News Canucks Team Notes

Canucks will ‘definitely’ be in on forward David Kampf: report

There’s an apparent interest from the Vancouver Canucks in a player who was recently put on the wire.

On Thursday, the Toronto Maple Leafs placed forward David Kampf on unconditional waivers for the purpose of contract termination. That means, if Kampf were to clear waivers on Friday, he would become an unrestricted free agent.

Later that day, on his show Donnie & Dhali – The Team, Rick Dhaliwal stated that the Vancouver Canucks have interest in pursuing the 30-year-old.

“I’ve been told Canucks will definitely be in on Kampf,” Dhaliwal said. “I can confirm they will be in on him.”

Kampf has yet to play a game in the NHL this season. The Chomutov, Czechia native was placed on waivers prior to the regular season and was assigned to the Maple Leafs’ American Hockey League affiliate, the Toronto Marlies. He ended up playing in four games for the Marlies, posting one assist. His last game came on October 29, before Kampf left the team.

Last week, Toronto suspended Kampf for leaving the farm team without pay. It truly signalled the end of his tenure with the team that he had been with since 2021. Although Toronto was trying to move Kampf elsewhere, no deal has been reached, leaving the Leafs with no choice but to get rid of the veteran’s contract.

Kampf’s current deal has an AAV of $2.4 million through the 2026-27 campaign, with a signing bonus of $1.325 million. That was reportedly a hurdle the Leafs couldn’t overcome in trading the disgruntled centre.

Breaking into the NHL with the Chicago Blackhawks during the 2017-18 season, Kampf has been a solid depth piece in his four seasons with the Leafs. He scored a career-high 27 points during the 2022-23 season, but fell out of favour with Toronto head coach Craig Berube last year, leading to him playing just once during the team’s run to the second round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

In 536 regular-season appearances in the NHL, Kampf has scored 48 goals and 95 assists for 143 points. He’s also notched seven assists in 35 postseason games. He will be an unrestricted free agent as of Friday, November 14, and will be eligible to sign with whichever team he chooses.

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/vancouver-canucks-will-definitely-in-forward-david-kampf-report
 
Should the Canucks sign forward David Kampf?

Desperate times. Desperate measures?

With a penalty kill barely hovering above coin flip territory over the past seven games (52.7%), should the Vancouver Canucks look at bringing in veteran centre David Kampf in an effort to shake up their shorthanded approach?

Kampf asked the Toronto Maple Leafs to terminate his contract after he balked at playing for the Toronto Marlies. On Thursday, his wish was granted, and the 30-year-old Czech now finds himself free to sign with any other National Hockey League club.

David Kampf's contract is getting terminated. Let the bidding war begin. pic.twitter.com/LloXQtpteP

— JFresh (@JFreshHockey) November 13, 2025

For a team using a winger as one of its four centres for weeks now, the Canucks could surely plug Kampf into the middle on this roster as currently constructed. But what, exactly, would he bring to the mix?

In 59 games last season, Kampf scored five goals and added eight assists. Those numbers don’t exactly jump off the page, but take a look at what the Canucks are getting from the centre ice position right now, and suddenly you can at the very least see a role for him here. A veteran of 536 NHL games, Kampf scored a career-best 11 goals in 2021-22 and posted a career-high 27 points the following year.

A career 51.4% faceoff winner, Kampf has finished with better than a 50% win rate in seven of his eight NHL seasons.

Last season, he led all Toronto forwards in shorthanded ice time, averaging 2:02 on the penalty kill per game. As a team, the Leafs were middle of the pack last season, ranking 17th on the penalty kill at 77.9%. Oh, what the Canucks would give to be anywhere close to that these days.

Kampf failed to make the Maple Leafs out of training camp, cleared waivers and was sent to the minors, where he played four games before stepping away to ponder his future. He was suspended without pay on November 2nd. Kampf had this year and next left on a four-year contract worth $9.6M ($2.4M annual cap hit). All of that has disappeared now that both sides have agreed to terminate the deal.

The biggest issue with signing Kampf to what would surely be a team-friendly ticket to get him back in the NHL isn’t finding a spot for him on the roster or in the lineup; it’s that Kampf is a depth piece at best and to slide him into a fourth line role would mean promoting Aatu Räty and/or Max Sasson to play higher in the lineup than they ought to. Then again, neither could produce less than Lukas Reichel has in his 10-game trial as a top-six centreman.

The Canucks have already travelled down Reclamation Boulevard with Reichel, with little to show for the low-risk proposition. That doesn’t mean they shouldn’t consider a similar approach with Kampf. But with Teddy Blueger’s likely return from injury at some point this month, does adding Kampf really give the Canucks much more than they already have?

Again, Kampf’s biggest impact would likely come on a penalty kill that is in complete disarray, giving up 20 goals in the past 16 games – half of that total in the last seven games alone. He may not be the best penalty killer in the league, but he has to be better than the guys the Canucks are currently deploying. The team is dead last in the NHL in penalty killing at 66.7%. It is costing them games. For something near a league-minimum deal for the remainder of the season, is it worth spending a few bucks to give Kampf a chance?

Keeping the status quo on the penalty kill seems like a questionable strategy. So why not take a different approach? What’s the worst thing that could happen?

PRESENTED BY VIVID SEATS




Take $20 off your first Vivid Seats order of $200+ using promo code CANUCKSARMY (new customers only, $200 USD minimum before taxes & fees)

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/should-vancouver-canucks-sign-forward-david-kampf
 
‘You want to be the guy’: Lankinen ready to help lead Canucks to better results with more consistent workload

The Vancouver Canucks entered the season with a goaltending tandem regarded as one of the best in the entire National Hockey League: Thatcher Demko and Kevin Lankinen. The biggest threat to that was a Demko injury, and not even a quarter of the way into the season, we’re already dealing with health issues with Demko.

After sitting out last weekend’s doubleheader against the Columbus Blue Jackets and Colorado Avalanche for precautionary maintenance, Demko returned for Tuesday’s game against the Winnipeg Jets. However, he would last just 20 minutes as Lankinen led his club out onto the ice for the second period.

While the organization is still evaluating the injury to pinpoint a timeline for Demko’s return, it has been speculated that he will be out 2-3 weeks. That presents an opportunity for Lankinen to start the bulk of the games ahead and hopefully replicate his stellar play from the 2024-25 season. But Lankinen is ready for the task that is now presented to him:

“I’m ready to play every single game,” Lankinen said. “That’s what I love to do. That’s what I’ve always wanted to do. So just got to keep preparing and help the team win.”

Lankinen signed with the Canucks late into training camp last season and was expected to share a 1A, 1B role with Arturs Silovs. However, Lankinen quickly emerged as the Canucks’ best netminder and ran with the opportunity.

The Finnish netminder won seven of his first nine starts in Vancouver and was undefeated in regulation through that point. Before Demko returned on December 10, Lankinen started the majority of the games, playing 20 to Silovs’ six. Over that stretch, Lankinen had an impressive 13-4-3 record, with a 2.65 goals against average and a .908 save percentage.

Lankinen found his rhythm, which is something he hasn’t really been given the opportunity to see this season with a healthy Demko.

Before starting both Saturday and Sunday, Lankinen started six of Vancouver’s 15 games, with Demko getting all nine of the other starts. And, to be fair, it wasn’t the greatest start to Lankinen’s season. He had a 2-4 record with a 3.36 goals against average and a .880 save percentage – a significant dip from his 2024-25 numbers.

The difference could be Lankinen’s inconsistent starts. He did not make two consecutive games in a row over that span, and wasn’t able to string back-to-back good outings together. That would be the reason Canucks fans weren’t seeing the same Lankinen as they grew accustomed to seeing.

And there’s evidence of that. With Demko out for maintenance, Lankinen was asked to play back-to-back games over the weekend. His numbers may not jump off the page in those contests, finishing with a 4.03 goals against average and a .875 save percentage, but the eye test proved otherwise. Would he have liked to have Kirill Marchenko’s second goal back that trickled through him? Probably. But all things considered, the goals he allowed were not solely his fault.

Even when he came in relief after Demko left after the first period, Lankinen was the Canucks’ best player on the ice for the final 40 minutes. Coming in cold, he stopped 20 of the 21 shots he faced, finishing with a 1.67 goals against average and a .952 save percentage. He looked locked in. And that’s large in part because he played 14 of the 15 periods over four nights.

A goaltender can’t get much more consistent play than that. Lankinen even acknowledged the importance of playing more consistently, which helps him get into a nightly rhythm and produce for his team on the ice:

“I think so, yeah, and probably most of the goalies would agree on that,” Lankinen shared. “The game slows down a little bit, and you make better reads when you’re in the game. The preparation gets a little easier, because, of course, you’re in the rhythm and you’re feeling it. So yeah, who knows what’s going to happen the next few days here, but learn from this and get better.”

While we still await an official timeline from the Canucks on Demko, it will be Lankinen’s crease to run with for the foreseeable future, and he’s ready for the challenge:

“Well, I feel great. The more I play, the better I feel. So that’s always what you want to do as a goalie. You want to be the guy; you want to carry the load, help the team win. I’ve been feeling really good, and hopefully we’ll get some more results here soon.”

That begins tonight when Lankinen leads his team out on the opening night of their three-game Southeastern road trip against the Carolina Hurricanes.

You can watch Lankinen’s full postgame availability after Tuesday’s loss to the Jets below:

PRESENTED BY VIVID SEATS




Take $20 off your first Vivid Seats order of $200+ using promo code CANUCKSARMY (new customers only, $200 USD minimum before taxes & fees)

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/you-wa...nucks-better-results-more-consistent-workload
 
The Stanchies: Lankinen’s big night, shot volume issues, and let’s talk about the Rutherford interview

Although the Vancouver Canucks managed to escape Carolina with a point in hand, your view of the 4-3 overtime loss might vary.

You might see a team struggling with injuries gutting out a point as something border on, well not heroic, but downright admirable. Any time this team can secure a point without Quinn Hughes in the lineup is probably a small reason to toast your glasses in appreciation. If ever there was a time to embrace your inner New York Italian, now would be the time to let out a “what are you gonna do?” as you commiserate with friends and family.

Or you might view the fact that the Canucks got outplayed, outshot and outchanced as another symptom of the rot that has buried its way into this roster. That even with a healthy lineup, the ceiling for this team will forever be stuck in the dreaded mushy middle. We’ve been fighting it for a while now, but it sure feels like we’re entering Moral Victory season.

I will say that despite leaving this game with an .895 save percentage, Kevin Lankinen’s 34 saves on 38 shots doesn’t tell the whole story. The Canucks ended the night with two, count them two high danger chances to the Hurricane’s 21. In fact the Canucks only had 17 total shots in the game, meaning Carolina surpassed them in high danger chances alone, let alone more than doubling them in total shots.

So while I won’t assign the MV label to Kevin’s performance, he at least can rest easy that he wasn’t to blame for this loss.

And if we want to stay positive, Elias Pettersson’s two points were a good story out of this game. He unleashed a vintage wrist shot at one point, scoring on the play, teleporting us to 2018, back when “Yanny” vs “Laurel” was our biggest worry. Although don’t worry if you want to scream at Elias Pettersson he did get beaten pretty soundly on the overtime winner, so you can take your pound of flesh if need be.

To the Canucks credit, winning a road game while drunk off of a high shooting percentage isn’t a unique spot to be in. Going up 3-2 in the game, you can excuse them for sitting back and trying to gut out the win. And for a while it felt like they’d lulled the Carolina players (and fans) into a sort of acceptance of their fate. Low energy, light fading, the need to sleep slowly crowding into their thoughts.

Luckily for the Canes, another Kane entered the fray, as a bizarre sequence in the third period from Evander pretty much dragged Carolina back into this game. We’ll get to that later.

Still, setting that aside, the Corsi paints the picture of one team in control, and the other one hoping their goalie plus luck going their way could steal a win:

canes-canucks-nov-2025.png


Anytime a Corsi graph looks like an airplane taking off, it’s clear who was controlling the play.

So while you decide what viewpoint you want to land on, happy they got a point or tired of watching a team struggle, let’s jump into the guts of this game.

Best early warning signs

Carolina had good energy off the hop, and were it not for Kiefer Sherwood being Johnny-on-the-spot, they might have scored on their first shift of the game:

It was to be a night of this for Vancouver, endlessly watching shots and wondering to themselves “how did we get out of that mess?” before promptly going back and making another mess.

And while the team overall got caved in on Corsi, we do have to point out that the Kiefer Sherwood, Brock Boeser and Lukas Reichel line got absolutely murdered at evens on the night, as Sherwood was dead last a 3 for, 30 against.

So what I’m saying is if you’re a Kiefer fan, really embrace that video clip and enjoy it, as I don’t have much else to offer you. He’s been one of their best goal scorers on the team and I am not questioning his effort level, I am just saying on this night he lost the battle and/or I don’t think that’s a line combination we need to see again anytime soon.

I can give you a big hit though? You want a boom boom?

There you go, that’s a big boom boom.

Best here comes the pain train
Not even 5 minutes in and Myers is on pace to have his most chaotic game of the year #Canucks

— @d@m (@F1Canucks) November 15, 2025

Tyler Myers continues to resort to his more chaotic ways, as the absence of the Tocchet GOTI system the Canucks used to have in place is no longer there to provide the nurturing structured environment I think CG57 can excel in.

Basically when you tell Chaos to improvise, sometimes that involves him improvising in ways I wouldn’t expect:

Part of me kind of loves this? Like, Myers does this big sweeping turn and then is like “Nah, you know what, you can go get that Joseph” and motions at him to go take care of Logan Stankoven.

Best keep on rollin’ baby
Myers gave the puck away 3 times in 10 seconds, and then Sasson scores on a breakaway. This game is on drugs already. #Canucks

— Chris H (@Heavy__C) November 15, 2025

Despite the chaotic nature of the start of the game, the Canucks ended up scoring first when Mackenzie MacEachern managed a pass and a sweeping of the leg at the same time, allowing Max Sasson to skate into a breakaway:

MacEachern managing to kick the puck over while also hooking his leg behind Shayne Gostisbehere is the kind of Jarkko Ruutu energy I want to see more of from this team. A Cobra Kai approach to hockey is never a bad thing, as long as you don’t go full John Kreese mode. Just sort of hover around Terry Silver levels.

And kudos to Max Sasson for coming in and celebrating Alex Mogilny’s Hall of Fame induction with a five-hole goal worthy of the former Canuck. Sasson just casually walks in and while the goalie is wondering which corner Max is going to pick, he’s like “nah dog, I’ll just go through your legs” and now Pyotr Kochetkov looks like a fool, a fool!

Best animal nature
Why are the two #Canucks giraffes so bad this season?

— Tyson Fedor (@TysonFedorTV) November 15, 2025

The lead was short lived, however, as Tyler Myers attempted to thread the needle through several Carolina players, where it was picked off and promptly turned into a goal:

I have looked at all the angles of this goal and the best I can come up with is Tyler Myers was trying to dial in a long distance bank pass to a very far off Evander Kane (which is its own problem), effectively giving him four points of failure in regards to Carolina players waiting to make a play on the puck:

myers-1024x577.jpg


It ends up being a really well placed shot from Andrei Svechnikov that beats Kevin Lankinen, and I don’t think this turnover is the most egregious one you’ll see in the NHL. But in a game of inches any turnover in your own zone is never a good thing, so yes, you can safely say that Chaos Giraffe embraced evil on this play.

I’m mostly surprised Svechnikov didn’t elbow someone in the face to celebrate his goal, to be honest.

Best making it up as we go along
Vancouver gets a penalty for Jarvis getting high sticked in the face by his own teammate. The NHL is such a joke league. #Canucks

— Chumbles (@ChumblesP) November 15, 2025

Shortly after the Canes first goal, Seth Jarvis would get raked in the eye by his own teammate’s stick, leading to Marcus Pettersson getting a penalty for existing near the scene of the crime:

Now I have seen some terrible cross-checking penalties handed out in my time, just as soft as this one, but the penalty was clearly called because Jarvis fell to the ice and began kicking his legs in pain, the universal sign of “oh my god that hurt so much, why did that hurt so much”.

Jarvis left the game and didn’t return, so I am not saying he was embellishing it, what I am saying is I think an official saw Seth laying on the ice exhibiting a large amount of pain and was like “ok it must have been that tall guy with a stick, he did it”, so Marcus Pettersson was arrested. He just looks like the kind of guy who enjoys a good cross check. And he’s so big that the cross check would probably hurt. That’s how we got here.

This would then lead to Carolina immediately scoring off of the faceoff on the powerplay:

Once again the Canucks have given up an east/west goal, and once again the Canucks historically bad penalty kill continues to chase down records. I never thought we’d find ourselves wondering just how vital Teddy Blueger and Derek Forbort were to a team’s success, but we might be at that point now.

Best shake and Jake
Nice move by DeBrusk

— Liv ✨🎷🐗 (@HuggyxHoggy) November 15, 2025

Even though the Canucks controlled very little of the play Friday night, they did manage to counter attack at times with speed, which is only noticeable due to how much they struggled to do it last season.

Not that I am suggesting Adam Foote is the answer or that losing Rick Tocchet has crippled the team, I just mean at this point in the season we’re starting to see some differences emerge between the two styles, and it’s clear that a Foote coached team seems to generate offensive rush chances better:

That’s a nice little give and go from Drew O’Connor and Jake DeBrusk. DOC waits until he draws in the defender then finds Jake down low with all the time and space in the world, and Vancouver gets one of their two high danger chances on the night.

