The Coyotes significantly improved their center depth and first power-play unit by landing Galchenyuk, a two-time 50-point scorer who was frequently moved from center to wing over six seasons with the Canadiens.
The best stretch of Galchenyuk's NHL career came in the 2016-17 season, when he scored 23 points (nine goals, 14 assists) in his first 25 games at center on a line with right wing Alexander Radulov before sustaining a knee injury and missing more than one month.
Galchenyuk, the No. 3 pick in the 2012 NHL Draft, wasn't the same after returning and injured his knee again later that season. Following his regression in the second half, Montreal's confidence in Galchenyuk at center wavered.
The 24-year-old had 51 points (19 goals, 32 assists) in 82 games this season, with most of the damage coming on the power play (NHL career-high 24 power-play points). His struggles at even strength led to an NHL career-worst minus-31, and it didn't help that he shot 8.9 percent, much lower than his career average (12.4) and the rate of his 30-goal season in 2015-16 (14.9).
Galchenyuk should benefit from this change of scenery and could settle into a full-time center role behind workhorse Derek Stepan. Galchenyuk should also have every opportunity to improve Arizona's power play, which finished 26th in the NHL at 16.9 percent, on the first unit with Stepan, Calder Trophy finalist Clayton Keller and defenseman Oliver Ekman-Larsson.
If goaltender Antti Raanta and defensemen Jakob Chychrun and Niklas Hjalmarsson can stay healthy, Arizona could also be one of the most improved defensive teams in the NHL next season. So even though Galchenyuk departs Montreal, which has elite goaltender Carey Price and veteran defenseman Shea Weber, he could actually see better 5-on-5 fortunes next season with more lineup stability in Arizona.
If Galchenyuk, who has two seasons left on his contract, works out at center, this could be the best 1-2 scoring punch the Coyotes have had at the position since moving to Arizona in 1996-97. Given the success of the Keller-Stepan-Richard Panik line down the stretch last season, Galchenyuk is likely to center young wings Brandon Perlini (17 goals; 2nd on Coyotes) and/or Christian Dvorak (15; T-3rd). In a best-case scenario, Galchenyuk would emerge as the No. 1 center with Keller on his wing for the years to come.
Arizona has a chance to take fantasy owners by surprise, so Galchenyuk should be considered a fringe top 100 forward with greater potential to be a late-round steal than he had before the trade.