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Lost in the sorrow of elimination was that Montreal Canadiens veteran defenseman David Savard played the last game of his career on Wednesday night. As the Habs were getting ready to shake hands with the Washington Capitals, the hulking blueliner was wiping away his tears, not because his team was eliminated, but because it truly was the end of the road for him.

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Speaking to the press after the game, coach Martin St-Louis said:

Our youth wouldn’t be where it is right now without David Savard. It’s been an honor for me to coach that man, a professional who leads by example with all the kids growing up in our culture. He’s not the only one, but I know we won’t have that influence anymore. He was surrounded by excellent vets, the Gally, Dvo, Andy, Matheson, Carrier…We have a damn good group. So, my emotions…of course, it’s a shame the season is over, but I’m so proud of this group.

– St-Louis on Savard and his group.

The saying may be “If you can’t beat them, join them, ” but Savard pulled a reverse-Marian Hossa, he beat the Canadiens in the Stanley Cup final in 2021 with the Tampa Bay Lightning, and signed with them as a free agent. Little did he know he was going to have to step right into Shea Weber’s skates, not so much as the player, but as everyone’s dad in a group that became younger in a hurry with Weber, Carey Price, and Paul Byron’s careers almost ending in that last game against Tampa Bay.

He signed a four-year contract with a Cup finalist team, and a few months later, he found himself in a full-blown rebuild. He stuck with it, though, taking everyone under his wing and helping this young defensive core mature.

Drafted in the fourth round by the Columbus Blue Jackets at the 2009 draft, Savard spent 11 years in their organization before being traded to the Lightning at the 2021 trade deadline. He played 14 regular-season games with the Bolts and 20 playoff tilts before raising the holy grail.

Over his 15-year career, the shot-blocking machine played 870 games, gathering 54 goals and 188 assists along the way for a total of 242 points and 467 penalty minutes. In 62 playoff games, he put up 17 points and 20 penalty minutes. He wasn’t an offensive defenseman by any stretch of the imagination, but he was a reliable defenseman with an imposing presence you could rely on.

While Savard was understandably sad as he left the ice on Wednesday night, at least he was able to call it a day on his own terms. His decision wasn’t dictated by a career-ending injury like Weber’s or contract negotiations that went south like Andrei Markov’s.


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