Best no gas, no brakes
WHAT DOES EVANDER KANE EVEN DO

— .☾⋆˚KAY⋆˚☆˖ – ROBIN DAY 🎈 (@NY88LANDER) November 15, 2025

Planet Ice would put the Canucks down a man halfway through the first period with the most beer league penalty I have ever seen in my life:

Just a casual one handed stick to the face, complete with hand in the air as if to say “you’re calling that??” when the ref raised his arm.

Say what you will about the man, but this is one of the most technically perfect beer league penalties I have ever seen in my life.

Fortunately for Vancouver this led to a bit of a vintage play from Elias Pettersson, as Carolina accidentally hit the drop pass button on their break out on the power play:

Elias sees Sean Walker bobble the puck a tiny bit and put his head down so he reads the backhand pass right away. So EP40 jumps into the play, takes the puck, and then scores on a nice little drag shot as it to say “I’d like to see Sebastian Aho try that on ME in overtime, ha ha ha!”

Best next up mentality
Marcus Pettersson logged 9:40 in first period for #Canucks. Eating up those Quinn Hughes minutes

— Jeff Paterson (@patersonjeff) November 15, 2025

Marcus Pettersson would end the night with 30:23 of ice time on the night, leading both teams in that regard.

Best view from the other side
They can be the worst goalie(not saying Lankinen is anywhere near) in the league and then they play the Canes and stand on their head. Make it make sense.

— Ash (@EmoTragedy07) November 15, 2025

Thinking random goalies will always destroy your team is not just a Vancouver Canucks tradition, as other fan bases have similar outlooks.

We have seen Kevin do this before, however, as the first half of last season is what largely earned his current contract with the Canucks. And while he has looked far more like second half Kevin this season, tonight he did play his ass off, and grinded out that one point for the Canucks:

That’s a nice side to side save from Lankinen, but with the mount of east/west shots the Canucks are facing, I do fear for the groins of the goalies this season.

Also remember that party enthusiast who was really really good at side to side saves? He would have probably been nice to have around.

Best shoot for the moon
That's a difficult one-timer to get a good shot on for Garland, nice looking PP!#canucks

— Greg P (@gregprzada17) November 15, 2025

You don’t need shot volume when every other shot goes in:

With three goals on seven shots, the Canucks third and final scoring play of the night was a power play marker from Conor Garland, who managed to dig the puck near his feet and push a shot on net. With Jake DeBrusk set up in his Tim Hortons office screening the goalie, Corolla was just able to beat the goaltender in a similar fashion to the Hurricanes first goal of the night.

Best don’t say moral victory
With a goal and an assist tonight, Elias Pettersson has posted back-to-back multipoint games. #Canucks

That's the first time he's done so since March 12 (Calgary) and 15 (Chicago), 2025.

Just the second time in the calendar year.

— Dave Hall (@davehall1289) November 15, 2025

Best sub plot
Not sure how other fans think of him but I’m a Tom Willander guy. He’s been getting better and better each game and hopefully he’ll get more opportunities soon. I hope he won’t be a casualty in a win now trade 🤞 #Canucks

— EP (@_ooEP) November 15, 2025

Tom Willander’s NHL journey is just starting, and while his gameplay so far has centered around being a dependable Milford Man, every other game or so he goes on a rush where he almost scores:

His ability to jump in the rush now and then to provide a burst of speed to the net is one of the most exciting parts of his game.

I feel like we’re getting closer and closer to Willander’s first goal of his NHL career, and so help me god it better be off a delightful rush and not some thoughts and prayers screened shot from the point. We deserve a bit of hype this season. We aren’t even getting the “Oh man Lukas Reichel almost scored” moments anymore, we’ve got so little right now.

Best a bit much
kevezina lankinen… you are so special

— r (@6ffside) November 15, 2025

While I come to terms with “Kevezina”, I will say that the second period was mostly a lot of Kevin trying to deal with life against a team that seemed intent upon hating him in the form of generating as many shots as possible, while his teammates did their best to block as many pucks as possible.

This is why you would see a lot of Kevin making the initial save followed up by teammates jumping on the puck like it was a live grenade and they wanted to be the ones to make the noble sacrifice:

With the Canucks sitting back and defending, it would lead to moments where the Canes would gain the zone, pull up, and then find an open player. In this case it was the Stank who found himself in the slot but was unable to beat Kevin:

At one point Jackson Blake literally skated around four Canucks in an end to end rush, before missing the net on the shot:

Sometimes you’d get Gostisbehere walking into a shot and unloading a piss missile that Kevin would have to drop his stick in dramatic fashion to make a glove save on:

And sometimes the Canes would beat Kevin using the east/west puck movement that seems to slice up Adam Foote’s defensive zone system, only to just miss the empty net:

It was just a lot of that kind of gameplay where Vancouver would hold on and then offer up a counter rush now and again in the hopes of getting a two goal lead.

Again, not a unique strategy, as when it wins they call this a “solid road game” but on this night it felt a bit extreme? Like you’d watch this game and it just felt like playing with fire more often than not.

Best positive outlook
#Canucks’ performance tonight is better than the lopsided shot count suggests – they’ve absorbed Carolina’s possession edge without bleeding chances against , and have caused the Hurricanes some stress off the rush – and they own a 3-2 lead going into the 3rd.

— Thomas Drance (@ThomasDrance) November 15, 2025

I think that’s a very charitable read of the game through two periods but damn it, if Drance is going to be optimistic for once, I am not going to be the one to argue.

Best what are we even doing here
Great work by Evander Kane there to re-energize the 'canes & the fans #canucks

— Zadorov's Ghost (@Goalfinger91) November 15, 2025

The most memorable play of the game for me was the Evander Kane shift. I don’t think it will hit the point where I can go “The shift” when talking about Evander Kane and people will know right away what I’m talking about, but it’s close.

So to set the stage for this, the Canucks to this point had been hanging back and holding onto the one goal lead. And despite the fact it felt like Carolina could have been up a couple of goals to this point, you got the sense that Carolina had kind of stagnated in the third. They hadn’t scored, Kevin looked locked in, Stormy as a mascot is in reference to the heavy Carolina pork industry, giving it a rather bleak background, so there was a lot to worry about on their end.

But then Evander Kane lost a puck battle with K’Andre Miller and he got mad mad about it:

Planet Ice straight up loses the battle on that race for the puck, there’s nothing nefarious about it. Just two dudes in a puck pursuit and one loses the physical contest. But Kane seemed to get real angry about this, so he starts chasing Miller around the ice. He’s chirping Miller looking for a fight but nobody is giving it to him. Now you have to understand, we at home only saw the puck battle. We saw Evander fall to the ice and we were like “well that’s unfortunate” and we had all moved on in life.

But on TV there was a growing murmur from the crowd and the best I can describe the atmosphere is when a fan runs onto the field and the camera cuts away from them. You know some shit is going down, but they aren’t showing it, so all you can hear is the crowd getting louder and louder and you keep wondering what’s happening.

So while this is going on, the crowd energy is building up and up, until Kane eventually gets levelled with a big hit from Joel Nystrom. Now the crowd erupts again and you can see Carolina players start to feel the energy. They start another offensive rush, and when Kane finally goes for a line change, the Hurricanes now have the puck deep in Vancouver’s zone and Taylor Hall taps in an east/west pass from The Ghost and now it’s a tie game:

Tyler Myers does his team no favours on this play, as he loses the puck behind the net before going in front and just sort of spins in place, fully embracing a bubble hockey approach to life. But the entire mood in the arena just shifted on this play. Instead of being down and out, the crowd came to life, and the Hurricanes fed off of it. Evander Kane spent the majority of the shift trying to get revenge for himself because he fell down, and his resulting late line change just led to a disjointed defensive zone effort from his team.

Which again, the Canucks were bleeding shots and chances against, so it’s not like this was the only play this kind of breakdown happened; It’s just that this one felt so unnecessary. At least before it was Carolina shooting at the Canucks, but here it truly felt like Vancouver shot themselves in the foot.

It’s one thing to defend a teammate taken out with a big hit, but it’s quite another to attempt to fulfill a blood oath because you lost a battle for the puck.

Best holding on for dear life
how about the caucks stop making lankinen's life difficult

— Emily (@sportyandhot) November 15, 2025

With the Canucks now firmly in “oh dear god please let us get out with a single point” mode, Marcus Pettersson caught a case of the slips and Carolina almost went ahead halfway through the third period:

Hey man, the effort is there, we can all see that. Drew O’Connor comes flying in to add support on the play and the team continued to try and block shots at an absurdly high rate, to the point they had a 29 to 4 advantage by the end of the night.

But you could also see that Carolina had the horses on the night and it felt like Vancouver was lucky just to be in the conversation.

Best glorious chance
#canucks #canes this whole 3rd period has felt like a Canes power play 🫠

— Liams_Limes (@Liams_Limes) November 15, 2025

The Canucks officially had two high danger chances on the night, and while I thought one was this late third period Linus Karlsson shot, apparently it was not registered as such:

I still felt it was important to showcase what was probably the only memorable shot attempt by the Canucks in the third period.

Best reference
Doctor Strange ran through this game a million times in a million alternate realities.. Canucks win once.

— Gord Locke (@Gordylocke) November 15, 2025

Best eyes wide shut
Multiple #canes running roughshod on #canucks players.

— OpenMic (@OpenMicNHL) November 15, 2025

Fil Hronek was taken out of the game near the end of the third period after Svechnikov unleashed a move probably better suited for the UFC:

Concussion spotters pulled him after the hit and it’s easy to see why. No penalty was called on the play, mind you, as the official who was right there turned away from the puck being shot around the boards.

I will say that this is one of the more viscous elbows I have seen in hockey. Sometimes a guy hits through his check and his elbow comes up with momentum and we all scream and argue about intent or not, but in this case it’s pretty clear Svechnikov was trying to land that shot to the head. He comes in hard and over the top with his arm and lands that elbow flush at the head of Fil Hronek and if the league was serious about cleaning up the game and making it safer, this is the exact type of play they should be handing suspensions out on.

Best playing the long game
If those are the two goalies going into a shootout, I’d play keep-away all OT too.

Lanks is a shootout specialist. #Canucks

— Canuck Girl 🇨🇦 (@CanuckGirl43) November 15, 2025

The start of overtime was objectively hilarious as the Canucks held the puck for over two minutes at one point? It’s just, without Quinn Hughes, their offensive pressure amounted to entering the zone, passing the puck around briefly, before leaving the zone and making a line change.

The crowd would boo every time they left the zone, and the heel work being done by the Canucks was so effective that by the time Carolina finally got the puck back, the crowd cheered like a goal had been scored.

Unfortunately the Canucks didn’t make the Hurricanes work hard with all that puck possession, as Aho, who had been on the ice for the entire two plus minutes, stayed on the ice after Carolina got the puck back.

So A for effort in working the crowd, but it didn’t put a dent in the energy level of their opponent.

And once they lost the puck, Carolina seemed to understand the assignment: Avoid facing Kevin Lankinen in a shoot out at all costs.

Blake and Gostisbehere almost ended the game with under a minute left, but Kevin made a couple of key stops:

But Aho gonna Aho, as the overtime specialist called game when he danced around Elias and drag shot his way to victory:

That’s an absolutely clinical finish from Aho, as Kevin stood very little chance of stopping that.

Could Elias Pettersson have played that better? Sure. But sometimes top level players make big plays, and there’s not much more to it than that.

As we said at the start of the article, you’re either impressed the Canucks got a point, or disappointed they got buried by a good Carolina team so handily.

Best summary
94 shot attempts against ties a franchise record for the Canucks. Has happened three times before.

Canes had 101 shot attempts against the New York Islanders in November 2023.

— David Quadrelli (@QuadrelliD) November 15, 2025

It was an uphill battle all night long.

Best before we go
Jim Rutherford interview.

Spoiler alert: “A rebuild is not something that we're going to look at doing. Like I said, we’re in transition. But we’re not trading all these players for draft picks that may or may not end up playing someday.” https://t.co/StEuDSxhLk

— Iain MacIntyre (@imacSportsnet) November 14, 2025

Now I would be remiss if I didn’t dive into the topic of the day, which was Jim Rutherford’s interview with IMac. They cover a lot of ground in the Q&A, but the main points for me were:

  • There is no rebuild on the horizon. The boogey monster that is the Buffalo Sabres remains the “See what can happen if you rebuild too hard??” talking point that all general managers refer to when they don’t want to tear down a team. Rutherford goes so far as to even refuse to mention the name of the Sabres, but I assume that’s out of decorum, not out of the fear of saying their name three times in a mirror and having them appear behind you to trade away your best players to Vegas.
  • Rutherford admitted that he didn’t expect the Canucks to still be looking to acquire a second line center at this point in the season, but said the prices are just too damn high. Which I just have to say to any GM out there, if you’re looking for a top four d-man that can play significant minutes, or hunting for top six center depth, that’s what every team is always looking for, every day, until the end of time. The “maybe we can find one on Craigslist?” approach works on occasion, but most of the time you’re going to show up at the dude’s garage and now he’s asking you to pay $200 above asking. “I didn’t realize it was mahogany bro, my bad.”
  • Rutherford did seem to embrace the team accepting its fate this season and riding out the injuries and continue to develop their players, instead of going all in to try and get a toe in the playoff pool. I have no doubt the team might change its tune if they acquire a second line center and go on a bit of a heater, but this might be a season in which the Canucks actually trade assets at the trade deadline, which I had assumed was illegal in Vancouver?
  • On the opposite end of the Buffalo Boogey Man system is the St. Louis Was Last Once And Still Won The Cup system, which Rutherford made sure to point at just to let you know anything can happen. I don’t know if it’s reassuring or frightening that my last place fantasy football team mirrors the Canucks approach, but here we are.
  • One of the rougher spots of the interview was when discussing Pius Suter. Jim said Pius wanted to come back but then there was “some miscommunication on term”, which was either a thinly veiled comment about Suter’s demands and what he ended up accepting, or the Canucks got locked out of their hotmail e-mail account and couldn’t remember the password. From the organization that brought you “we ran out of time”, this won’t go over well, but as this is a different regime, we can’t bury this Jim with the sins of Jims past. That being said, we also know the Canucks flexed to Brock Boeser hard out of nowhere, and Nikita Zadorov talked about feeling disrespected in contract discussions, so its understandable if you read that quote and feel a bit uneasy.
  • He re-affirmed that the best-case scenario for this season is they get a 2nd line center, recover from injuries, and “if you get in the playoffs, you just never know.” which has been the war cry of this team for the last, what, 13 seasons? Which at this point they really just need to embrace this lifestyle. Enough with the “meet pressure with pressure” or “compete is in our nature”, it’s time to go all in. “Crazier things have happened?” should be written on the wall as the players walk to the ice. “You never know!” emblazoned on the locker room floor. “St. Louis did it once!” sewn into their gloves.
  • Jim mentioned not making trades for “draft picks that may or may not end up playing someday” so if a Quinn Hughes trade does materialize down the road, prepare yourself for players who can play right away. Which isn’t necessarily a bad thing if you win a deal and bring in top level talent, it’s just historically you rarely get those kinds of deals completed because usually the team bringing in a Quinn Hughes is looking to a Stanley Cup now, and won’t be willing to give up a lot of good players in their prime. There is a reason we always talk about the “Dave Gagner was not a throw in” lore in Vancouver. Marian Hossa for Dany Heatley trade is one of the rare times where two teams traded players in or near their prime, with both players going on to perform at a high level for their new teams. Which again, this is the exception rather than the rule. More often than not, yeah, your GM will trot out and explain how Dave Gagner was a vital part of the trade and would not have happened without him.
  • The final talking point was the question about if Rutherford had full autonomy from the owner, to which he definitively stated he does. There will be some doubt on this, as the rumours and allegations surrounding the Jim Benning era about who was really driving the bus have reached infamy at this point, and as Patrick Johnston wrote, Mike Gillis had potential trades impacted by ownership. Maybe there is some Tony Soprano-esque cachet that Jim Rutherford brings to the table where he can do what he wants. But on the flip side, we only tend to hear about resistance from ownership when the dreaded rebuild talk is brought up, and as it appears right now, Rutherford’s vision for the team is still very much in a quick turnaround mode. It’s only when you push back against that do you suddenly find even golden child Trevor Linden on the outside looking in, wondering what happened.

My main takeaway from this interview is that it just all sort of feels like the same thing we’ve heard year in and year out, which is where the main fatigue of this lies. There will always be the people who support the Canucks no matter what they do, and are always willing to believe in whatever the current plan is. “Anything can happen in the playoffs!” is a legitimate strategy in the eyes of some, and they will be the first to tell you to relax about this interview, which hey, fair enough, have at it.

On my end, though, it’s tough to watch a team walk through the exact same steps they have done in the past decade, and hoping everything lines up properly this time. Short term gains has been the name of the game for far too long in this city, and after battling with people who assured me “give it time!” season after season after season, I do find myself wondering when will we ever get to the point where an actual rebuild with a viable plan gets put into place. Getting lapped by teams that did a proper rebuild is only going to worsen over the next few years, and now add in the fact that this might be a scenario in which the owners themselves will never get behind a complete rebuild, and it’s hard to see the light at the end of the tunnel no matter which management is in place.

