Kaiden Guhle

Kaiden Guhle (/ˈɡl/ GOO-lee;[1] born January 18, 2002) is a Canadian professional ice hockey defenceman for the Montreal Canadiens of the National Hockey League (NHL). He was selected in the first round, 16th overall, by the Canadiens in the 2020 NHL Entry Draft.

Kaiden Guhle
Guhle with the Edmonton Oil Kings in 2022
Born (2002-01-18) January 18, 2002 (age 22)
Sherwood Park, Alberta, Canada
Height6 ft 2 in (188 cm)
Weight202 lb (92 kg; 14 st 6 lb)
PositionDefence
ShootsLeft
NHL teamMontreal Canadiens
National team Canada
NHL draft16th overall, 2020
Montreal Canadiens
Playing career2021–present

Early life

Guhle was born on January 18, 2002, in Sherwood Park, Alberta, Canada[2] to parents Carrianne and Mark.[3] He was born into an athletic family; his mother was a figure skater, his father played basketball, and his older brother Brendan Guhle was a professional ice hockey player. As a result, the Guhle brothers began power skating at a young age.[4]

Playing career

Amateur

Prince Albert Raiders (2017–21)

Guhle was selected with the first overall pick in the 2017 WHL draft by the Prince Albert Raiders. In his first full season with the Raiders, the team won Ed Chynoweth Cup as the finals champion of the WHL. They played in the 2019 Memorial Cup but did not advance out of the round-robin.[5] During the 2019–20 season, he had 40 points in 64 games.[2]

On October 6, 2020, Guhle was selected by the Montreal Canadiens in the first round, 16th overall, at the 2020 NHL Entry Draft. He was later signed to a three-year, entry-level contract with the Canadiens on October 21, 2020, which included bonuses to a maximum of $420,000 in each season.[6] However, in November he was loaned to the Brooks Bandits of the Alberta Junior Hockey League until December 20.[7]

With the COVID-19 pandemic resulting in the 2020–21 WHL season being reduced and delayed, Guhle began the season playing three games with the Laval Rocket in the AHL before joining the Canadian junior national team preparations. Due to a subsequent hand injury, he played only two games with the Raiders in the WHL, before resuming full training in June 2021.[8]

Guhle made a strong impression at the Canadiens' training camp before the 2021–22 NHL season, and as a result coach Dominique Ducharme seriously weighed retaining him in the lineup, though noting it would not make sense to do so unless there was a regular place for him in the top six. Guhle himself said that he had not expected to still be in consideration a day before the roster announcement.[9] Ultimately he was not taken up, and returned to Prince Albert for the 2021–22 season.[10] Guhle played seventeen games with the Raiders, registering 2 goals and 13 assists, before being traded to the Edmonton Oil Kings on December 1.[11]

Edmonton Oil Kings (2021–22)

The trade was part of the Oil Kings' bid to challenge the Winnipeg Ice for the WHL championship title.[5] Guhle recorded five goals and twenty assists in 25 regular season games with the Oil Kings, and was named the WHL Central Division's defenceman of the year.[12] After missing the final weeks of the regular season due to injury, he returned for the first game of the 2022 WHL playoffs, and scored three goals and two assists in the Oil Kings' four-game sweep of the Lethbridge Hurricanes in the quarterfinals.[13] The Oil Kings also swept the Red Deer Rebels in the second round, before winning the matchup with the Ice in the WHL Eastern Conference Final 4 games to 1. Guhle scored two goals and an assist in the series-clinching Game 5 win.[14] They went on to face the Seattle Thunderbirds in the WHL Finals, winning four games to two, the second Chynoweth Cup win of Guhle's career.[15] He was named the WHL Playoff Most Valuable Player at the conclusion of the series, setting a team record for most goals by a defenceman in a single postseason (8).[16] The Oil Kings played in the 2022 Memorial Cup, but did not advance past the round robin.[17]

Professional

Montreal Canadiens (2022–present)

