As wonderful as the Canadiens are on offence, the defensive numbers say that they have significant issues, and they have had them long enough that they shouldn’t expect different outcomes next season unless changes are made.

The Canadiens are 24th in the league in goals against. The Canadiens are 28th in penalty killing success. Top-calibre teams are always strong in these two categories. Teams that go far in the playoffs are always strong at killing penalties.

Penalty killing is naturally about manpower on the ice, but it’s also about attitude. The Canadiens are passive in their pursuit, and find themselves in a box structure defending far more than is seen around the league. They allow offence too easily.

Improving the penalty kill isn’t about collapsing into a box in practice and letting attacking players pass it around, playing keepaway. Improving the penalty kill is about demanding players change their mindset and attack at every single opportunity.

It’s a mindset, and the Canadiens don’t have it. They don’t pursue the puck. They don’t take away time and space. They hope that they can seize the rebound first.

Defence overall is also talent and mindset. The greatest offensive team of this generation, the Edmonton Oilers, needed one goal in game seven of the Stanley Cup finals to tie it late. In the last five minutes, they didn’t even get a single chance. They couldn’t even get in the zone to establish possession against the Florida Panthers. That’s defence.

On the Bruins’ second goal, Jayden Struble was passive, and then Hutson and Oliver Kapanen took the same man allowing Pavel Zacha to score. Kapanen and Hutson are intelligent defensive players. Why is simple coverage breaking down so often?

The Canadiens need to make changes to their coaching staff next season. Head Coach Martin St. Louis needs help with 24th in goals against and 28th in penalty kill. He can’t be responsible for all aspects of the team.

They can’t run it back like this next season. The same issues will persist.

Wilde Cards

Kirby Dach is the unluckiest or most brittle player in all of sports. He gets back into the lineup after suffering a significant injury, and then nearly immediately suffers another significant injury.

Dach was hit on Sunday night by Jeffrey Viel of the Anaheim Ducks. He fell hard on his left side, and couldn’t hold his stick as he made his way back to the bench. On Tuesday, the Canadiens announced that he is gone for two to four weeks.

That’s a wide-open window for recovery; it’s not usually a timeline with so much doubt. At its worst —and with Dach, assume that — he will be out for the rest of the regular season. However, should the Canadiens make the playoffs, Dach will be available for that.

Dach already missed 31 games this season with a broken foot. It’s a shame again for Dach as the moment he starts to get his rhythm back, he gets injured.

Dach’s injury ends the controversy centred around Brendan Gallagher’s inclusion in the lineup over Alexandre Texier. Texier draws in with Zachary Bolduc and Jake Evans while Gallagher assumes his regular spot with Phillip Danault and Josh Anderson.

One of the strengths of the Canadiens this season has been their depth. They would really need the injury bug to strike to feel undermanned as they still have Joe Veleno and Patrik Laine under-worked in Montreal, and a very capable Samuel Blais is in Laval.

Brian Wilde, a Montreal-based sports writer, brings you Call of the Wilde on globalnews.ca after each Canadiens game.

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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