And as it stands now, “Hey maybe Celebrini and Bedard will wanna play for Vancouver when they’re free agents!” is a damning statement from the fan base about how it sees the best way to turn things around in this city.

Sponsored by bet365

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/stanch...e-issues-lets-talk-about-rutherford-interview
 
Abbotsford Canucks weekend primer: Canucks start a six-game road trip in California

The Abbotsford Canucks are on the road for an extended timeframe and will do so with a win on their side.

In the final game of a two-game set against the San Jose Barracuda, the Canucks earned their first win in over a month. With a shootout win, they snapped an 11-game losing skid to head on the road on a good note.

The six-game trip will begin in San Diego for their first match against the Gulls.

Despite enjoying their best season in franchise history, the Canucks were even-keeled against their Pacific Division rivals in 2024-25. Through eight games, the team’s finished with an even 4-4-0-0 record. All-time, the Canucks enjoy a lopsided 16-6-0-2 record, and will look to add to that total in a quick one-stop game on Saturday night.

Slowly, but surely, this team is on the brink of getting a few bodies back into their lineup. Important bodies.

After being activated off injured reserve and assigned to the team last week, Jonathan Lekkerimäki appears to be ready to join the team to assist in the offence.

While it’s unclear if he’ll make his return to game action this weekend, Nikita Tolopilo did join the team on their trip. It’s a good sign that he will get himself into action at some point on the journey.

Players to watch​

Jonathan Lekkerimäki, RW

All eyes will be on the sharpshooting winger, who is expected to rejoin the team and boost their offensive potency tenfold. Returning from a reported shoulder injury, there is a world where his minutes are somewhat sheltered. However, he should be viewed as the team’s go-to threat, both at even strength and on special teams.

Ty Mueller, C

Like everyone else, Ty Mueller has struggled offensively this season. With two points in the team’s victory earlier in the week, momentum is on his side to enjoy a little bit of a boost to find the scoresheet. He’s playing heavy minutes in all other areas, so now it’s a matter of finding the scoresheet on a more consistent basis.

Vilmer Alriksson, LW

The big Swede, Vilmer Alriksson, has been heating up as of late. Despite showing just two goals (and points) on his ledger, he has demonstrated an eagerness to plant himself at the net front and create havoc in front of the goaltender. Head Coach Manny Malhotra has gained trust in his abilities, lining him up on the top line over the last few games.

Aku Koskenvuo, G

Making his AHL debut, Aku Koskenvuo saved the day to snap the team’s extensive losing streak for his first career win. With that in mind, he could see a back-to-back start as encouragement for getting his team out of a deep, dark hole.

Key injuries​


Jett Woo (upper body): Injured during the 2025 Calder Cup run, which he played through. Woo is listed as month-to-month and is expected back sometime in December.

Guillaume Brisebois (lower body): The full extent of the injury is unknown, but he is expected to miss significant time, with a possible return not anticipated until early 2026.

Nikita Tolopilo (lower body): Recovering from a groin injury, Nikita Tolopilo joined the team on their road trip. While it’s unclear when he’ll return, it is expected to be sometime this week.

Chase Stillman (lower body), Cooper Walker (lower body), Jujhar Khaira (undisclosed).

Familiar faces in Vancouver​


A significant chunk of Abbotsford’s core is currently with the big club, including:

Mackenzie MacEachern, Arshdeep Bains, Max Sasson, Linus Karlsson, Aatu Räty, Víctor Mancini, Tom Willander and Jiri Patera

What’s ahead​


The Canucks travel to Coachella Valley on Sunday for a one-game match at Acrisure Arena before heading to San Jose for a two-game rematch on November 21 and 22.

Projected Lineup (not line combinations)


Forwards

Ben Berard – Nils Aman – Danila Klimovich

Vilmer Alriksson – Ty Mueller – Jonathan Lekkerimäki

Joseph Labate – Chase Wouters – Anri Ravinskis

Josh Bloom – Jackson Kunz – Arnaud Durandeau

Dino Kambeitz – Nick Poisson

Defence

Jimmy Schuldt – Kirill Kudryavtsev

Joe Arntsen – Sawyer Mynio

Nikolai Knyzhov – Derek Daschke

Phip Waugh – Jake Murray

Goaltenders

Ty Young

Aku Koskenvuo

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/abbots...r-canucks-start-six-game-road-trip-california
 
Canucks sign David Kampf to one-year contract worth $1.1 million

The Vancouver Canucks have signed centre David Kampf to a one-year deal worth $1.1 million. General manager Patrik Allvin announced the signing Saturday afternoon.

General Manager Patrik Allvin announced today that the #Canucks have agreed to terms with forward David Kämpf on a one year, $1.1 million contract. pic.twitter.com/wFGrug4ToK

— Vancouver Canucks (@Canucks) November 15, 2025

Kampf, 30, has spent the last four seasons with the Toronto Maple Leafs. His best season came in 2022-23, when he tallied 27 points in 82 games. Prior to joining the Leafs, Kampf spent four seasons with the Chicago Blackhawks. Kampf played four AHL games with the Toronto Marlies this season, and earlier this week, the Leafs and Kampf mutually agreed to terminate his contract, which had two years left on it at $2.4 million annually. This made Kampf an unrestricted free agent, free to negotiate a new contract with any team he wanted to go to.

The left-shot centre scored five goals and eight assists for 13 points with a minus-one rating in 12:24 minutes of average ice time in the NHL last season. Through his eight seasons in the NHL, Kampf has been a mainstay on his teams’ penalty kills, averaging at least 1:28 minutes of shorthanded ice time per game in every season, including over two minutes in six straight seasons.

With the Canucks’ penalty kill struggling, and their woeful lack of centre depth — especially ones head coach Adam Foote can trust to take defensive zone draws — the Canucks were an obvious fit for a defence-first centre like Kampf. While Kampf has spent most of his career on the fourth line, it wouldn’t be a surprise to see him be deployed like a second-line centre on this Canucks team. Lukas Reichel has seen his ice time diminish greatly as of late, and while Aatu Räty and Max Sasson have both done good things this season, Kampf’s veteran presence will be a welcome addition to the Canucks’ centre corps.

The addition of Kampf should allow the Canucks to stop leaning so heavily on Elias Pettersson to take defensive zone draws, freeing up the Canucks’ number one centre to get more opportunities in the offensive zone, where hopefully he can put the puck in the back of the net.

Check out our deep dive on Kampf’s game below!

READ NEXT: Should the Canucks sign forward David Kampf?


Sponsored by bet365

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/vancouver-canucks-sign-david-kampf-one-year-contract-worth-1-1-million
 
The Farmies: The Gulls flew, while the Canucks fell in 7-0 lopsided loss

Coming off your first win in 11 games, the expectation – or, at least the hope – is to take that momentum and build. Well, with the team travelling to San Diego, this game wasn’t so much about building as it was collapsing.

Despite a decent start to the game, the Abbotsford Canucks collapsed in front of their netminder, offering high-grade odd-man rushes and backdoor tap-ins aplenty.

After a win to snap an incredible skid just four days ago, they are back to their losing ways after suffering a 7-0 beatdown at the hands of the San Diego Gulls.

The small silver lining to the game was the return of Jonathan Lekkerimäki, who drew in for his AHL season debut. Although he never sniffed a point, he was the team’s most dangerous player by a country mile with six shots on target. Of course, his addition highlights a glaring issue with this team.

You see, just 15 games into the 2025-26 season, Lekkerimäki became the 32nd skater, many of whom have been ECHL-calibre players, to have dressed for this team. That’s not to mention the six netminders used already. To compare, the Canucks used just 35 skaters and four goalies through all 72 games in their 2024-25 Calder Cup regular season.

To expect a team navigating through such turnover is nearly impossible. But that doesn’t equate to being pushovers on the ice, and tonight, that’s precisely what the Abbotsford Canucks were.

Starting  lineup​


Alriksson–Aman–Lekkerimäki
Kunz–Mueller–Durandeau
Labate–Khaira–Berard
Poisson–Wouters–Klimovich

Schuldt –Mynio
Knyzhov–Kudryavtsev
Arntsen–Daschke

Young

Scratched: Anri Ravinskis, Phip Waugh, Dino Kambeitz, Josh Bloom, Jake Murray
Injured: Jett Woo, Guillaume Brisebois, Nikita Tolopilo, Cooper Walker, Chase Stillman

First period: Triple trouble​


The Abbotsford faithful were reminded early what it was like having a bona fide shooter on the team, as Jonathan Lekkerimäki was firing early and often.

He finished the period with a period-high four shots and was dangerous for most of the period. His first look came from a neutral zone regroup, collecting the puck on the curl before entering the zone and firing a shot that tested Ville Husso up high on the shoulder.

Just moments later, fellow Swede Vilmer Alriksson kept his feet moving before being brought down on the zone entry, sending the Canucks on the first power play of the game.

The Canucks have been struggling to find wins all season, but with a power play clicking over 26%, scoring on the man advantage hasn’t been an issue. And on brand, they were snapping it around with purpose.

Abbotsford picked up several strong looks, all of which came from distance shots that created havoc in the crease.

But they weren’t the ones who benefited in the end.

San Diego goal – 1-0 – Justin Bailey (unassisted)

Following a Lekkerimäki point shot, the Canucks jammed at a few rebound opportunities before Joseph Labate sent a weak pass back to the point. Swiping at the puck was Sawyer Mynio, who had the puck chipped by him courtesy of a hungry Justin Bailey.

Off to the races, the former Canuck beat a tired Lekkerimäki before delivering a patient forehand move to slide it past Ty Young.

Hoping to regain momentum quickly, Lekkerimäki wasn’t done collecting chances. He and his lieutenants connected for several looks over the next few moments, and by all accounts, were holding down play.

But the Gulls understood how to capitalize when they were given their chances.

San Diego goal – 2-0 – Judd Caulfield from Yegor Sidorov and Tyson Hinds

Courtesy of a tremendous individual effort, Judd Caulfield overpowered Mynio, somehow staying on his feet before cutting back to slide through all on his own. With the Canucks backcheckers barrelling down on him, he took it to the forehand to chip up and over Ty Young to double their lead.

And Judd wasn’t done there.

San Diego goal – 3-0 – Judd Caulfield from Nathan Gaucher and Nikolas Brouillard​


Later in the period, while attacking a scattered Canucks line change, Nathan Gaucher threaded the perfect pass to a streaking Caulfield, who found himself behind the defence and one-on-one with Young.

Going short side again, he snuck one past the shoulder to send his team to the dressing room with a trio of goals.

For what it’s worth, the Canucks hadn’t played a poor period, per se. They outshot their opponents and collected several decent looks on Husso. Unfortunately, a few defensive lapses led to odd-man rushes that Young could not hold down.

Shots: ABB 9, SD 8
Score: ABB 0, SD 3


Second period: All downhill from here​


The Gulls picked up where they left off, adding to their lead in the opening minutes.

San Diego goal – 4-0 – Ryan Carpenter from Tyson Hinds

We’ve discussed rebounds being an issue for Ty Young already this season, and on the Gulls’ fourth goal, that issue was on display again.

Following a point shot save, the puck sprang out in front. Outmuscling Joe Arntsen was Gulls captain Ryan Carpenter, who kicked the puck to his stick and deposited it past Young.

From there, tempers began to flare for the visibly frustrated Canucks. Exacting pleasantries in the corner were Noah Warren and Captain Chase Wouters. After having had enough of each other, the two dropped the mitts and tussled.

You can’t blame a captain for attempting to fire up his team. Unfortunately, that spirit never really made its way to the Abbotsford bench. They managed just five shots over the course of the period, and that included two power play attempts.

Unlike the first period, where they had a noticeable jump, the Canucks had absolutely no response in the middle frame.

Shots: ABB 14, SD 19
Score: ABB 0, SD 4


Third period: 7-0​


Abbotsford collected its best chance of the entire game just seconds into the final frame.

While enjoying puck possession on a delayed call, Ty Mueller was sprung on his own right out of the penalty box. On that break, he attempted to make the move to the forehand before the puck bobbled over his stick.

We love it when we find moments that sum up a game well, and that could have been the perfect poster shot for how this one had gone thus far.

After two more failed power play attempts from the visitors, the Gulls extended their lead.

San Diego goal – 5-0 – Sam Colangelo from Matthew Phillips and Nikolas Brouillard

Following the initial shot, the puck slid out to the slot, where sharpshooting Sam Colangelo was standing all alone. He ripped a perfect shot that beat Young clean.

And they kept on pushing.

San Diego goal – 6-0 – Sacha Pastujov from Tim Washe and Matthew Phillips

While on the 5-on-3, Tim Washe found himself alone in the circles. Taking his time, he sent a perfect saucer pass to Sacha Pastujov, who scored on the one-timer.

San Diego goal – 7-0 – Justin Bailey from Roland McKeown

Justin Bailey struck again.

With the Gulls refusing to let up, they pressed hard in the Canucks end with chances. The puck reached the blueline before sending a backdoor feed to Bailey. Somehow, he was left on his own, hanging Young to dry as he deposited the puck into an empty cage.

Shots: ABB 17, SD 30
Score: ABB 0, SD 7


Final thoughts​


What’s to say? Coming off a big win in Abbotsford on Wednesday, the Canucks had no response at any point in this game. Despite an “okay” first period, the final two showed that they were incredibly outmatched with just eight shots.

Yes, injuries and call-ups continue to plague this roster, but you still can’t help but call out the lack of push in this one.

5v5-lines-4.png


What’s next?​


The Canucks head back to Coachella Valley for a rare single-game date with the Firebirds. Puck drop at 5:00 pm PT at the Acrisure Arena.

Sponsored by bet365

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/farmies-san-diego-gulls-flew-abbotsford-canucks-fell-7-0-lopsided-loss
 
The Stanchies: Quinn Hughes plays hero as Canucks score six unanswered vs. Lightning

Let’s be honest. The Vancouver Canucks probably shouldn’t have won tonight.

Their first period against the Tampa Bay Lightning was arguably their worst of the season. One shot on goal was all the Canucks could muster against a hockey team that played the day before! It really looked like we were in for a long, underwhelming night of hockey as the Canucks got stomped by an equally injury-depleted roster.

Just look at this graph showing the Corsi stats and balance of momentum throughout the night.

20252026-20297-cfdiff-5v5-1.png


Tampa trapped Vancouver on their side of the graph right away and refused to let them out, taking a 2-0 lead through the first half of the game. But you don’t play the games on paper, and the Canucks turned their lack of shots into an asset, making poor Jonas Johansson do nothing for most of the night, only to send some well-timed bank shots and deflections past him at record speed in the third period.

The Canucks, like their social media posts congratulating the Vancouver Rise on their NSL championship, arrived late. But they got there eventually!

We definitely should not ignore the way Canucks fell behind, or chalk it up to bad luck. That was undoubtedly indicative of the quality the team has been playing at in recent weeks. But we also can’t discredit the effort it took for the Canucks to win in the end. Resiliency isn’t a reserve you can afford to dip into all the time, but if you cash it in at the right time, you might hit the jackpot. And that’s exactly what the Canucks did today.

Quinn Hughes’ return came up huge for the Canucks in this game. He’s struggled and played out of character at points this season. Tonight, he played his absolute best stretch of the season, potting four assists. Elias Pettersson picked up a pair of helpers as well, proving once again that the Canucks’ stars can step up when the moment calls for it. But they also hung in the game thanks to phenomenal goaltending from Kevin Lankinen, who stopped 28 of 30 shots, including 12 of 13 in the first period. Even depth players played a role in the comeback, like MacKenzie MacEachern picking up a goal and an assist, and Linus Karlsson scoring a game-winning goal.

It wasn’t a Picasso by any stretch, but these days in Vancouver, we’ll take any victory we can get.

Let’s break it all down.

Best tone setter
Fucking RIGHTS Garly #Canucks

— Connor (paid my dues) 🇨🇱 (@cknnr17) November 16, 2025

I’m not sure a reputation can recover from being tossed to the ground by Conor Garland

— Josh Elliott-Wolfe (@ElliottWolfeJ) November 16, 2025

This game started exactly the way a tragic Canucks game would: with a really cool moment wrapped in a few really bad ones.

Conor Garland was locked in from minute one, especially after Darren Raddysh took a couple runs at him along the boards early. That spurred Garland to come back at him behind the net and start a tussle.

giphy.gif


6-foot-1 Raddysh accepts Garland’s challenge eventually, expecting a fight taking a walk in the park. Instead, he ends up thrown right through the park bench.

Undoubtedly embarrassed at being thrown around like a rag doll by a 5-foot-10 Conor Garland, Raddysh made sure to throw a classless late punch as the refs stepped in between them. Usually, you get a fight like this when a team is already losing to spark their team. Garland wanted to get that out of the way early.

It didn’t really work, but the effort was appreciated!

But it would also be one of Garland’s only shifts of the hockey game, because he’d leave the game with an injury either related to the fight or from a hit later in the game, and would not return.

Forward Conor Garland will not return to today's game.

— Vancouver Canucks (@Canucks) November 17, 2025

Everything is fine, guys.

Best Back to Peak
Ofc the shots are 6-0 Tampa

— ameena (@Canuckgirl20) November 16, 2025

Kevin Lankinen has taken the ball and run with it since Thatcher Demko left the lineup again, and the Canucks have absolutely needed him to.

For a team that had played its biggest game of the season so far less than 24 hours prior against the Florida Panthers, the Lightning came out guns blazing. They ripped 13 shots at the Canucks net in the first period, including the first seven of the game’s shots. He had to make a number of saves, especially in the first half of the period.

