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The Montreal Canadiens are known for being protective of their players. It’s not because the media want to speak to a particular player or prospect that they’ll get to speak to them. We had prime examples of that when Patrik Laine joined the organization or when Jakub Dobes said he wouldn’t understand if he were sent down to the Laval Rocket last season. So when development camp came around, mere days after Jeff Gorton intrigued a lot of people when he said that summer is long and that plenty of things could happen and could make Michael Hage reconsider his decision to go back to school, it wasn’t a given that the Habs would make the exciting prospect field questions, but they did. That was the right call.

After Gorton insinuated the door was still open for Hage to join the Habs this season, it was obvious that the youngster would be grilled about that possibility and the reasons which motivated him to make that call. Despite being only 20 years old, the youngster spoke with calm and eloquence, making it clear that it wasn’t a decision he had made in the heat of the moment but one he had really thought through.

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Essentially, the young man believes he still has things to improve before making the jump to the NHL, and he wants to help Michigan win a national championship. It’s admirable that he has the maturity to prioritize those things over the temptation to turn pro and maximize his earnings earlier, because the sooner you get through your ELC contract, the sooner you can sign a big-money deal. To see Hage prioritize his development rather than choose to get to the dollar bags quicker shouldn’t be all that surprising, really. Kent Hughes has made it clear that the Canadiens, when they draft a player, want to draft character players. Players who will want to be part of a team and work toward one objective: winning, not toward maximum earnings.

When Hage committed to Michigan, he did it to win there, and last year that didn’t happen. The high ankle sprain he suffered threw a spanner in the works, and he couldn’t play as much or as well as he would have had he been healthy for the Frozen Four. At the same time, when he joins the Canadiens, he wants to be the best player he can be, and in that sense, he reminds me of former Habs captain Max Pacioretty.

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