"You don't do it for any other reasons," Galchenyuk (6-foot-1, 207 pounds) said. "You want to win, you want to win for the fans, and to be honest, personally I've never been this excited before a year. I'm super-excited, as everyone on the team. It's always exciting to come back and know that there's something to prove and you know everybody's been training and we have a lot of things to prove and prove people wrong.
"Obviously, it was a disappointing season, but at the same time, it was a negative and we've got to turn it into a positive and just move on from last year and just kill it this year and give our best."
Montreal was without goalie Carey Price, the 2015 winner of the Hart and Vezina trophies, for all but 12 games last season because of injuries.
The signing of free agent forward Alexander Radulov is another reason Galchenyuk is optimistic the Canadiens will rebound. Radulov, 30, had 47 goals and 102 points in 154 games with the Predators from 2006-08 and in 2011-12. He returned to Russia to play the past four seasons and scored 78 goals in 181 games for CSKA Moscow of the Kontinental Hockey League.
"He'll do well for us and it's something that maybe we've been lacking," Galchenyuk said. "We obviously have a lot of skilled players, but his speed and competitiveness, that's what I love most about him. His competitive drive and his fire and the passion he plays his game with, it's top-notch, so I'm really excited."
Galchenyuk has skated with Radulov in recent days at the Canadiens practice facility, along with defenseman Mikhail Sergachev and forward Nikita Scherbak, two of Montreal's top prospects.
Though Galchenyuk was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and is a United States citizen, he speaks Russian. His father, Alexander Galchenyuk, played internationally for the Soviet Union at the 1991 Canada Cup and Belarus at the 1998 Nagano Olympics.