The Canucks weren’t exactly helping him much either, scrambling and leaving lots of open ice available for the Lightning to get shots through. But Lankinen was everywhere he needed to be. He routinely cut down angles and prevented the Bolts from even finding the net, like on this Scott Sabourin chance.

Sabourin had all the time in the world to bury this shot. But Lanks was able to challenge out far enough to make Sabourin clank the puck off the crossbar instead.

Even when the Canucks did get the puck, they usually did something less than ideal with it, like Evander Kane icing this puck after a long shift in the defensive end.

All the concerns about this Canucks team are coming to roost.

Best ad blocker
#Canucks Elias Pettersson is on pace to break Alex Tuch's NHL record for blocks in a season by a forward. Tuch had 113. Pettersson is on pace for 170.

— Adam Kierszenblat (@Adamkblat) November 16, 2025

The KierszenStat for this game was one that some people don’t wanna hear, but it needed to be said! For all the struggles he had scoring, Elias Pettersson is putting in the work in the defensive end.

Emil Lilleberg thought he was going to get Tampa’s eighth shot of the hockey game, but Elias Pettersson jumped in front of the shot like King Arthur taking a magic wand’s bullet for Shrek. Only difference is Pettersson didn’t turn into a frog after.

He’s doing all the right Selke-calibre things for his team and I’m not afraid to admit it!

Best SHOTS!
still scoreless. But the heatmap sure does tell a story pic.twitter.com/7bOr510OjO

— Jeff Paterson (@patersonjeff) November 16, 2025

the canucks first period pic.twitter.com/JYJKqI0AAI

— sarah (@sleeplesshockey) November 16, 2025

With 12 minutes left in the first, the unthinkable happened. The unimaginable, the unbelievable, the inconceivable.

The Canucks… got a shot on goal. And it was all thanks to Brock Boeser.

Boeser played this Lightning zone exit attempt perfectly. As Lilleberg skated into the middle of the ice, Brock got right into the passing lane and blocked it. Boeser put his body in between Lilleberg and the puck as he waited for a pass to Kiefer Sherwood skating back into the zone. A little give-and-go between him and Sherwood leads to a Boeser shot that almost found the corner of Jonas Johansson’s net. It was actually such a great play and shot that I fully expected to be writing about a goal here. After all, that’s how Canucks luck usually works. But Johansson read it better than most goalies would’ve and blockered it away.

Ah well, better luck next period.

Best *pretends to be shocked*
What?! Nobody saw that Lightning goal coming. #canucks

— Mel (@judjud22) November 16, 2025

I thought Lanky got there. How did that find a hole!? #Canucks

Ryan avgtraveller (@viewfromtherog.bsky.social) 2025-11-16T22:47:22.482Z

It was only a matter of time.

The fact that it took damn near the entire period for the Lightning to finally put a puck in the net was success in itself. But a couple reoccurring problems bit the Canucks in the butt on Nikita Kucherov’s one timer.

Firstly, Evander Kane: who are you covering on this play? The ghosts of Kokusai Green?? It ain’t any of the players on the ice, that’s for sure.

Secondly, the Canucks have had an absolutely dreadful time defending cross-ice passes all season long. Darren Raddysh victimized them on it after spinning out of coverage and finding a path through four Canucks sticks to Kucherov, waiting in his favourite spot on the ice. Lankinen nearly got there in time, but the puck squeaked through.

Said it on @Sportsnet650 couple times this week but no team in NHL gives up more on lateral passes across middle of ice than Canucks this season, per @csahockey … worst at east-west below hash marks in particular, a chance that goes in 5% more often than breakaway https://t.co/TQVQQcpqEz

— Kevin Woodley (@KevinisInGoal) November 16, 2025

The Canucks’ willingness to sit back and let opponents pound them through the middle of the ice is a big reason why their season has gone the way it has. It’s why they can’t dictate the pace of play, why the penalty kill has struggled, and why winning games has been such a grind. You have to grab the bull by the horns at some point.

Best is that good?
Lightning have as many goals as the #Canucks have shots in the first period.Canucks on pace for a 3-shot game vs the #Lightning, meaning they can only max out at two goals.

LesnielBC 🇨🇦 (@lesnielbc.bsky.social) 2025-11-16T23:00:28.214Z

Best preview
#Canucks are only 1 shot away from tying this game…

Ralph In The Ridge🇨🇦 (@ralphintheridge.bsky.social) 2025-11-16T23:09:45.568Z

The Canucks were clearly humbled by their first period effort, because they came out for the second with a vengeance. Within two minutes of the period starting, BOOM! A second shot on goal.

EP40 made this play happen by wheeling out of coverage from J.J. Moser, and finding Hughes pinching to the top of the circles. Hughes couldn’t get more than a close angle shot at Johansson, but it was the kind of chance around the net the Canucks weren’t getting earlier in the game. Perhaps this is an omen.

Best missed connections
Totally getting out hustled. #canucks

— Snowstar444 (@snowstar444) November 16, 2025

giphy.gif


It's pretty understandable how lopsided this game has been, given that one team played last night and the other did not.

What's that? The Lightning are the team that played last night, not the #Canucks?

Oh.

— Daniel Wagner (@passittobulis) November 16, 2025

Even with the Canucks’ newfound confidence in the offensive zone, they couldn’t help but give up another goal. And it’s to a name they’re all too familiar with.

Once again, Erik Cernak is able to get a puck through to the net because his checker is Kane, who completely abandons his post again to float like soft serve in the middle of the ice. Cernak gets the puck to the net, where it’s deflected in front of Lankinen by noted Canucks killer Jake Guentzel. Maybe they should’ve traded for him back in 2024 after all.

This game is going exactly the way you’d expect it to. The Canucks might as well pack it up and get a head start on that team trip to Disney World. I heard the line for Terror of Terror is only 15 minutes if you pay for Lightning Lane.

Best use of the commercial break
First attempt, by the way. pic.twitter.com/5aLf1UsqWY

— Dave Hall (@davehall1289) November 16, 2025

Best Heating Up
Jake DeBrusk has 4 goals in his last 5 games. #Canucks

— NHL Watcher (@NHL_Watcher) November 16, 2025

great move from Pettersson on that play 🔥 #Canucks

— cat 🫧🇨🇦 (@canucksgrande) November 16, 2025

Just when it looked the Lightning were about to pull away, the Canucks found life after MacKenzie MacEachern (remember that, now) was held in the neutral zone by Moser and earned them a power play.

The Canucks’ power play has found the secret sauce to scoring; namely park Elias Pettersson up high and let him draw the Lightning defenders to him. The plan goes off without a hitch, as Pettersson gets a shot through that Johansson stops, but the juiciest of rebounds pops out. And Jake DeBrusk is nothing but money from in close like that.

DeBrusk has had a slow start to his season, but he’s evolving back into his goal scoring self at the speed of light. Surrender now or prepare to fight.

Best No Lies Detected
Petey is far and away the best player on the Canucks this season, but nobody is ready for that conversation.

— The Hockey Spotlight (@nhlspotlight) November 16, 2025

Best Agitator
The Never Day Sie #Canucks strike again.Absolutely hilarious that this game is tied.

Daniel Wagner (@passittobulis.bsky.social) 2025-11-17T00:13:29.781Z

The Lightning are a team that’s made a living off their physical brand of hockey for years. A style of play that’s chippy and mean, dragging teams into the mud with lots of penalties and, crucially, lots of power play chances. Even up calls from the refs are inevitable, so why not take a lot of penalties if you have a lethal power play?

Tonight’s game didn’t work out that way. If anything, in the third period, the Canucks arguably had a more accurate depiction of their style of play than the Bolts did. Kiefer Sherwood found a way to get under Yanni Gourde’s skin in the third with this hit, and came back for a conversation with Laurel after the whistle.

A few minutes later, Scott Sabourin gets rung up for bowling into Kevin Lankinen on a rush, and the Canucks power play goes to work. Brock Boeser has the puck along the boards and spots Sherwood’s waiting stick in front of the net. In the ultimate bounce and turning point of the hockey game, Sherwood proceeds to bank the puck off of Moser’s leg and past a completely unsuspecting Johansson.

The Canucks are, against all odds, tied with the Lightning. In a game where they have 11 shots. The story of this team.

giphy.gif


Best flip it on its head
Linus Karlsson with the Birthday Boy Bump

— Andy Cole (@AndyCole1984) November 17, 2025

Do you hear that sound? It was faint earlier, but it’s getting louder.

It almost sounds like the PDO Machine going brrr.

Not even a minute after the Sherwood goal, MacKenzie MacEachern is able to hold the puck in at the blue line under pressure from the Lightning. He tries to take a shot on net, but it’s blocked. His second shot, a backhander, gets through to and miraculously finds Linus Karlsson, who deflects it past Johansson. 3-2 Canucks, out of NOWHERE.

Let’s take a moment to appreciate that celebration by Linus Karlsson as well. Karl drops the one knee down and heads for the boards with total jubilation. NOW we’re having fun and Karlsson gets his birthday present.

Best ARE YOU NOT ENTERTAINED?!
The PDO Merchants are back

— Jez (@Zer0PucksGiven) November 17, 2025


This is where the condensed schedule of an Olympic year can take over a single hockey game. The Lightning are playing their second game in under 24 hours, and seemingly emptied the tank to win the game in the first period. The Canucks, with the extra day off, were only barely able to keep up with Tampa the entire night before they started to get the bounces to go their way.

But some of that is creating your own luck, and Quinn Hughes did exactly that by walking the line with his usual fancy feet before getting a shot through against the grain. Once again, the puck ricochets off the stick of newly lethal goal scorer Drew O’Connor in front of Johansson and past his blocker. Three goals in less than two minutes, Hughes has three points on the night, and the Canucks have a two-goal lead.

The Canucks have successfully pulled off the “call an ambulance! but not for me!” meme in real life. The Lightning thought they’d be home in time for dinner with two points made to order. Instead, the Canucks bought out all the restaurants in town and closed them to build condos.

Best like he never left
back to back 3-point nights for #Canucks Hughes (with a game off in between)

— Jeff Paterson (@patersonjeff) November 17, 2025

I know this sounds crazy, but Quinn Hughes might be a really important reason for any Canucks success. Please don’t put me on blast for this scorching hot take.

Best tides turned
Disgusting attempt to cheat by Tampa Bay

— Wyatt Arndt (@TheStanchion) November 17, 2025

Rumours of Canucks’ impending demise greatly exaggerated etc etc https://t.co/C9o4uKNF6d

— Anna Forsyth (@aforsyth03) November 17, 2025

The Lightning nearly forced their way back into the game midway through the third. They had just enough gas left in the tank for one final push, and they appeared to make it count when Charle-Edouard D’Astous pounced on a Lankinen rebound to the corner and got a shot away before Lanks could seal the post, cutting the Canucks’ lead to one.

But controversy! Adam Foote’s coaching staff finds something before they drop the puck. Namely, Jake Guentzel high sticking a clearing attempt in an effort to keep the play alive.

Canucks call for a coach’s challenge, and it doesn’t take long for the refs to waive it off. This is officially Vancouver’s night. Signed, sealed, delivered.

Best Big Mac
Deflection city! #Canucks

— Thomas Belle (@tbelle31) November 17, 2025

The Canucks will go as far as MacEachern will take them.

— Chris Conte (@ChrisConte79) November 17, 2025

Before today’s game in my Stanchies Pregame video, I predicted that this game would be full of offence and scoring between two teams missing a lot of players. It took longer than expected, but I ended up spot on in the end. (Let the record show there was thunderous applause.)

MacKenzie MacEachern had himself an incredibly good game. At one point, it looked like he had two goals, initially being credited for Linus Karlsson’s go-ahead tally. While that got demoted to an assist, he absolutely scored the fifth goal.

This play is – stop me if you heard this – started by Quinn Hughes, circling Johansson’s net and drawing the Lightning defenders in. He finds Fil Hronek for a one-timer, and Hronek’s shot takes yet another bounce in front, off MacEachern’s stick and into the net. Had his first goal stood, MacEachern would have broken his career high in one game. Instead he ties it, but I don’t think he’s complaining.

Perfect time for a legacy game.

giphy.gif


Best sticking a fork in it
“Empty netter? I guess I could” pic.twitter.com/mEXBsuPn9E

— Anna Forsyth (@aforsyth03) November 17, 2025

What a comeback, @Canucks🏒🥅🚨☺️😏.

— Sarah Laug (@nucksaid) November 17, 2025

Considering they were down by three, The Lightning elected to pull the goalie with over four minutes left. It took about a minute for Marcus Pettersson to sink a shot into it.

EP40 was the initial shooter, but his attempt hit a Bolt’s leg and bounced right to the Dragon. M’Petey’s first goal was also apparently the Canucks first empty netter of the year.

“Wait a minute Lachlan, didn’t Quinn Hughes hit an empty net in Dallas last month?” Supposedly, that wasn’t credited as an ENG because Casey DeSmith hadn’t left the ice yet. Whoops!

Anyways, the Canucks won the game, but not before Scott Sabourin gave Linus Karlsson a garbage slewfoot in the final minute of play. Somebody call Scott a wah-mbulance.

Best let him cook

giphy.gif


Tonight also marks EP40's sixth point in three games, as he added two assists to his goal and three assists from games against Carolina and Winnipeg. #Canucks

— Izzy 🪿 (@izzycheung37) November 17, 2025

Has Elias Pettersson been his classic self all year? No, but does that mean he hasn’t played very well overall? Also no.

The points are finally matching the process. Just wait for the goals to start matching up too.

Sponsored by bet365

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/stanch...ucks-score-six-unanswered-tampa-bay-lightning
 
Canucks lineup notes: Jiri Patera starts, Garland out vs. Panthers

As the Vancouver Canucks wrap up their quick three-game road trip, that comes with some significant lineup changes.

According to Sportsnet’s Dan Murphy, goaltender Jiri Patera will get the start, and newcomer David Kampf replaces an injured Conor Garland up front.

Patera starts for #canucks. Garland (day to day) tweaked something in fight, won’t play tonight. Sherwood takes his spot on L1. Kampf is in.

— Dan Murphy (@sportsnetmurph) November 17, 2025

Patera signed a two-year, $1.55 million contract carrying a $775,000 average annual value with Vancouver in the 2024-25 offseason. He started the year in Abbotsford, appearing in just seven games, finishing with a 2-2-1 record with a 2.79 goals against average and a .899 save percentage before suffering a season-ending lower-body injury.

The next time fans saw Patera was at 2025-26 Canucks training camp. In five games this season in Abbotsford, Patera has a 1-2-1 record with a 3.10 goals against average and a .894 save percentage, but has looked strong given the state of this Abbotsford team.

The Czech netminder last appeared in the NHL back on March 26, 2024, with the Vegas Golden Knights. In eight career NHL games, Patera has a 3-3-1 record with a 3.57 goals against average and a .902 save percentage.

Kampf draws into the lineup after signing with the Canucks this past Saturday. While it’s still unknown where he will play, his 51.4% career faceoff percentage has him pegged for a defensive centre role and a penalty kill specialist.

Garland coming out of the lineup makes room for Kampf to slot in. Garland was injured after a fight on Sunday afternoon against the Tampa Bay Lightning’s Darren Raddysh. This will be Garland’s fourth missed game of the season, after being sidelined for three games following a neutral zone hit from New York Rangers forward Sam Carrick in late October. Vancouver secured two overtime victories in the three games without Garland.

Filling in for Garland on the top line with Evander Kane and Elias Pettersson is Kiefer Sherwood. The NHL’s single-season hit leader has found a scoring touch this season, tallying 12 tucks and a lone assist on the season. Sherwood’s 12 goals are tied with Morgan Geekie, Bo Horvat, Cutter Gauthier, Sidney Crosby, and Brad Marchand for fifth in goals scored this season.

Puck drops for Canucks vs. Panthers are 4:00 PM PST.

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/vancou...i-patera-starts-garland-out-fliorida-panthers
 
The Stanchies: Canucks drop scoring fest 8-5 to Panthers

You can call the Vancouver Canucks’ three-game road trip many things, but you can’t call it boring. Despite losing to the Florida Panthers 8-5 on Monday night, getting three points out of six should probably be considered a victory of sorts for Vancouver. Not a moral victory, mind you, we don’t just hand those out for free. You have to earn those around here. Your team loses 14-1, and one guy ends the night plus one? That’s a true moral victory, one earned through blood, sweat and tears.

But the night was still a victory just in the sense that at no point did it appear effort was ever an issue for this club. The majority of the Panthers goals were a result of well-meaning intentions from the Canucks, it was just the execution was horribly a bit flawed. It was akin to showing up to Meryton and refusing to dance with the puck due to it not being handsome enough for such an endeavour; one can only hope the Canucks realize the error of their ways and can get things back on track down the line once they learn the follies of their pride.

This game was in many ways like the night against the Tampa Bay Lightning on Sunday, except this time the Canucks didn’t have Kevin Lankinen in net to survive the rough parts of the game. No, instead that task fell to the Canucks debut of Jiri Patera, who I personally enjoy watching in net due to his aggressive style. It just brings a certain swagger; it feels a bit chaotic in net. It reminds me of a time when Roman Čechmánek was allowed to cartwheel in net to make a save, and we didn’t know a single thing about reverse VH.