Following the conclusion of the Memorial Cup, Guhle began to rehabilitate a lower-body injury that he had been playing through during the playoff run. As a result of this, he did not participate in the team's development camp in July. He said that he "wanted to make sure that I was ready because there's a long season coming up. Hopefully, my first professional season."[18] Participating in pre-season games, Guhle was widely considered one of the most impressive young players in the Canadiens system and was a perceived frontrunner to make the team's defensive lineup.[19] He scored three goals in the pre-season.[20] On October 10, it was confirmed that Guhle had made the Canadiens' opening night roster for the regular season.[21] In his NHL debut on October 12, 2022, Guhle played a team-leading 22:34 minutes of ice time in a 4–3 victory over the Toronto Maple Leafs.[22] With injuries to the team's more senior left-side defencemen, Mike Matheson and Joel Edmundson, Guhle continued to play top-line minutes for the Canadiens. He recorded his first NHL points, two assists, in a 3–2 victory over the Pittsburgh Penguins on October 17, and was named the second star of the game.[23][24] Guhle scored his first NHL goal in an October 27 3–2 victory over the Buffalo Sabres, helping the team to its first road victory of the season.[25] After he sustained a knee injury in a December 29, 2022 game against the Florida Panthers where he collided with Panthers forward Aleksander Barkov, it was announced that Guhle would miss at least two months of the remainder of the season.[26] He returned to the team on February 28, scoring a goal in a 3–1 win over the San Jose Sharks.[27] After missing games due to a shoulder injury, he sustained a high ankle sprain in a March 16 game against the Florida Panthers, and the team announced that he would sit out the remainder of the season.[28]

Guhle spent most of the 2023–24 season playing on the Canadiens' top pair alongside Mike Matheson, which necessitated a move to the right side, a position where the team had less depth than on the left.[29][30] Speaking on the change in March, he remarked that there had been "a lot of games, a lot of reps. You get more comfortable every game. Still working on a lot of stuff and still a lot of stuff I need to learn on that side of the ice."[29] He was suspended for one game after slashing Philadelphia Flyers forward Travis Konecny from the bench in a March 28 game, which he attributed to Konecny having hit Canadiens teammate Juraj Slafkovský shortly beforehand, saying "I wasn't trying to injure him. I was more just trying to steer him away."[31] Guhle exited an April 4 game against the Tampa Bay Lightning after being hit against the boards by Nikita Kucherov.[32] Sustained a head injury as a result, he missed the final two weeks of the season.[33] Appearing in 69 games, he had 6 goals and 16 assists.[32]

International play

Medal record
Ice hockey
Representing  Canada
World Junior Championships
2021 Canada
Hlinka Gretzky Cup
2019 Slovakia/Czech Republic

On November 3, 2018, Guhle was named captain of Team Canada Red at the 2018 World U-17 Hockey Challenge.[34] Following this, he was selected to join the Canada men's national junior ice hockey team at the 2021 World Junior Championships.[35] He finished the World Juniors with two goals and an assist in seven games as the team earned a silver medal following a loss to the United States.[36] The following year, Guhle was named captain of the Canadian team for the 2022 World Junior Championships.[37] After playing two games, the tournament was cancelled as a result of Omicron variant spread. Guhle said it was a disappointment given it being his final year of eligibility.[5] While the tournament was later rescheduled for the summer, Guhle was unable to participate due to injury.[18]

In the aftermath of the 2023–24 NHL season, Guhle indicated that he had been invited to join the senior national team for the 2024 IIHF World Championship, and would compete if he was able to sufficiently recover from a head injury in time.[33]

Career statistics

Regular season and playoffs

Regular seasonPlayoffs
SeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM
2017–18Prince Albert RaidersWHL80114
2018–19Prince Albert RaidersWHL653141740230338
2019–20Prince Albert RaidersWHL6411294056
2020–21Laval RocketAHL30000
2020–21Prince Albert RaidersWHL21120
2021–22Prince Albert RaidersWHL172131528
2021–22Edmonton Oil KingsWHL25520252919881610
2022–23Montreal CanadiensNHL444141827
2023–24Montreal CanadiensNHL706162256
NHL totals11410304083

International

YearTeamEventResultGPGAPtsPIM
2018Canada RedU174th603312
2019CanadaHG18 501112
2021CanadaWJC 72134
2024CanadaWC4th91452
Junior totals1825728
Senior totals91452

Awards and achievements

AwardYearRef
WHL
Ed Chynoweth Cup champion2019, 2022[5][16]
Central Division Defenceman of the Year2022[12]
WHL Playoff MVP2022[16]

References

External links

Awards and achievements
Preceded by Montreal Canadiens first round draft pick
2020
Succeeded by