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Canadiens' Kirby Dach set to miss season with torn ACL, MCL

The injury bug has once again bit the Canadiens center, who missed substantial time last season as well.

The Montreal Canadiens will be without center Kirby Dach for the rest of the season due to a torn ACL and MCL and will undergo surgery, the team announced on Tuesday night.

The Canadiens pivot was forced to leave the club's game on Saturday against the Chicago Blackhawks after being checked into the boards by defenseman Jared Tinordi.

Kirby Dach has hit the shelf with an undisclosed injury. (Photo by Chris Tanouye/Freestyle Photography/Getty Images)
Kirby Dach will miss the remainder of the Canadiens season. (Photo by Chris Tanouye/Freestyle Photography/Getty Images)

Dach missed substantial time last season, playing in just 58 games for Montreal and scoring 14 goals to go along with 24 assists. Notably, the forward missed the bulk of the 2022-23 season after having his year ended prematurely due to knee surgery, though it is unclear if his most recent ACL and MCL tears are on the same leg.

Selected 3rd overall by the Chicago Blackhawks in 2019, Dach has shown promise in truncated stints when healthy, but has struggled to remain on the ice throughout the early stages of his career. Since the COVID-shortened 2021 season, Dach has missed 74 games with various upper and lower body injuries.

Despite missing substantial time, Dach took major strides last season for the Canadiens, serving as one of the Canadiens' top play-drivers and scoring at a career best 53-point pace.

With Dach on the shelf, Alex Newhook, acquired from the Colorado Avalanche this offseason for draft capital, is expected to move to the middle of the ice on the Canadiens' new-look second line.

"I'd say the lack of size [Newhook] has compared to [Dach], he probably makes up in speed, foot speed," Canadiens head coach Martin St. Louis told reporters. "He’s going to have more responsibilities but I don’t think it’s anything he can’t handle."

The injury bug is nothing new to the Canadiens, who have had dreadful luck on that front throughout the past two seasons. Last year was particular rough for the Habs, as they had 600 man-games lost due to injury.