Alas, that style comes with a cost: it can be high-risk, especially when it’s playing behind this Canucks defence. The Panthers’ offence feasted on the night, and while I don’t think Patera played particularly poorly considering what he saw in front of him, he also made it abundantly clear that he wasn’t going to be the answer, either.

Which, again, I don’t know how fair it is to heap blame on a goalie succumbing to an elite defending Stanley Cup champion team behind what one would generously describe as a Value Village defensive scheme, but any time you give up eight goals on a night, some people are going to put the target largely on your back.

That is the beauty and pain of being a goaltender: you could stop 72 shots on the night and lose 1-0, and some people would still be like, “Man, he really should have had that shot that beat him.” Or you can be a self-hating goalie like most of us are and win 7-1, and the entire ride home, you’re still angry about letting in that lone goal. This is the personal hell of being a goaltender.

But I digress.

The point is, the fact the Canucks got three point out of the three games is honestly pretty good. This team remains an organization that lives and dies by the PDO machine, so it’s best to just enjoy it when it goes your way. Even on nights when it goes your way and you still lose 8-5, at least you saw some offensive hockey on display? It’s pretty clear the GOTI system has been flushed out of the Canucks, as the defensive zone coverage looks like it was scrawled out on a napkin at 3 am at The Pint, but hey, Quinn Hughes (three assists) and Elias Pettersson (two goals) are hitting some dingers.

So give your favourite flawed team a hug and tell them you love them anyway, and let’s break this game down.

Best debut shot
It’s Petera. It’s Bobrovsky. It’s gonna be a game. #Canucks

— JS87 (@joshuaseinen) November 18, 2025

Where were you when Jiri Patera made his first save as a Vancouver Canuck?

At no point during the first five minutes did I have any idea of the kind of night Patera was in store for. I assume he had no idea either.

Like at one point, I clipped a couple of saves from Jiri and was thinking, “Hey he’s pretty aggressive in net, that could be fun to watch” not knowing what was to come:

Hey, that’s a pretty slick poke check! I also enjoy the ninja-kick sliding save he makes to boot the puck into the corner. While I respect and trust the school of robotic goaltending that Thatcher Demko went to, you have to understand that Dom Hasek is my GOAT. Part of my soul yearns for and desires weird, unconventional saves. So when I see a guy sliding over and kicking his leg a little too hard on an easy shot, I get a little bit excited. Maybe this will be the game that a goalie does a random pad stack on a dump-in from center ice.

You should also watch that clip and enjoy one of the rare moments where David Kämpf wasn’t on the ice for a goal against. He ended the night being on the ice for five goals against, while being on the ice for zero goals for. He did well in the faceoff circle, though, going 11-4? Obviously, it was his first game on a new team, but it’s probably safe to say it wasn’t his favourite game he’s ever played in.

But believe it or not, there was a time when it looked like it might be a boring old regular game and that the high point of the night might be a Jiri Patera save on Evan Rodrigues cutting across the net:

See? Everything was normal here. Just two teams having a game of clappy clappy puck puck to start the week.

Best pro tip
Life hack: you can skip the first 10 minutes of periods because the #canucks take half a period to wake up

— 44 (@canuckinsanity) November 16, 2025

With the Canucks current first period game resembling my approach to classes at university, they’ve been getting there when they get there.

So while shots weren’t really on the menu for Vancouver, there were a couple of hockey lessons on display on the night.

One, when a guy tries to dangle you, just look him in the eyes and sit him down, much like Fil Hronek did to Brad Marchand on a rush early in the game:

I just enjoy the fact that Marchand was like, “Ok, time to deke this guy out,” and Hronek is like, “nah, just gonna dump you in the corner little bro”, leaving Marchand to direct traffic like he just blew out both quads at the Royal Rumble.

Another lesson in hockey that you hear all the time is not to admire your passes, which AJ Greer was quick to remind Lukas Reichel of:

To be fair, that was a dope pass. If I had pulled that pass off, I’d still be looking at it after the game. You can bet the group chat would have videos of the pass, and I’d be telling them all about it, pretending not to hear them when they asked if it led to a goal.

I think the little smirk from Reichel as he gets onto the bench tells you that he understands the rule, but he knows it’s better to be hit on that play than to get robbed by Kirk McLean on one of the greatest playoff saves of all time.

Best you were the chosen one
if ever there was a Tyler Myers goal waiting to happen it was right there. A Panther runs over his own goalie leaving Myers with a gaping net to shoot at. Alas, angle was a little too sharp

— Jeff Paterson (@patersonjeff) November 18, 2025

At one point during the opening frame, Tyler Myers was in a race for the puck with Cole Schwindt, and Sergei Bobrovsky was all “this seems fun, I wanna get involved too,” so he randomly jumped up into the fray, and collided with Cole:

Which, on one hand, I absolutely adore from Bob. That’s some BDE (Big Dom Energy) from Bob, as I still see Hasek running out to clip Marian Gaborik in my head every time I close my eyes for sleep.

But BDE doesn’t come without a cost, as Schwindt had to leave a game due to an injury sustained on the play, and according to the Panthers’ head coach, it probably isn’t a short-term situation.

That being said, I will say I was surprised that Tyler Myers didn’t score on the play, as this is very much his element. Chaos is a ladder when Tyler Myers is on the ice, but on this night, he ended up hitting the side of the net, which would have doubled the Canucks shot count to that point.

Best he Drew it up like that
Not sure what box of Wheaties DOC has been having for breakfast lately, but let's make sure he has full stock. 😲#Canucks

— Dragon Was Slayed (@522IntoOvertime) November 18, 2025

I remember blasting away at Drew O’Connor early in the season, wondering if he’d ever start putting up points. I gave a very impassioned speech about how he might just be who he is at this point in his career.

And while a 10-game stretch of scoring points since then doesn’t unequivocally prove I was once again a big dumb moron, it is firmly on my radar as we watch Drew continue to pile up the points:

This guy has been one of the most lethal 5-on-5 players for the Canucks in terms of point production, so yes, what I am saying is, you’re welcome, Vancouver. My dumb hockey take inspired this run of hockey from Calendar, thank you very much.

It’s hard to believe that at one point it felt like there was a contest between Reichel and O’Connor about who could come closest to scoring without ever actually getting a goal, but since then, DOC has become one of the Canucks most consistent players.

And I absolutely love this goal. One of my main concerns about Doc was that his speed rarely translated into positives for his team, either in the form of a good pass to set up a linemate or in driving to the net to score a goal. Well, on this play, not only does his tireless motor end up drawing in a couple of defenders down low, but he then passes the puck to the point where Quinn Hughes has plenty of time and space to move the puck around.

And on the ensuing shot from Tyler Myers, Drew then keeps on working at the puck, eventually stealing it out from under Bob’s glove, and bashes the puck in. It’s a greasy goal from a hard-working shift, and that is absolutely what your bread and butter will be from bottom six players.

(Although I remain convinced that was a bank pass from Tyler Myers and not a missed shot. The dude does bank passes on 75% of his plays with the puck.)

The point is, it’s not often we get to use a second angle from a Drew O’Connor goal to showcase what a fantastic job he did:

That goal was DOC’s fourth goal in the last six games, and while it very well could just be a hot streak, at least he’s showing he can catch on fire now and then, which shouldn’t be discounted in the NHL.

Some players remain cold forever, living in fear of and wondering when they will become the next “hey remember that guy? didn’t he play for us once?”

Which, to be fair, even that isn’t so bad? Like at least Lee Goren is like “**** yeah, I remember that guy, he was me!” when he’s out for a night with the lads.

All I’m saying is, if I ever run into Billy Sweatt, I am 100% buying him a drink and asking him who was better, Darren Haydar or Jason Krog, while he patiently explains he never had a chance to play with Krog, so he can’t weigh in properly.

Best east to west connection
The #canucks PP answer was always Sherwood.

— Michael Paweska (@mrpaweska) November 18, 2025

The Canucks are awful at defending lateral passes in their own zone, so maybe it stands to reason that they’ve seen so many scored against them that they decided to try one themselves:

Kiefer Sherwood took a rare break from scoring goals to finally get an assist or two, as he set up Jake DeBrusk in his Tim Horton’s office for an easy tap-in goal on the power play. Jake literally skates in unnoticed somehow and then taps in the puck with minimal effort. I just sort of assume that when Jake points his stick during the play, he is, in fact, casting some sort of invisibility spell, which allows him to walk in for the goal.

I called him out earlier in the season as a player who can produce nothing for weeks at a time, and nobody cares, and everyone was like, “Yeah he’ll get hot soon enough, that’s why nobody cares.” And here we are. And I will admit, I really enjoy him as a player. He just seems like he’s having a good time, out for a skate with the boys, and has fun playing in the blue paint. Nothing but respect for that.

Best here comes the rain again
Defense does not exist for the Canucks. #Canucks

— Petey (@Canucks_Fan40) November 18, 2025

AJ Greer would bring the Canucks down to earth as the Panthers would strike back quickly after the DeBrusk goal:

The Canucks have had a tendency this year of multiple players chasing the same check, which often leaves one player wildly open on the play. With Tocchet, he would always hammer home about the GOTI hockey, protecting the guts of the ice. He would literally try to get you traded if you didn’t follow the system and defend the GOTI.

Well, with all of that gone, we’re just starting to see plays like this, where Tyler Myers, D Petey, and David Kämpf all close in on Sam Bennett. This starts a domino effect: Carter Verhaeghe gets the pass from Bennett with time and space in the slot, which freezes the Canucks trio as they turn to face the new danger, allowing Verhaeghe to find AJ Greer high in the slot, who uses Myers as an effective screen on the shot.

It just feels like once a play falls apart for the Canucks in their own zone, they really struggle to get things back on track, as they start chasing the play and end up leaving players open all over the ice.

Best highlight of the night
Only fitting that our goalie makes a Luongo like save while in Florida. Luongo is also likely in the building too. #Canucks

— princesserica84 🇨🇦 (@princessrica84) November 18, 2025

The beauty of the Patera school of goaltending? It can lead to saves like the one he made on Mackie Samoskevich, after the Panthers forward walked right around Quinn Hughes and bull rushed the puck on net:

Which, again, high risk, high reward. That could very easily have been a goal, and this night would have ended 9-5 instead of 8-5.

But the point is, that’s an incredibly fun save, and I enjoyed every moment of it, even if I could hear Ian Clark screaming in agony from across the globe.

Best bold advice
The Canucks might consider covering Florida players on the rush. #Canucks

— Kerry Banks (@bad_kicker) November 18, 2025

Despite being denied by the glove of Patera, the Panthers would tie the game up just before the end of the period, when Seth Jones made it 2-2 on a rush attempt:

This is another one of those plays where things just sort of break down for the Canucks. Which, hey, most goals you look at will involve moments where you can be like “oh yeah, this broke down real bad here,” but it is a trend for the Canucks to have more of these than most teams.

And on this play, you have Marcus Pettersson probably playing too close to the boards, which opens up space in the middle. Brock Boeser makes a play for the puck and fails, so now he’s stopped skating and out of the play. I believe Kämpf thinks things are covered, so he’s just casually skating back and sort of watching over things. By the time he realizes Marcus Pettersson has failed containment, he chooses to cover Brad Marchand to help close off the passing option. And then Seth Jones just beats Patera cleanly five-hole.

That’s pretty much been par for the course for the Canucks. Lots of little mistakes in coverage that lead to a high volume of shots and chances against, which is why they are next to dead last at even strength play. If your goalie isn’t on a heater and if your PDO isn’t going brr, you’re in for a long night.

Best mostly everyone is trying
It looks like the Canucks are trying, but you have to wonder why they lose so many one-on-one battles. #Canucks

— Kerry Banks (@bad_kicker) November 18, 2025

The Panthers would make it 3-2 minutes later when Luke Kunin would tap in the rebound after the Canucks got caught watching Noah Gregor skate a lap around their zone:

I don’t know if Quinn didn’t respect the game of Gregor, or just made a bad read, but he ends up having to chase Gregor around the ice, which leads to Evander Kane half-heartedly pointing a stick towards the puck, before the Panthers forward gets the backhander off. Elias Pettersson is firmly in his shot block era, so he’s going full Alex Edler to make a save in the crease, and he ends up sliding away into the shadowlands when Jiri Patera uses his chaotic energy to make a ninja kick pad save.

Remember earlier when I enjoyed Patera kicking his pad to make a big save on a normal shot? This is the risk of that lifestyle.

So with EP40 and Patera off to the side, Kunin literally has no check on him, so he taps in the easy goal.

The Canucks tried to answer quickly with a goal of their own, but Brock Boeser ended up missing an empty net, leading to one of the best “wtf how did I not score there” reactions of the season:

Brock puts his stick on his head and does a complete 360 as he tries to come to terms with what just happened. It’s the kind of shock where you have to think things through for a full minute to make sure that actually occurred. “Wait, did I not put my emergency brake on? Did my car really just roll away down the hill into that pool?” as you patiently wait for Jamie Kennedy to jump out and tell you in a really weird monotone voice that you’re on his hidden camera show nobody has heard of.

Best shaming the goaltender

Evan Rodrigues would then make it 4-2 as once again the Canucks making questionable life choices reared it’s ugly head:

Yes, at one point, Kämpf, Myers and Marcus Pettersson all chased the puck behind the net, managed to lose it, and provided no defensive zone coverage whatsoever.

Again, I don’t doubt their effort on this play. I don’t think either man was thinking about mailing it in. But their efforts were used in an ineffective manner, as the end result was a pass from behind the net going to a guy wide open for a tap-in.

Kämpf is probably most to blame for this one, as he needs to guard the front of the net when his two d-men are down low like that, but I have no problem if you want to yell at multiple players for this goal.

Best optimism
Alright we might be losing, but i am loving the 3 goals on 6 shots #canucks

— 44 (@canuckinsanity) November 18, 2025

Florida would then make it 5-2 on an Anton Lundell goal that was scored before the TV even had time to finish showing the previous goal scorers:

This was the main goal where I audibly said “woof” in the direction of Patera, as he probably should have had this one? Although it was good puck placement from Lundell, it does feel like Patera shouldn’t be letting one in from that angle.

At the very least, we didn’t have to describe four other Canucks making mistakes in coverage leading up to the goal? That’s fun, right?

Best Goonies moment
Hey nice rush goal. Petey gets it. Nice pass by Kane. Hughes with 3 assists. 5-3 them 🚨🚨🚨 #canucks

— just a guy. 🇨🇦 (@jaycee24_) November 18, 2025

Despite being down 5-2, the Canucks pushed back in this game, starting with Elias Pettersson’s first of the game:

Planet Ice excels in the offensive zone, so it was no surprise to see the skill put on display by Evander Kane as he taunted Bob with either a shot or a pass, before deciding at the last second to send the puck over to Elias.

Bob showcases immense BDE energy on the play, immediately dropping his stick so he can try to make a dramatic blocker save, but Elias Pettersson ends him with precision.

That’s a very nice counterattack from the Canucks if we’re being honest, and something we didn’t see a lot of last year. Hey, if you’re going to be dog water in your own end, it at least better come with some fun offensive rushes the other way. Bruce Boudreau didn’t teach us that lifestyle for nothing.

Evander Kane would then hit the post a moment later, sneaking behind the defence for a breakaway:

Which, again, he’s Planet Ice for a reason. Cheating up to spring for a breakaway, that’s fantastic beer league strats, this guy knows how to earn beers in the locker room. I have to assume Adam Foote loves the beer league lifestyle as well, hence Evander Kane is getting the most 5-on-5 ice time of any forward on the team.

Best paying the price
I think Petey just got Boesered 😟 #Canucks

— Hockey Gal (@huggy2petey) November 18, 2025

No word on if the general or the soldiers took the brunt of the blast:

Putting the head down to ride out the pain wave, we’ve all been there.

Best what about this
8 shots, down two, second period. Yupppp, I’m on the right channel #Canucks

— Priya ☔🏒 (@Canuckstrom) November 18, 2025

Can I interest you in some Drew O’Connor hard work instead of a goal?

I know the Canucks penalty kill is truly awful this season, and is basically on par with the final season of How I Met Your Mother where it’s revealed the Mom was Derek Forbort all along, but I think we can all take a moment to appreciate a hard working effort from O’Connor.

Best game management
in what world is that 4 minutes #Canucks

— empathy tweets (@empathytweets_) November 18, 2025

At one point Niko Mikkola ran Kiefer Sherwood from behind, leaning heavily on his neck and head, which understandably upset the Canucks. Tyler Myers ran to his teammates defence, throwing his gloves off and, well, just sort of holding Mikkola as if to say he was this close to eating some thunder bombs (this is what I assume Myers calls his fists):

But the NHL being the NHL decided that hey, let’s just balance this out, so they handed out four minutes of penalties to Mikkola and four minutes of penalties to Tyler Myers, as the Chaos Giraffe was hit with a double minor for roughing. Which again came as a result of him literally dropping his gloves and holding Mikkola near the bench. At no point did it look or seem rough, but NHL officials are never held accountable for anything, as seen by the continued employment of Kelly Sutherland, so you just learn to try and laugh your way through it.

