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NHL Notebook: Kings and Blues strike a trade, Adam Fox on LTIR, and more

Welcome back to NHL Notebook — the series here at CanucksArmy where we deliver you news and notes from around the National Hockey League — oftentimes through a Vancouver Canucks-tinted lens!

The story of the Vancouver Canucks season has been injuries. They have probably been the most injured team all season, which is one of the reasons they are where they are in the standings – third last, just one point out of dead last. Which, of course, has led trade rumours to take over the market’s focus as fans look toward the future.

However, in this NHL Notebook, we have a trade and injuries that don’t surround the Canucks this past week:

Blues/Kings swap forwards​


The St. Louis Blues announced on social media that they acquired forward Akil Thomas from the Los Angeles Kings in exchange for Nikita Alexandrov.

The Blues have acquired forward Akil Thomas from the Los Angeles Kings in exchange for Nikita Alexandrov. #stlblues

— St. Louis Blues (@StLouisBlues) December 2, 2025

Thomas, 25, was drafted in the second round (51st overall) of the 2018 NHL draft. He spent the following two seasons in the OHL before heading to the AHL for the 2020-21 season. Since making the jump to the professional ranks, Thomas has dealt with several injuries. Through his first four seasons, Thomas has been in and out of the lineup with injuries, playing 157 of a possible 288 games.

The Toronto, Ontario native’s best season came in 2023-24, where he scored 22 goals and 46 points in 64 games with the Ontario Reign. His efforts earned him a seven-game stint in the NHL, where he scored three goals and four points. Heading into the 2024-25 season, the Kings were hopeful Thomas could run away with a bottom-six role. However, that didn’t pan out as planned, as after his struggles, Thomas was a regular healthy scratch that season. He scored just one goal and three points in 25 games, finishing with a minus-four rating in sub-10 minutes of average ice time.

Through 19 AHL games with the Reign this season, Thomas has four goals and nine assists for 13 points. He will now join the Springfield Thunderbirds, the Blues’ AHL affiliate.

Alexandrov, also 25, was drafted in the second round (62nd overall) of the 2019 NHL draft. His draft-plus-one season with the Charlottetown Islanders of the QMJHL was his best in junior, as he scored 23 goals and 31 assists for 54 points. After playing the following two seasons in the AHL, Alexandrov split his seasons between the NHL/AHL. He played a depth role in his first season, scoring three goals and adding seven points in 28 games in 2022-23, but struggled to contribute offensively in 2023-24, recording just a pair of assists in 23 games.

The German-born centre has not been given another opportunity in the NHL since then. However, he finished 2024-25 with 21 goals and 28 assists for 49 points in 48 games, and is off to a decent start in 2025-26, scoring three goals and 11 assists for 14 points in 18 games with the Thunderbirds.

Just a change-of-scenery move for both players and teams, hoping to prove that they can make the jump to a more consistent NHL forward.

Injuries​


The New York Rangers placed defenceman Adam Fox on long-term injured reserve on November 30.

The #NYR are placing Adam Fox on LTIR, according to a league source. More details to come @TheAthletic.

— Vince Z. Mercogliano (@vzmercogliano) November 30, 2025

Fox was injured after receiving a hit from Tampa Bay Lightning forward Brandon Hagel along the end boards on November 29. Fox appears to be favouring his left arm. He would go down the tunnel and not return.

Here’s the play:

Looked like Adam Fox’s left arm gets crunched by Hagel.

He’s still in the #NYR locker room. pic.twitter.com/jvaQLfA69S

— Jonny Lazarus (@JLazzy23) November 29, 2025

Fox, 27, was off to a hot start for the Rangers despite their offensive struggles this season. The offensive defenceman scored three goals and 23 assists for 26 points, with a plus-four rating in 23:50 in average ice time.

There is no timeline for Fox’s return.

Kyle Palmieri

The New York Islanders announced on November 29 that forward Kyle Palmieri underwent surgery to repair a torn ACL and will be out 6-8 months.

