But Montembeault faces stiff competition in the battle for Canada’s crease; Hill won the Stanley Cup with Vegas in 2023, and Binnington won it with St. Louis in 2019. Montembeault is 8-11-2 with a 2.89 goals-against average and .905 save percentage in 21 games (20 starts) this season for Montreal (10-14-3).

“They’ll probably go with whoever is hot when the tournament starts,” Montembeault said. “There isn’t much time to practice before it begins, so it will probably be the goalie who’s in the best groove who will get to start. So, it’s up to me to play some good hockey right now.”

Montembeault won a gold medal playing for Canada at the 2023 World Hockey Championship, where he had a 1.42 GAA and .939 save percentage with one shutout in seven games, including a 5-2 win against Germany in the final.

The thought of this time being part of a team featuring Canada’s elite players, including Connor McDavid, Nathan MacKinnon and Sidney Crosby, excites him, as does the opportunity to face the best players from the U.S., Sweden and Finland in the first best-on-best NHL tournament since the World Cup of Hockey in 2016.

“All the best players are going to be there, so it’s fun to be a part of it,” Montembeault said. “Just thinking about the practices, it’s going to be crazy with all the guys, McDavid, Crosby and MacKinnon, all together. It’s going to be very high-level hockey, so it’s going to be a lot of fun.”

Montembeault began this season with a 48-save shutout in a 1-0 win against the Toronto Maple Leafs in the Canadiens season opener Oct. 9.

He has allowed five goals in the eight games he has won, including seven starts and one after relieving Cayden Primeau. He has a 0.68 GAA and .978 save percentage in those games.

“He gives us a lot of confidence back there to know that if something goes south, he's back there to make a save, or save our bacon a little bit,” Montreal defenseman Kaiden Guhle said. “So, he's been huge and he's playing really well right now.”

Prior to this season, the 28-year-old from Becancour, Quebec, had one NHL shutout in 128 starts with Montreal and the Florida Panthers, who placed him on waivers on the eve of the 2021-22 season.

Selected by the Panthers in the third round (No. 77) of the 2015 NHL Draft, Montembeault was claimed by the Canadiens on Oct. 2, 2021. He did not play in the NHL in 2020-21, going 8-4-1 with a 2.86 GAA and .898 save percentage in 13 games with Syracuse of the American Hockey League after making his first 19 career starts for Florida over the previous two seasons.

With Carey Price unavailable to begin the 2021-22 season, Montembeault was brought in to back up Jake Allen and ended up playing 38 games, including 30 starts; he went 8-18-6 with a 3.77 GAA and .891 save percentage in his first season with Montreal, which had begun a full rebuild after a surprising run to the 2021 Stanley Cup Final.

Now in his fourth season with the Canadiens, he’s their No. 1.

“I think for him it has happened gradually,” Montreal coach Martin St. Louis said. “I think for us who are on the inside, we're not surprised that he is where he is. One, I think, is his work ethic; two, I think, is his mindset, his attitude. He doesn't get too high, he doesn't get too low, you know, he's just very process driven. And I think it allows him to just have a short memory.

“Whether it was good or bad, he just comes the next day and does his thing. And I think with that he found some consistency and his level is just, I feel like it's been going up and up and up and up.”