Best old school cool
Vintage Petey, man…hook it to my veins #Canucks

— Fred Ledge (@PatsNucksfan) November 18, 2025

Perhaps inspired by the lack of justice, the Canucks started the third period strong, punctuated by Elias Pettersson digging into his bag of tricks and pulling out his vaunted rookie season shot:

Things to note on this goal:

  • Kiefer Sherwood got his second assist on the night, bringing him to 12 goals and 3 assists on the year. He’s a skilled player and we know he can pass, so it’s just amusing to see the imbalance in stats when his shooting percentage is riding a heater.
  • Tom Willander continues to show that he never wants to leave the NHL ever again. Was it a banner night for him in terms of Corsi? Not really, he was near the bottom of the team. But overall, he’s more than held his own in his deployment, and we continue to see flashes of brilliance when he rushes the puck up the ice. And on this play, not only did he create a zone entry and back the Panthers up into their own zone, he made a “who do you think you are, I am” pass right before he hit the blue line, which set everything in motion. He then continued to rush to the net like a young Ed Jovanovski, demanding the attention of the Panthers defenders, allowing Elias Pettersson to get some time and space with the puck.
  • That finish from EP40 was the sort of thing we used to see all the time, and that is very much a “There you are Peter!” Hook moment everyone keeps waiting for. We know EP40 can shoot the lights out. We just need to see it happen more often.
Best final hope
How is this a tie game?!!! Hronek scores!!! Power play goal! 🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨 5 all! #canucks

— just a guy. 🇨🇦 (@jaycee24_) November 18, 2025

The Canucks would then tie the game up on a power play break out that ended with a tap in off the rush from Fil Hronek:

Everyone but Aatu Räty touched the puck on this play, which will probably be brought up in therapy, but the finish on this goal was as clinical as it gets. Evander Kane makes a perfect pass to Max Sasson, who then makes a perfect pass to Fil Hronek, as the Canucks do their best impression of a waterfall as they crash the net.

You can watch the replay and see each Panther make a play for the puck, only to get beaten by the pass, which eventually leaves Hronek all alone in front of Bob. Tidy piece of business with the extra man, even if Aatu will forever be wondering why he wasn’t invited.

Best and so it begins
Florida takes the lead right back. Bennett deflects home a Mikkola shot. This game is on something.

— David Dwork (@DavidDwork) November 18, 2025

The Panthers would then take the lead for good when Sam Bennett tipped in a Mikkola shot that didn’t involve a head for once:

As with all tips, this was as deft as they come, and I assume Patera was just praying for the night to be over at this point. The Canucks get caught with too many guys down low, which leaves Mikkola wide open at the point, who then feeds the shot to Bennett, who is all too happy to give Willander a “welcome to the NHL, kid” moment.

And as with most goals on the night, David Kämpf got to watch a red light go off behind his own goalie.

Best finishing touches
canucks have given up an nhl-high 23 ppg this season, and this is game 21

— Mike Halford (@MikeHalford604) November 18, 2025

After the Canucks failed to score on third period power play, the Panthers effectively ended the game with their seventh goal of the night on a power play of their own:

Once again, Tyler Myers and David Kämpf continued their Hall and Oates partnership as they both closed in on Verhaege, which allowed the Panther player to find Sam Reinhart open by the side of the net, who then has the patience to find Seth Jones as three Canucks players end up puck watching on the play.

That was a very sloppy penalty kill, I won’t lie, although I think David Kämpf can be excused, as it’s his first night with the team, so he’s not used to the “I have no idea what to do with my hands” penalty kill approach the Canucks have been employing this season. Tyler Myers should have stayed closer to the net and given a semblance of a diamond, but because he cheats up so high on the play, Reinhart is more open than a stupid Costco built in a city that absolutely does not have the proper traffic infrastructure to handle it.

And since I feel bad for Patera, here he is making a breakaway save:

Best Grant Fuhr energy
Not sure I've ever seen a worse save percentage for a goaltender that will likely get the W #Canucks pic.twitter.com/CRHVFkdBZL

— Gav 🇨🇦 (@oakridge604) November 18, 2025

Best just a tease

The final gasp from the Canucks was Jake DeBrusk hitting the post on a late third period power play:

With the way PDO has been going for the Canucks, I was honestly surprised they didn’t make another comeback at this point.

Best we meet again old friend
Onto the next one. #Canucks

— Adam (@Cond0r1_) November 18, 2025

Brad Marchand would finish off the game after Evander Kane jumped up on a faceoff and tapped the puck back directly to, well, Brad Marchand, who also jumped up on the play:

Live by the beer league strats, die by the beer league strats.

Best at least
Elias Pettersson now has four consecutive multi-point games.

2A vs. WPG
1G, 1A vs. CAR
2A vs. TB
2G vs. FLA

Doing so against tough opponents and the toughest matchups. #Canucks

— Tyson Cole (@tyson_cole) November 18, 2025

With the deployment Elias Pettersson has handled, and the defensive responsibilities he’s been given, this has actually been a very decent season from him.

Best reality check
#Canucks at 5v5 since Nov 6:

Shot attempt differential with Quinn Hughes on ice: +11

Shot attempt differential without Hughes on ice: -109

— Harman Dayal (@harmandayal2) November 18, 2025

At the end of the day, though, this team lives and breathes with Quinn Hughes.

Sponsored by bet365

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/stanchies-vancouver-canucks-drop-scoring-fest-8-5-florida-panthers
 
Blackfish: Koskenvuo ends Abbotsford’s losing streak, Medvedev steals the spotlight, and more

Welcome back to Blackfish: Our weekly Vancouver Canucks prospect report.

This week saw a rare Abbotsford Canucks victory, thanks to rookie goalie Aku Koskenvuo, who stole the show in his American League debut. Koskenvuo wasn’t the only goalie to prove himself over the week, with Aleksei Medvedev continuing his incredible run of play with the London Knights. A few others in the Ontario Hockey League continue to plug along with production, and a WHL defender returned to action.

Let’s dive right into the good stuff.

Abbotsford Canucks​


Abby-1.png


The Abbotsford Canucks played four games over the week. After a gruelling 11-game losing skid, Abbotsford finally recorded their third win of the season; their first victory since October 11th, 2025!

Sure, they lost the other three, mostly in lopsided, blowout fashion. But we are looking for silver linings today.

The big story was Koskenvuo’s play in the club’s lone victory. Nikita Tolopilo is close to a return, but not quite ready, leaving the crease to Aku and Ty Young for the time being.

Fresh off his first career professional win at the ECHL level, the young Finn took the ice for his first American League game. In the team’s 4-3 shootout victory, Koskenvuo stopped 33 of 36 shots faced and was named the second star of the game.

Though Koskenvuo’s play was much better than the numbers suggest, he nevertheless allowed four goals on 23 shots in his second AHL start. In the first period alone, he made several key stops to keep his team in a close game. Unfortunately, each goal against was directly caused by glaring defensive lapses by the five-man unit in front of him. A goalie can only bail out his team so many times, especially a team as lacking in talent/skill/aptitude as Abbotsford.

With Jiri Patera up with the main club, Koskenvuo’s debut has made the goalie carousel an interesting one to watch play out as the club returns to full health.

We have said it often, and we will repeat it: it’s very challenging to judge a player’s game when the team is going through so much on-ice turmoil, especially a goaltender’s. When confidence levels appear to be rock-bottom, and team chemistry is nonexistent, it’s difficult to assess what percentage of a goalie’s performance is strictly on the individual.

That said. Ty Young has struggled.

He allowed 12 goals on just 51 shots over the week, and yes, many of those goals stemmed from defensive lapses, but he’s struggled to make routine saves. His rebound control has been a noted flaw in his game throughout the year, and that has directly contributed to goals.

Overall, he’s sporting a dreadful 5.07 goals against average and .835 save percentage to go with his winless 0-6-0-0 record. Nothing with this team is going right, but Young has to be better if he wants to help his team out of their funk.

Up front, Ty Mueller has been finding his offensive legs, contributing a goal and two assists. It’s not much, but it’s better than the lone point that he had on his stat sheet coming into the week.

And when you’re in a funk, these are the kind of goals you want to be scoring.

Four more games off the schedule, and zero points for Danila Klimovich. He’s been demoted to the fourth line, though he’s held his spot on the 2nd power play unit. Nothing is happening at 5-on-5, so the power play is his only real chance to hop off the schneid. After posting a career-high 24 goals in 2024-25, he’s still sitting at zero for the year.

Injuries have helped, but Vilmer Alriksson’s hard work has cemented his place in the team’s top six. He may not have contributed on the scoresheet this week, but he’s been finding his groove and role on this team as a menace at the net front. He’s learning to use his giant frame and is looking increasingly comfortable with his game at the pro level.

Heck, he’s even showing off some silky smooth hands in the shootout that led to the week’s win.

Just don’t look at his plus/minus.

The highlight of the week was truly the return of Jonathan Lekkerimäki, who rode in on a white horse to record a team-high six shots on goal in the club’s dismal 7-0 loss to the San Diego Gulls. Lekkerimäki would notch another three shots on goal, while collecting two points in the team’s 5-2 loss to the Firebirds. Though he didn’t produce in his AHL return, his presence was noted. Lekkerimäki brought a certifiable POP, sticking out like a sore thumb whenever he was on the ice.

He picked up his first goal of the season with his patented quick-release, courtesy of a nice threaded pass from Ben Berard.

While he stood out as a clear tier above the field, we do have to wonder if the team will keep him down a little longer than expected for this conditioning stint. He appeared gassed on many shifts and was noticeably late on several backchecks. Given the state of the organization, we wouldn’t be surprised to see Vancouver recall Lekkerimaki before Abbotsford’s next game.

It was a tough, tough weekend for all in the plus/minus department, especially for those who play heavy minutes. Alriksson and Kudryavtsev were both minus-7 on the week, which was, shockingly, not the worst among those on Abbotsford’s roster sheet.

At this point, you can fairly guess that those who are sporting terrible plus/minus numbers are those who are playing the most for Manny Malhotra. It’s bad. Real bad.

Injuries: Chase Stillman remains out in a walking boot.

CHL​


CHL-1-1.png


What can we say about Aleksei Medvedev that we haven’t already? This kid is proving to be the real deal, and we are putting a stake in the ground early that he will play in the NHL.

With prospects taken in the second round or later, it’s always a gamble to put a “certified NHL player” tab on a prospect just months into his draft-plus-one season. However, Medvedev is just too good. Does playing for the London Knights help his stats? Of course. But the Knights aren’t scoring this year, currently sitting seventh in the Eastern Conference by total goals scored.

He allowed just five goals on 66 shots in a win/loss split last week. Furthermore, he was named a star in each of those games. Whether a win or loss, he’s now earned a star nomination in each of his last three games and four of his previous five starts.

Aleksei Medvedev kicks off tonight's game with a pair of incredible shorthanded saves.

This kid is on another level. #Canucks | @LondonKnights pic.twitter.com/k7EUhn9LuE

— Dave Hall (@davehall1289) November 13, 2025

Medvedev now sports a strong 8-3-1 record with a 2.08 goals against and a .926 save percentage.

Gabriel Chiarot added another three points over the week and is now on pace for 64 points, doubling his totals from 2024-25.

Both goals were the result of being in the right place at the right time. With 16 points (nine goals, seven assists), he now co-leads the Brampton Steelheads while leading the forward group in plus-minus with a plus-5.

We say it often, but we enjoy how Chiarot plays the game. Does he carry an overly high NHL ceiling? Probably not. But if you like workhorse spark plugs who create plays by fighting for plays, then he’s your guy. He doesn’t wait for plays to come to him; instead, he gets into the grind and takes matters into his own hands. He’s still a very long-term project, but the way he plays the game screams third-line energy role. Whether that’s in the NHL or AHL remains to be seen.

Playing somewhat of an opposite game to Chiarot is Kieren Dervin, who’s quietly having a solid season in the OHL, showing off his slick hands early and often.

Kieren Dervin shows off some quick hands, capitalizing on a defensive turnover.

That's his eighth goal of the season and second shorthanded. #Canucks pic.twitter.com/stYjSFjjoL

— Dave Hall (@davehall1289) November 15, 2025

Seven of his 11 assists have come on the power play, but the majority of his goals (two shorthanded, one power play) have come in beautiful fashion. He’s a speedy and creative winger who has a knack for scoring goals in tight. We aren’t convinced about his overall game just yet, but he’s killing penalties and playing heavy minutes.

He continues to lead the charge in Kingston, firing at a point-per-game pace, with 19 points on the year.

It was a tough weekend for the Niagara Ice Dogs, who dropped both of their games over the weekend to extend their losing streak to five games.

Riley Patterson shared the crown with a team-worst minus-4 rating. Though he did add a single goal at the tail end of a 6-2 blowout. His minus-4 rating dropped his impressive season-plus-minus to a plus–5. His tough weekend included a rough outing in the face-off dot, winning just seven of 35 attempts, dropping his face-off win percentage to 46.3%.

On the positive side, he sits second on the IceDogs with 19 points—ten goals, nine assists—16 of which came at even-strength.

Just one assist for the Seattle Thunderbirds’ captain, Braeden Cootes, through his two games this week. With seven shots on goal, it was another week of “probably should have had more,” as the chances continued to pile up, but not go his way.

He’s firing at a 1.50 point-per-game clip right now, and is still on pace for 90 points, which isn’t too shabby for a player who missed the team’s first few weeks of play.

In last week’s report, we noted how Parker Alcos had missed some games after an unconfirmed hand injury. Though he has since returned to the Oil Kings in a sheltered capacity after missing three games.

NCAA​


1-NCAA-1.png


Wilson Björck added his first goal since returning from injury, taking the beautiful cross-ice pass for the one-timer. He added five shots through two games and saw his second-highest ice-time total with 18:24 on Friday. Boy, did he have his chances.

Over in Michigan State, Anthony Romani took the weekend off from scoring and instead posted a pretty assist. With eyes on the back of his head, he threaded a perfect pass to Ryker Lee for his third assist of the season.



We haven’t touched on the remaining NCAA cast in a few weeks. For the most part, it’s been due to a lack of production and utilization. As you can see from the above, both Daimon Gardner and Matthew Perkins have failed to generate much of anything, and have both dropped down the depth chart of their respective teams’ lineups.

We do like what Matthew Lansing brings to the table; he’s just not getting a ton of ice time over in Quinnipiac. It’s never surprising when a freshman sees bottom-six minutes. All expected from a recent seventh-rounder.

Then we have Aiden Celebrini, who’s actually on pace to eclipse his career-high in points (8). It’s worth noting that the majority of his assists have come either as secondary or easy dishes. But we aren’t too focused or concerned about his point totals. He’s been bouncing up and down the BU lineup this season. He’s oscillated between second-pair deployment, hitting 19 minutes per night, and third-pair minutes, where his ice time has been severely limited.

He leads the Terriers in blocked shots (23) and has been a much more impactful player than we have seen in the past. After three years in the NCAA, however, we’re not convinced he will be an NHL player. We won’t be shocked to see the Canucks keep him within their system, even if it’s on an AHL contract—a la Jackson Kunz—there just might be little-to-no NHL upside.

He’s one of those kids who we are rooting for to put us in our place, though.

Rest of the world​


1-row-1.png


That will do it for this week’s Blackfish Report. Please keep the comments going for any player you are curious about seeing more of. We are gearing up for a monthly “player highlight” in the next few instalments, so if there is a player you’d like a bit more breakdown of, please voice your opinion!

Until next week, folks.

PRESENTED BY VIVID SEATS




Take $20 off your first Vivid Seats order of $200+ using promo code CANUCKSARMY (new customers only, $200 USD minimum before taxes & fees)


Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/blackf...d-losing-streak-medvedev-steal-spotlight-more
 
Canucks: How much has Quinn Hughes been impacting his team compared to other star NHL defencemen?

It might not have been the best start to the season for Quinn Hughes, but the Vancouver Canucks captain has more than carried the load for his team over the last few games.

The 26-year-old defenceman is currently riding a six-game point streak, totalling 13 points over the span. That includes a three-game stretch against the Winnipeg Jets, Tampa Bay Lightning and Florida Panthers (he was out against the Carolina Hurricanes), where Hughes has 10 assists. Before this point streak, Hughes sat in a tie for 24th in defensive scoring with seven points through 10 games. But to this point in the point streak, Hughes has jumped all the way to second, behind only Cale Makar.

To put that in perspective, Hughes has been in on 10 of the Canucks’ 14 goals (71.4%) over his last three games. Those are some staggering numbers. And during Monday night’s game against the Panthers, The Athletic’s Harman Dayal shared some even more eye-opening Hughes stats:

#Canucks at 5v5 since Nov 6:

Shot attempt differential with Quinn Hughes on ice: +11

Shot attempt differential without Hughes on ice: -109

— Harman Dayal (@harmandayal2) November 18, 2025

This got us thinking. We all know how elite Quinn Hughes is, and we all know how important Quinn Hughes is to this Canucks team. That’s obvious anytime you watch a Canucks game. But let’s put some numbers behind the eye test and see the impact Hughes is making on the Canucks at 5v5, and compare it to how his peers around the National Hockey League are doing.

For this exercise, we will be looking at 10 other defencemen, ordered in points scored this season, and further elaborate on Dayal’s shots on goal numbers with and without said defenceman on the ice over that same time frame:

Screenshot-2025-11-18-at-1.13.36-PM-e1763503707251.png


Most of these defencemen are making a positive impact on their team at 5v5. Lane Hutson, Morgan Rielly, Zach Werenski and Matthew Schaefer are the only defencemen of this group to be outshot at 5v5. Evan Bouchard, Miro Heiskanen and Josh Morrissey lead the way with 54%+ shot share. And with Hughes on the ice, the Canucks are controlling 51.96% of the shot share.

