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Today in Canada > News > Canadiens great Carey Price elected to Hockey Hall of Fame
News

Canadiens great Carey Price elected to Hockey Hall of Fame

Press Room
Last updated: 2026/06/22 at 4:09 PM
Press Room Published June 22, 2026
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Canadiens great Carey Price elected to Hockey Hall of Fame
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Carey Price and Patrice Bergeron battled it out as rivals for Original Six franchises.

The former NHL stars with strong ties to Quebec also helped Canada succeed on the international stage.

Now the duo will enter the Hockey Hall of Fame together.

Price and Bergeron were among the class of 2026 announced Monday alongside Pekka Rinne, Keith Tkachuk and Cindy Curley in the player category.

Brian Burke, meanwhile, will go in as a builder at November’s induction ceremony.

Price starred with the Montreal Canadiens for 15 seasons, while Bergeron suited up across 19 campaigns for the Boston Bruins.

The No. 5 pick at the 2005 NHL draft, Price won the Hart Trophy as league MVP and the Vezina Trophy as its top goaltender in 2015.

The 38-year-old from Anahim Lake, B.C., finished with a 361-261-79 record, .917 save percentage, 2.51 goals-against average and 49 shutouts across 712 regular-season games in a career that was, at times, hampered by injury.

Price had even better big-moment numbers before a knee issue forced him to stop playing beyond the 2021-22 campaign.

He owned a .919 save percentage, 2.39 GAA and eight shutouts in 92 playoff contests, with his final post-season act perhaps the most impressive — willing the underdog Canadiens on an improbable push to the 2021 Stanley Cup.

A six-time Selke Trophy winner as the NHL’s top defensive forward, selected 45th overall at the 2003 draft, Bergeron hoisted hockey’s holy grail with the Bruins in 2011.

The 40-year-old former centre from L’Ancienne-Lorette, Que., registered 427 goals and 613 assists for 1,040 points in 1,294 regular-season games.

He added 128 points (50 goals, 78 assists) in 170 playoff contests, including Boston’s run to the 2019 final, before retiring in 2023.

Price, who added the Ted Lindsay Award as the league’s most outstanding player voted on by the NHLPA membership to his trophy case in 2015, and Bergeron enjoyed success side-by-side sporting the red Maple Leaf.

The duo was on Canada’s relentless 2014 team that topped the field at the Olympics in Sochi, Russia, before capturing the World Cup of Hockey two years later.

Bergeron also claimed gold at the 2010 Vancouver Games to go along with a victory at the 2005 world hockey championship.

Bergeron was in his first year of eligibility for the Hall, while Price was passed over in 2025.

Rinne owned a 369-213-75 record playing parts of 15 NHL seasons with the Nashville Predators. The 2018 Vezina-winning goaltender had a .917 save percentage and a 2.43 GAA in 683 games.

Tkachuk registered 1,065 points (538 goals, 527 assists) in 1,201 contests in 18 NHL campaigns.

Curley captained the U.S. women’s team to three silver medals at the world championships in the 1990s.

Burke’s long career in NHL management included stops with the Hartford Whalers, Vancouver Canucks, Anaheim Mighty Ducks, Toronto Maple Leafs, Calgary Flames and Pittsburgh Penguins following a stint at the league office.

He won the Cup with Anaheim in 2007.

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