#Isles Injury Update: Kyle Palmieri will get surgery to repair an ACL tear in his left knee. He is out 6-8 months. https://t.co/1jtSjmalPU

— New York Islanders (@NYIslanders) November 29, 2025

The outcome is unfortunate for Palmieri, but he went out with a bang:

Kyle Palmieri after getting hurt on the boards, stole the puck while heading to the bench, got the assist and then went to the dressing room 😭🚨 pic.twitter.com/EBg7ugtYwc

— B/R Open Ice (@BR_OpenIce) November 28, 2025

Palimeri gets tangled up with a Philadelphia Flyers defenceman on a race for the puck in the corner, which is when the injury took place. In agonizing distress, the Islander forward toughed it out, got back to his feet, and glided to the bench.

However, on his way there, Emil Andrae was backpedalling with the puck in his own zone. Palmieri stick lifted him from behind to steal the puck, and sent a backhand saucer pass to Jonathan Drouin, who then drops it for Emil Heineman, who roofs it on Samuel Ersson.

Hockey players are built different.

At the prime age of 34, Palmieri was off to the best scoring pace of his career, with 18 points (six goals and 12 assists) through 25 games, good for a 0.72 point-per-game. The Islanders have not yet announced if this injury will completely end his season. However, the 6-8 month timeline would have Palmieri return at the end of May/beginning of June.

Tyson Foerster

The Philadelphia Flyers announced that forward Tyson Foerster will be out 2-3 months with an upper-body injury.

Injury update: Flyers forward Tyson Foerster will be out 2-3 months with an upper-body injury. https://t.co/l3FPNFUGC2

— Philadelphia Flyers (@NHLFlyers) December 2, 2025

Foerster was injured after taking a one-timer on a Flyers 5-on-3 power play. Here’s the play:

Tyson Foerster just got hurt taking a one timer and man it does not look good. Hope for the best 🙏#LetsGoFlyers pic.twitter.com/Tlr087Ydck

— Flyers Clips (@Flyers_Clips) December 2, 2025

Foerester was off to an impressive start, scoring 10 goals and three assists for 13 points in 21 games. His 0.48 goals-per-game pace was tracking to shatter his previous career high of 25 goals he set last season.

Now to put our Canucks tinted glasses on: does this make the Flyers more desperate as they battle in a tough Metropolitan division and give the Canucks what they want on a potential Kiefer Sherwood trade?

Tyler Seguin

Dallas Stars senior writer for DallasStars.com, Mike Heika, announced that forward Tyler Seguin would be out long-term with an ACL injury.

Tyler Seguin has an ACL injury and is out long term.

— Mike Heika (@MikeHeika) December 3, 2025

Seguin was injured going for a loose puck along the boards when Vladislav Gavrikov lost his balance and fell onto the right leg of the Stars forward last night. Here is the play:

🚨 BREAKING: Tyler Seguin is out long-term with an ACL injury suffered on this play with #NYR’s Gavrikov last night. #TexasHockey pic.twitter.com/p8FVdMWHos

— NHL News (@PuckReportNHL) December 3, 2025

Seguin had appeared in all 27 games for the Stars this season, scoring seven goals and 10 assists for 17 points. If Seguin is to miss the rest of the season and is placed on LTIR, that would open up his $9.85 million cap hit for the Stars to replace him. Could they look to target a Canuck forward to help replace Seguin’s production?

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/nhl-no...t-louis-blues-strike-trade-adam-fox-ltir-more
 
Canucks roster news: Nikita Tolopilo and defenceman Elias Pettersson recalled from AHL

Ahead of Thursday’s practice, the Vancouver Canucks made a few roster transactions. On Thursday morning, the club announced that they had recalled defenceman Elias Pettersson and goaltender Nikita Tolopilo (emergency conditions) from AHL Abbotsford. Goaltender Jiri Patera has been returned to Abbotsford.

General Manager Patrik Allvin announced today that G Jiri Patera has been assigned to Abbotsford (AHL), D Elias Pettersson has been recalled from Abbotsford (AHL) and G Nikita Tolopilo has been recalled from Abbotsford (AHL) under emergency conditions.