However, the numbers are drastically different for the Canucks when Hughes is not on the ice.

The Canucks are getting outshot 43-78 at 5v5 without Hughes, resulting in a 35.54% shot share. This is by far the lowest of the elite defencemen listed. Now, the Canucks aren’t the only team that sees their shot share dip at 5v5 without their star defenceman. However, the Canucks are the team that is hurt the most without their elite blueliner on the ice.

To simplify these numbers, look at the difference column.

Screenshot-2025-11-18-at-1.13.57-PM.png


The Canucks see a 16.42% boost to their shot share at 5v5 when Hughes is on the ice, compared to when he’s off. Whereas the Avalanche are seeing nearly 7% more shots when Makar is on the bench.

Now, of course, matchups matter, and score effects certainly come into play with a stat like this. Makar’s Colorado Avalanche are 13-1-5 at the time of this writing, and he plays over 25 minutes per game. So teams are more often than not pushing late in games to try and claw their way back with Makar on the ice. Compare that to Hughes’ 9-10-2 Canucks, usually trying to will their way back into the fight with Hughes leading the way.

The Avalanche are not having trouble producing offence without Makar, but the Canucks’ offence, quite honestly, just goes as far as Hughes takes them.

And let’s also keep in mind deployment splits between these defencemen.

Hughes is doing this with Evander Kane as the forward he’s playing the most 5v5 minutes with. These other defencemen have spent the most time with Nathan MacKinnon, Mark Scheifele, Mikko Rantanen, Nick Suzuki, JT Miller, Connor McDavid, John Tavares, Kirill Marchenko, Nick Schmaltz and Mat Barzal out of any forward on their respective team. That’s not to say Kane is a bad player – despite what fans may say – but he is a step below the rest of the elite players listed.

So, Hughes has provided the Canucks with the most significant offensive boost while surrounded by less-talented players. If that’s not MVP worthy, I simply don’t know what is.

Sponsored by bet365

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/vancou...g-his-team-compared-other-nhl-star-defencemen
 
Thomas Müller on embracing Vancouver, supporting the Canucks, and more

Usually, it’s the Vancouver Canucks that are the talk of the town around these parts. However, amid their struggles, the city’s focus has shifted to a team pushing for their respective conference semi-finals: the Vancouver Whitecaps.

The Whitecaps set a franchise record with their best record (18-7-9) this season, finishing second in the Western Conference. Their 63 points tied them with San Diego FC for first in the Conference, but they had one fewer win. The club had an opportunity to solidify first place; however, a 2-1 loss to Dallas FC on the final game of the season saw them finish second. They also advanced to the Concacaf Champions Cup Final for the first time in franchise history, but lost 5-0 to Cruz Azul.

A big reason for their ascent this season is the arrival of star German midfielder Thomas Müller.

Müller 36, spent the previous 17 seasons with Bayern Munich of the German Bundesliga. During his time in Munich, Müller won 13 league titles and two UEFA Champions League titles, and he made 131 appearances for the German National Team, helping the team capture the FIFA World Cup in 2014. Müller joined the Whitecaps after the club acquired his rights from FC Cincinnati. He made his first appearance on August 17.

In seven games with the Whitecaps, Müller scored seven goals and three assists. However, Müller’s presence has been felt just as much off the pitch as it has on it.

The German has fully embraced living in Vancouver. He has invested his time off the pitch with fans and the media to help grow the game in the Pacific Northwest.

Müller joined Sekeres & Price on Wednesday to discuss the importance of fully embracing the city, the fans and wanting Canucks fans to cheer them on as well:

“It’s because I like it,” Müller shared. “I’m used to having interaction with the city and with the people. I did that in Munich for a long period. I think it’s more fun for me to get a little bit of connection going. I want to identify because if I feel part of the city, my value to be successful for the city increases too. So I think it’s kind of egoistic when you break it down to the real philosophical details. I want to get into it to get a better feel for it. You know, I mean that it’s not just random and maybe in a kind of way senseless what I’m doing. I want to be part of the city. I feel for the Canucks, and I want the Canucks fans also feeling for us. So we are one city, and we can be proud to have these kind of teams in the highest leagues, in the highest competitions.”

It’s safe to say that Müller has accomplished that. BC Place is completely sold out for the Whitecaps’ Western Semi-Final single-elimination game against LAFC on Saturday. Fifty-four thousand five hundred fans will be in attendance, cheering on the Whitecaps as they look to advance to the Western Conference Finals against the winner of San Diego FC and Minnesota United FC.

But that’s not shocking to Müller. This was his mission when coming to Vancouver. To grow the game and play in front of over 50,000 fans:

“Yes, I think so,” Müller said when asked if he believed he’d be playing in front of a sold-out crowd when coming to Vancouver. “Not because I’m not a realistic guy, but I was aiming to get the crowd going. I talked about the crowds and everything with some other guys, and I heard about the Miami game. I don’t know when it was, but I think it was also sold out – for sure, it was because of Messi. I can understand everyone wants to see the greatest player of our game. But this time, it is different. I think this time it’s sold out because of us. I think the main reason is our performance this year, or the performance of the boys.”

Müller shared that he is looking forward to the game and has been counting down the nights since they completed the sweep over Dallas FC on November 1. He added that it was a “great feeling” when he heard that BC Place had sold out in five days.

In his short time with the Whitecaps, Müller has impacted Vancouver soccer fans with his electric play and winning mentality. But Vancouver has also brought a lot of joy to him over the past four months:

“For my Vancouver experience, maybe 70% [of] my job is being a part of this group, and maybe 30% is experiencing a very beautiful city, nice views, mountains, sea and animals.”

Kickoff for one of the biggest games in Whitecaps history is set for 6:30 PM PST this Saturday.

You can watch the full Thomas Müller interview on Sekeres & Price here:

Sponsored by bet365

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/thomas-muller-embracing-vancouver-supporting-vancouver-canucks-more
 
Scenes from Canucks practice: Garland returns; Kämpf centres second line

It was back to work for the Vancouver Canucks who held a rare home ice practice on Wednesday morning at Rogers Arena. With a compressed schedule to start the season and more road games than home contests, practices on home ice have been few and far between.

But with just two games in nine days, the Canucks will have opportunities to work on things. And the team certainly needs to address its play in its own zone. That was the focus of a brisk 45-minute practice.

What we saw​

#Canucks today
Kane-EP40-Sherwood
Boeser-Kampf-Garland
DeBrusk-Raty-O’Connor
Reichel-Sasson-Karlsson
MacEachern

Hughes-Hronek
MP29-Myers
EP25-Willander
Joseph-Bains

— Jeff Paterson (@patersonjeff) November 19, 2025

Conor Garland returned to the ice with his teammates after missing Monday’s 8-5 loss to the Florida Panthers with a minor injury suffered in a first period fight on Sunday against the Tampa Bay Lightning. He was the only one of the team’s injured players back with the group. Adam Foote addressed the injuries after practice.

David Kämpf took part in his first practice with his new team after signing with the Canucks on Saturday and making his debut with the team on Monday. Kämpf, who profiles more as a defensive centre, skated on a line between Brock Boeser and Conor Garland. Kiefer Sherwood stayed on the right wing with Elias Pettersson and Evander Kane, while Jake DeBrusk and Drew O’Connor flanked Aatu Räty. Lukas Reichel found himself on the wing on the fourth line with Max Sasson and Linus Karlsson.

To the surprise of many, there were no changes on the blueline despite giving up eight goals and a season-high 41 shots on Monday. Quinn Hughes and Filip Hronek remained together, as did the second pair of Marcus Pettersson and Tyler Myers. Elias Pettersson and Tom Willander formed the third pair while P-O Joseph was an extra and skated with Arshdeep Bains to give the Canucks four defensive duos during drills. Mackenzie MacEachern was also an extra during practice.

Players spent a good portion of the session working on down-low and net-front coverage. At one point, clearly not enamoured with what he was seeing, Adam Foote stopped the proceedings to bark at his players about the need to defend better.

The Canucks are home for a pair of games this week. The Dallas Stars are here on Thursday, while the Calgary Flames visit on Sunday. The Flames are in Buffalo on Wednesday night after playing Chicago on Tuesday. They will hurry home to face Dallas on Saturday at the Saddledome before making their way here. It will be the second time this season the Canucks have faced a Calgary team that has played the night before. It also happened in a 5-1 Canucks win in their season opener.

#Canucks mini game at practice pic.twitter.com/hSAjr7ucIs

— Jeff Paterson (@patersonjeff) November 19, 2025

What we heard​


Adam Foote on defence-focussed practice on Wednesday: “You guys know the numbers. A goal and a half has to stop. We have a lot of young guys and we just keep teaching extend your coverage. Close. Sort out the system with them. Sometimes you’re too early on the play. Sometimes you’re late. We go over it. And go over it again and again. Continue to do it. We’re slowly getting it.”

Quinn Hughes on the need to control play more than they have of late: “We have to defend better. We have to close plays quicker. You waste so much energy defending all night. When you do get the puck, it’s hard to do anything with it because you’ve just defended for 35 or 40 seconds. The more we close plays quicker and get out of our zone quicker, then we can play offence and limit some of that pressure.”

David Kämpf on settling in to life as a Canuck: “It’s a nice group, a good group of guys. Today was my first practice so I’m still trying to figure it out a little bit, but overall no problems.”

PRESENTED BY VIVID SEATS




Take $20 off your first Vivid Seats order of $200+ using promo code CANUCKSARMY (new customers only, $200 USD minimum before taxes & fees)

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/scenes...ice-garland-returns-kampf-centres-second-line
 
Explaining the Canucks’ systems under Adam Foote

Last season, we dove into former Vancouver Canucks head coach Rick Tocchet’s systems, amid all the noise about the team buying into ‘Tocchet hockey’.

For the team’s sake, let’s hope this isn’t an annual piece where we dive into the newest Canucks head coach’s systems. But with Adam Foote taking over to start this year, we thought it’d be appropriate to examine and explain the new systems the Canucks bench boss has come up with through the first quarter of the season.

We will start in the defensive zone and make our way up ice from there.

Defensive zone coverage


The Canucks’ defensive zone coverage has changed significantly this season, shifting from a fairly simple box-and-one style, focusing on taking away the middle of the ice. They’ve switched to a more man-on-man style of coverage. However, when the puck is below the hash marks, there is more support than in your typical man-on-man.

When the puck is in the corner, we see one of the Canucks defencemen go into pressure, with the first forward back (F1) providing low support, ready to jump in if the puck is moved up or down the boards. The weakside defenceman (D2) is net-front, taking away the option for a pass. The wingers play a bit higher (F2 & F3), so that if the puck is moved to the point, they can jump to pressure their man.

low-dzone.png


Once the puck is moved up the half wall, they switch into a more true man-on-man coverage. The low forward (F1) that was supporting the defenceman down low is the one to take the player now with the puck on the half wall, while the defenceman in the corner (D1) stays between the opponent’s forward and the net. The net-front defencemen (D2) should then tie up their man to eliminate the possibility of a tip on a shot or of being available to score on a rebound.

high-d-zone.png


From this point, anytime the puck is moved anywhere above the hash marks, each player’s responsibility is to take another player, creating five different one-on-ones all over the ice.

Where we see breakdowns happen here is if someone gets beaten or another Canuck leaves their man to try to support. Often, the opposing team will take advantage of this when we see the puck carrier bring the puck up the boards, move it to his defenceman, who starts bringing it into the middle of the ice, while the weakside defenceman sneaks down. The weakside winger (F3) for the Canucks, rather than sticking with his defenceman who’s sneaking down, helps pressure the defenceman in the middle of the ice.

D-zone-breakdown.png


Another example would be when the puck carrier brings the puck up the boards, the strong side winger (F2) will attempt to help pressure him, leaving the strong side defenceman for the other team open, giving him either a shooting lane or space to make another play, when the weak side winger (F3) comes into support.

D-Zone-breakdown-2.png


Canucks Head Coach Adam Foote has talked about these breakdowns a bit, noting that players sometimes go out of their way to support when they’re not supposed to in this system.

It can be difficult for a player to break the habit of not supporting defensively because it is so much more common for teams to run defensive systems that provide much more support and don’t create these one-on-ones all over the ice. But when done correctly and with the right personnel, this system can be highly effective at shutting down teams.

Defensive zone & Neutral zone breakouts


Breaking out of the defensive zone is more about taking what you can get than anything else. But one thing the Canucks seem to do a fair bit is activate their defencemen off the breakout and involve them in the rush.

Often, the puck will be moved up to the winger (F2), and they will look for a pass back to the weakside defenceman (D2).

D-Zone-breakout.png


The puck is moved up to the winger (F2) on the boards, while the centreman (F1) swings through the middle as an option for a pass, while the weak side winger (F3) cuts across to the middle of the ice, and the weak side defenceman (D2) hangs back in the slot area. If the look is there, the Canucks like to move the puck to that weakside defenceman (D2) who will have tons of space to skate the puck into the neutral zone.

They do the same thing in the neutral zone, often looking to that weakside defenceman (D2) to take the pass and move the puck up ice with space.

Neutral-zone-breakout.png


These plays enable the Canucks to move up ice with more time and speed, allowing them more controlled zone entries and making them a more effective threat off the rush, rather than dumping the puck in and trying to regain control off the forecheck.

Neutral zone forecheck


The forecheck in the neutral zone is a common 1-2-2 with some slight variations. The first forward (F1) will split the middle of the ice to eliminate D-to-D passes, while the strong side winger (F2) hangs a bit lower, around the dot, than the weakside guy (F3) to take away a play up the boards, and the weak side winger (F3) will take away a pass up the middle of the ice.

The Canucks defencemen like to hang a bit further back and take away any stretch-pass opportunities.

Neutral-zone-forecheck.png


The weakside winger (F3) hanging back a bit higher gives the Canucks more of a counterattack opportunity if the puck is turned over. He will have more space to skate and make a play rather than being in the thick of things and having to just dump the puck in.

Offensive zone forecheck


The offensive zone forecheck is similar to their neutral zone forecheck, particularly on controlled breakouts for the opposing team. We see the same first guy (F1) pressuring the defenceman with the puck while the strong side player (F2) takes away a pass up the boards, and the weak side guy (F3) takes away the middle of the ice.

Controlled-o-zone-forecheck.png


Where we see a different variation is when there’s more of a battle for the puck in the offensive zone corner. The weakside forward now becomes F2 and is ready to jump on the puck or pressure the defenceman on the other side of the ice if it’s moved D-to-D. The strong side forward then becomes the F3 and hangs a bit higher to support the defencemen in case the puck is moved up ice, so the opposing team doesn’t have an odd man rush.

O-zone-forecheck.png


This forecheck puts more pressure on the opposing team’s defence and doesn’t allow them to move the puck out of their zone easily, while still supporting back, taking away odd-man rush opportunities.

The new systems Adam Foote has implemented are quite different from what we saw last season under Rick Tocchet. The biggest theme in the new way the Canucks play is having more control and speed. When done correctly, this team can be very hard to play against because they take away a lot of their opponents’ time and space. But as we’ve seen, especially in the defensive zone, breakdowns can be costly, leaving opponents with great opportunities to capitalize.

Sponsored by bet365

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/explaining-vancouver-canucks-systems-under-adam-foote
 
The Stanchies: Canucks play their best game of the season, lose 4-2 to Stars

Alright, how do we do these again?

The last time I reported for Stanchies’ backup duty was the 2024-25 trade deadline game against the Minnesota Wild, one which followed the organization’s bold decision to stand pat at the deadline, retaining then-pending UFAs Brock Boeser, Derek Forbort, and Pius Suter.

Last season, the club was ruthless in its approach to tolling daily cap space to maximize its potential as a buyer or seller at the deadline. With a single retention slot available, there was hope that something, anything, was possible for the organization that found itself in an admitted ‘transition phase’ following the JT Miller trade.

Unfortunately, in a year where Anthony Beauvillier and Brandon Tanev returned 2nd-round picks, and 33-year-old Brock Nelson returned a 20-year-old right-shot centre and a first-round pick, the organization said there simply wasn’t a market for their guys. I believe the phrase was, “You’d laugh at me if I told you the offers we received [for Brock].”

Fortunately, despite another dismal playoff miss, no extra picks in the 2025 Entry Draft, Suter leaving for St. Louis over a miscommunication regarding term, and Forbort entering the 8th week of his maintenance day, Boeser stayed.

Since re-signing out of nowhere on July 1st, Boeser has since added an ‘A’ on his jersey, returned to a 35-goal pace, and produced as reliably and consistently as one could hope for the second-highest paid forward on the team! It’s been a pretty decent start for a guy whose team couldn’t manufacture a market for a player of his quality. Given all of the injury (unfair) and torrid goal-scoring pace replicability (fair) concerns, Boeser has given fans exactly what they were hoping for when he re-signed for the next seven years! Though it has been another frustrating, listless, and defensively disastrous Canucks season thus far, it has been nice watching Boeser do what he does while still wearing Canuck colours.

Back to the last Stanchies, and that trade deadline commentary from Allvin, and how it tied into Thursday night’s game.

“I don’t think you use [trade deadline day] as a defining day of how you build a team,” said Allvin in the post-TDL scrum with the local media beat.

Here’s the thing: two teams defined their team’s construction with a deadline deal for the Dallas Stars’ current leading scorer, Mikko Rantanen.

The Carolina Hurricanes salvaged the negative-percentile result of their initial trade for Rantanen when they traded him to Dallas for a draft class and their current 2nd-line centre, Logan Stankoven. At 20 years old, Stankoven is the 5th most-used skater on the Hurricanes at 5v5 ice time this season. The Hurricanes locked Stankoven up to a long-term deal that keeps him in Carolina until he’s 28 years old at a beyond-friendly cap hit of $6 million!

The Stars turned a draft class and the potential of a then 2nd-line winger into a capital-B BONA FIDE elite, game-breaking, above-a-point-per-game first-line winger, who they immediately locked into a 7-year deal at a similarly beyond-reasonable cap hit of $12 million!

When’s Forbort ready to go again?

Could the Canucks have used Suter as their 2nd-line centre?

Is Boeser’s effort to score the kind of timely (and awesome) goals that ensure the Canucks pick up enough points to stick around the mushy middle in a solid draft year really worth it?

Tough to say!

In his semi-annual gasoline-pouring, sit-down interview with Sportsnet’s Imac, President of Hockey Operations Jim Rutherford expressed a feeling of reluctance—contempt, even—toward the idea of a rebuild, even if Hughes leaves. Given the latter statement, I pray that last year’s trade deadline tune has changed for this year. This organization can not face the potential reality of losing the best defenceman in hockey presently—the best in franchise history—with the attitude that the in-season days marked for opportunity to define a franchise forever are actually just another day in the office.

Otherwise, there is genuinely no hope that things are ever going to go the other way.

Anyway! On Thursday night, the Canucks played their best hockey of the season for a full 60 minutes against a dangerous opponent, crushed possession, dominated face-offs, torched their opposing netminder with shot volume, and it didn’t matter!

In so many words: the Canucks got Canuck’d in the most Canuck-ian way imaginable.

Let’s get into it and see what it was like to watch a game where the shoe was on the other foot!

Starting Lineup
Warmup #Canucks lines vs. @DallasStars

Kane. EP40. Sherwood.
Boeser. Kämpf. Garland.
O’Connor. Räty. DeBrusk.
MacEachern. Sasson. Karlsson.

Hughes. Hronek.
MP29. Myers.
EP25. Willander.

🥅Lankinen🥅

7pm on @Sportsnet650 https://t.co/J6DNM1E8Qt pic.twitter.com/iIvhDAlmSo

— Brendan Batchelor (@BatchHockey) November 21, 2025

Blurst Start
that was hard to watch #Canucks

— ⊹ ࣪ ﹏﹏𓂁﹏⊹ ࣪ ˖ (@jxcidy) November 21, 2025

You’ve got to feel for Kevin Lankinen.

After a road trip that saw him stand on his head repeatedly in two of three, getting absolutely throttled on the shot count, he comes home to a bizarro play in the opening minute where he picks up a secondary assist.

First, a routine board-and-out drops at Kiefer Sherwood’s feet, bounces off his skate and out to Justin Hryckowian, who cruises into the Canucks’ end on a two-on-one alongside Mavrik Bourke.

Hryckowian goes east-west to Bourke, whose initial shot is a muffin. An easy stop for Lankinen.

While trying to settle the puck, Lankinen shovels the puck through his five-hole and into open space. Marcus Pettersson reacts quickly enough, swatting the loose puck away from Hryckowian, denying him an easy tap-in opportunity on the follow-up.

Unfortunately, M.Pettersson’s denial effort was a little too strong, rebounding the puck off the backboard to a sprawled-out Hryckowian, who, unlike JT Miller, didn’t quit on the play, backhanding the puck out to Bourke for the easy tap-in.

1-0 Stars

Fun game: watch how many players slide on this sequence.

Nevertheless, the early and awkward goal set the tone for the opening frame. A battle of PDO-bender wills was afoot.

While I thought the Canucks did well controlling play after the opening goal, their work in the offensive zone left a lot to be desired. The Jake DeBrusk, Aatu Raty, and Drew O’Connor trio spent a decent chunk of time winning battles along the Stars’ boards, just for their efforts to result in a point shot from M.Pettersson that sailed nowhere near Jake Oettinger’s net.

It was one-third of the Abby line who got the Canucks’ back in the PDO battle.

Picking off an errant pass inside the neutral zone, Linus Karlsson got the Canucks back in the game with a slick no-look wrister past the man they call Otter.

1-1 Tie

Karlsson’s goal registered as the Canucks’ first of the period, giving them an immaculate 100% shooting clip.

It was an especially slick sequence for Karlsson, considering he looked off Boeser the entire time cruising down the left wing. It was a devastating blow to my pre-game preamble write-up, which sorely needed a point from Rantanen or Boeser to seamlessly tie everything together.

Cool goal though!

Best “Good to be back doing that hockey!”
I'm not sure I can stomach another 8-5 game

— Jeff Paterson (@patersonjeff) November 21, 2025

Look, I haven’t written a longform Stanchies in ages, and it was a daunting prospect, shaking off the rust, in the middle of the week with a 15-month-old, whose bedtime routine lines up perfectly with game start time.

Sure enough, bedtime ran late, Sportsnet+ had lag issues, GIPHY refused to upload properly, and Jeff Paterson’s tweet was the first one I saw when I opened the social media platform formerly known as Twitter.

Truthfully, I’d never been more excited in my life to cover a rollercoaster. It’s been too long covering the dramatic highs and crushing lows of Canucks hockey. And the first period was exactly that!

A hysterical early goal against that saw the home goalie pick up an assist, a beautiful equalizer from a rookie winger still angling for consistent ice time, a tiebreaker goal from Jason Robertson that would be his 9th in his last 5 games, and a 2nd equalizer for the home team from the oft-lamented $11.6-million-dollar 1st line center.

This game.

Nay, this period had it all!

In the five minutes following Karlsson’s equalizer, the Canucks top line got to work against the Stars’ number-one defenceman and fourth line.

A nifty set play resulted in a point shot from Tom Willander, tipped wide by Elias Pettersson.

And that tip from EP40 gave way to the most atypical Evander Kane offensive zone giveaways you’ll ever get that killed the Canucks’ possession.

The Canucks’ kept rolling with the punches, with O’Connor sending Raty into the zone alongside DeBrusk for a shot off Oettinger’s shoulder and off the glass.

Unfortunately for Vancouver, the Dallas Stars of 2025-26 are just as talented as the Canucks are at compensating for porous defensive play with elite shooting.

Best Plea
canucks please dont get smoked man

— The Hood Gospel (@TreyMaine_) November 21, 2025

After seven minutes of Vancouver controlling the run of shot attempts, the trio of Roope Hintz, Tyler Seguin, and Jason Robertson capitalized for Dallas to regain the lead, with Robertson unleashing a vicious shot on Lankinen off a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it steal.

2-1 Stars

I’m not even certain Sherwood got his stick down on top of the puck; that’s how fast Robertson capitalized on the opportunity. The alternate camera angle hammers in how nasty this goal is.

giphy.gif


Side note: if you’re blaming Lankinen here, you need to go outside and touch grass.

Past the midway point of the period, Boeser caught Filip Hronek jumping up into the neutral zone, sending him in for a shot on Oettinger with a brilliant cross-ice feed.

With seven minutes remaining in the first period, Linus Karlsson drew a slashing penalty against Sam Steel, giving Vancouver their first of many power play opportunities.

The Canucks’ red-hot power play made it a 2-all game with a hard-nosed crash-bang play around the net off a drive from EP40.

2-2 Tie

DeBrusk was credited in-arena, but the NHL statskeepers had EP40 as the goalscorer on the equalizer well after.

After drawing a slashing penalty, Karlsson would then sit in the box after slashing Dallas’ Bourke while trying to negate the Stars’ breakout.

Incredibly, the league’s 2nd-best power play would stand no chance against the league’s worst penalty kill.

Tyler Myers sent newcomer David Kampf out of the zone for a shorthanded two-on-one with DeBrusk, after knocking the puck off Robertson along the boards.

giphy.gif


The Stars weren’t completely without their looks. Rantanen nearly justified my preamble with a no-look pass to Robertson for a shot off the crossbar.

Best neutral take
That’s the period and it’s fair to say the Canucks had the majority of the play, outshooting us 25-14. But where it counts, neither team could get anything done and it remains 2-2. But some acrobatics by Otter to keep the game tied could give us some momentum #TexasHockey

— UK Dallas Stars Fanatics 🏒Hockey’s BACK🏒 (@DallasStarsUK) November 21, 2025

I know, it’s not a Canucks person, but a Dallas Stars fan from the United Kingdom proved to have the best take on everything that followed the first period.

The Canucks finished the middle frame having outshot their opponent 15 to 6, but Jake Oettinger was massive for Dallas when they needed him. Much to Pete DeBoer’s chagrin.

Not often have we seen the Canucks dominate on the shot clock.

Setting the tone early was Kampf drawing a tripping penalty against Esa Lindell that sent Vancouver to their second power play.

Truthfully, it should have been a 3-2 game within seconds of the Lindell penalty, had Sherwood not completely duffed a glorious scoring chance off a pass from EP40.

Sherwood had a chance to redeem himself, but Oettinger denied him with a slick poke-check on the doorstep.

Head Coach Adam Foote’s second unit was given 20 seconds to work, punctuated by a shot into the breadbasket by Evander Kane.

Less than two minutes after the expiry of Lindell’s penalty, Max Sasson drew a slash against Rantanen that sent Vancouver back to the man advantage almost immediately.

Forty seconds into the man advantage, Captain Hughes drew an interference penalty against Bourke, gifting Vancouver an extender 5-on-3 power play opportunity. To give Vancouver the best chance to convert, Foote rolled out his first power play group, minus Sherwood, who was swapped out for Evander Kane.

DeBrusk nearly broke the stalemate off a cross-crease pass from Boeser, only for Oettinger to make his best save of the night with an unreal lightning-quick pad save.

giphy.gif


With time expiring on the 2-man advantage, Hughes responded to a shorthanded drive from Rantanen, racing through the neutral zone and into the offensive zone, setting up DeBrusk for a chance.

Credit to DeBrusk on this quick-up play at the end of a long shift. Despite Hughes’ pass being out of his initial reach, DeBrusk deflects the puck into the air and bats the puck on Oettinger mid-air.

The remainder of the period was punctuated by missed opportunities, as if not converting on an extended 5-on-3 wasn’t already a colossal missed opportunity.

First, Raty failed to capitalize on a sloppy line change from Dallas, firing the puck wide off a quick passing play from Conor Garland and Kane.

giphy.gif


The Stars then had their first missed opportunity of the period, failing to move the puck over the goal line despite ample opportunity.

giphy.gif


In a rare moment where the Canucks’ opponent warranted the dreaded Sportsnet Shift Time graphic, Boeser capitalized on a redirected dump-in from Garland for a breakaway shot on Oettinger.

giphy.gif


The choppy GIPHY graphics don’t do enough justice to the Canucks’ work in the second period. With 4 minutes left in the frame, Oettinger made an absolutely ridiculous glove save that denied EP40 a surefire empty net goal.

giphy.gif


Not long after, Lankinen went tit-for-tat with Oettinger, getting his neck behind a one-timer blast by Vlad Kolyachonok from just 12 feet away.

giphy.gif


The above sequence was one of the few times when the Canucks’ in-zone coverage broke down. You can see Elias Pettersson (D) float off the wall, and Linus Karlsson gets stuck in no man’s land, spinning to find who he should be marking. Otherwise, it was a fairly clean period for Vancouver in terms of their man-on-man coverage.

Worst way to lose
Stars outshooting #Canucks 9-2 in the 3rd.
Turning Point of the game.
The 5-on-3 PP.

— X – Nucks IceMan (@nucksiceman) November 21, 2025

Early into the final frame, the Canucks were off to a fourth consecutive power play.

Midway through, a failed clearance from Lindell ended up on the tape of Boeser, who set EP40 up with a pass that gets converted on 99 times out of 100 for a normal team.

Oettinger had other plans.

I don’t know if he borrowed a time machine ahead of time and knew what was coming, but Oettinger’s reaction time from the second period onward was something to behold. The guy was on a heater; immaculate reaction time and positioning to deny the Canucks’ best shooters over, and over, and over, and over again.

When they weren’t peppering Oettinger with five-alarm chances, the Canucks were ripping howitzers wide of the net altogether.

Best save
Hronek for Norris #canucks

— aaron (@dcivxiii) November 21, 2025

Around the 7-minute mark of the final frame, a period that to that point had been solely controlled by the Canucks, the Stars found a seam, and tilted momentum in their direction off of it; long enough to swing the game in their favour.

For the second time in the night, Lankinen lost control of the puck within his pads. Unlike the first time, Hronek was there to stop the empty net tap-in.

giphy.gif


Not just a tap-in from anyone, either, but a tap-in opportunity from the guy who was a foot away from scoring his 10th in five games!

While facetious, I don’t think Hronek’s efforts this season should go unnoticed, especially with Hughes’ defensive form still coming to grips.

The Canucks have outscored their opposition 19-10 with Hronek on the ice at 5-on-5.

I mean, just look at the timing on this denial!

giphy.gif


Sure, they gave up the lead a few minutes later, but that wasn’t on Hronek! He played his part, and he has played his part as the team’s #1 right-shot guy very well this season.

Following Hronek’s save, Kyle Capobianco drew a holding penalty against Drew O’Connor, breaking the Canucks’ run of power play opportunities.

The Canucks’ PK was physical and aggressive against the Stars, with M.Pettersson laying out Rantanen twice to deny the league’s 2nd-best power play from setting up.

Hronek took a spin with Elias Pettersson to help Vancouver’s PK shut out the Stars’ power play…but at a great cost.

Best Jinx
i don't know if this is the best the canucks have looked/played this season, but it's gotta be close

— Mike Halford (@MikeHalford604) November 21, 2025

Jpat’s jinx confirmed a rollercoaster first period, but denied fans of another box score throwback to the 80s.

The second I saw Halford’s tweet, I knew with certainty that the Canucks were going to lose this one in regulation.

The Canucks torched the Stars in the faceoff dot, dominated possession, shots and shot attempts, drew more penalties, and threw more hits. Yet, their best performance of the season boiled down to their star defenceman making an uncharacteristically dangerous pinch as the last man back, while compensating for the equally egregious pinch by his rookie d-partner, Tom Willander, who was only skating with Hughes because Hronek had just finished a tour on the Canucks’ PK.

The compounding mistakes gave way to a glorious breakaway for Dallas’ Colin Blackwell, who regained the Stars’ lead for the third time.

3-2 Stars

giphy.gif


Following Blackwell’s goal, the air had completely come out of the building. Off a stolen goal and a failed power play, the Stars had found their legs, outshooting Vancouver 8-2 before coasting back on their lead.

Nastiest Full Circle Moment
Evander Kane is garbage. Two failed zone entries and stars capitalize. I don’t know why players keep passing him the puck. #Canucks

— Gunner (@gunnerstaall) November 21, 2025

Thoroughly out of the driver’s seat and desperate for an equalizer, Foote attempted to pull Lankinen for the extra attacker.

First, Kane flubbed a dump-in that forced a regroup from the d-zone that sent Lankinen back into his net.

giphy.gif


Next, Miro Heiskanen easily poked the puck off Kane’s stick after catching the veteran forward sleeping on his drive down the left wing. The steal blew the zone for Vancouver, and gifted Dallas’ Jamie Benn and Rantanen a freebie two-on-one against Boeser going the other way as the rest of Canucks could only watch.

giphy.gif


What came next was just an absolutely filthy spinning backhand goal from Rantanen.

It was the kind of spinning goal that you only see from the kind of game-breaking talents that you find at the top end of the draft, the trade deadline, or from Mason Raymond.

4-2 Stars

Boeser’s with Rantanen the entire way on the retreat, too! He creates just enough space with the dip and spin to uncork a vicious backhander under Lankinen’s left arm. Nasty, nasty stuff.

Worst “Is that good?”
Third periods have been a killer for the #Canucks this season.

They've now allowed 35 third-period goals, most in the NHL in 2025-26.

No other team has allowed more than 30 third-period goals.

— Trevor Beggs (@TrevBeggs) November 21, 2025

No.

This stat does not seem good.

Best “So, you’re telling me there’s a chance?”
First try #canucks pic.twitter.com/6SoBHmAjHn

— Jake's Tiny Stick (@prairienuck) November 21, 2025

Let’s be real.

Even if the Canucks won the first overall pick in the draft, the player they select is cursed to not live up to the absurdly high standard set by recent 1st overall picks, Matthew Schaefer, Macklin Celebrini, and Conor Bedard.

Maybe I’m being overdramatic, but that just feels like how things are destined to go.

Best Remembering Some Guys
Should the #Canucks trade draft picks for Brad Lambert?

Sven Baertschi?
Adam Clenndenning?
Emerson Etem?
Andrei Pedan?
Markus Granlund?
Linden Vey?
Philip Larsen?
Matthew Highmore?
Travis Dermott?
Ethan Bear?
Jason Studnicka?
Vitali Kravtsov?
Lukas Reichel? pic.twitter.com/MsTJw7Tvna

— Thomas Drance (@ThomasDrance) November 21, 2025

I’m sorry if you’re upset that I didn’t spend enough time talking about David Kampf and his performance on d-zone face-offs.

I just can’t be bothered to care about someone closer to being on the list like Drance’s above, than a difference maker for Vancouver this season and beyond.

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/the-stanchies-canucks-play-best-game-season-lose-4-2-stars
 
Back
Top