— Vancouver Canucks (@Canucks) December 4, 2025

The Canucks sent both Pettersson and Tolopilo down to the AHL on Wednesday, as it was a team day off for the big club, and Abbotsford played at home last night. Abbotsford’s struggles have been well-documented this season, as much of their Calder Cup-winning roster from last year has graduated to becoming full-time NHLers.

Playing in the second leg of a back-to-back against the Calgary Wranglers after dropping the first contest on Tuesday night, Abbotsford eeked out its fifth win of the season to move to 5-14-1 on the year. Tolopilo stopped 23 of 24 shots, holding down the fort long enough for Danila Klimovich to score the late tying goal in the final minute of the game with Abbotsford on the power play. Abbotsford went on to win the game in a shootout.

Pettersson spent most of the night on a defence pairing with Victor Mancini and finished the night with one shot on goal while being a -1.

Pettersson and Tolopilo now return to the NHL, where it will be interesting to see how much playing time they’ll actually get. Pettersson has been a healthy scratch as of late, and while this demotion to the AHL was a chance for him to get into some game action, perhaps the Canucks also hope it serves as a reminder that his spot on the NHL roster isn’t guaranteed and that they expect more from him. For Tolopilo, he figures to start in either Friday night’s or Saturday night’s game, as the Canucks prepare to play home back-to-backs against the Utah Mammoth and Minnesota Wild, respectively. Thatcher Demko could be nearing a return soon, however, so this could end up being Tolopilo’s final NHL start for the forseeable future.

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/vancou...eman-elias-pettersson-recalled-ahl-abbotsford
 
Canucks fall to dead last in NHL standings

After tonight’s results around the National Hockey League, the Vancouver Canucks have fallen to 32nd overall – dead last – in league standings.

Coming into the night, the Canucks were 30th, ahead of only the Nashville Predators and Calgary Flames.

On Thursday night, the Predators travelled to South Florida to take on the two-time defending Stanley Cup Champion Florida Panthers. Carter Verhaeghe opened the scoring late in the first period. The Panthers held the lead until late in the third period, when Ryan O’Reilly tied the game with less than seven minutes to go.

This game required overtime, during which long-time Florida resident Steven Stamkos completed the comeback on a nice passing play.

COMEBACK WIN COURTESY OF STAMMER ‼️ pic.twitter.com/MgVjC21p5n

— Nashville Predators (@PredsNHL) December 5, 2025

This moved the Predators past the Canucks and into 30th in league standings.

Moving out west, the Flames welcomed the red-hot Minnesota Wild to town. After a scoreless first period, Jonathan Huberdeau scored four minutes into the middle frame. Yakov Trenin tied the game before the second break.

But Calgary quickly regained the lead when Matt Coronato and Connor Zary scored two quick goals less than seven minutes into the third. Rasmus Andersson put the finishing touches on the game when he buried an empty-netter from his own goal line.

And thus, the Canucks’ 10-14-3 record and 23 points have them last in the NHL standings.

Screenshot-2025-12-04-at-8.57.17-PM.png
Now, based on point percentage, the Canucks are still ahead of the Flames. With the Canucks’ two games in hand on the Flames, they could very well pass them in either of their back-to-back games this weekend.

The points column is not the only statistic in which the Canucks are dead last. Vancouver’s 3.63 goals against per game also sits 32nd in the league. Their 2.86 goals per game rank 23rd, but it’s really been the team’s defence that has led them to this point.

So, where does this team go from here? Is this the wake-up call for the players to turn their season around? Or is this the point where management sees how this season is going and decides it’s time to take advantage of what is truly a seller’s market?

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/vancouver-canucks-fall-dead-last-nhl-standings
 
Why the Red Wings are one of the best potential trade partners for the Canucks right now

It’s getting a little tricky to keep track of all the many teams that the Vancouver Canucks are reported to be talking trade with. But if we’re thinking about the quality of the source, and/or the quality of the potential trade return, it makes sense to pay particularly close attention to the Detroit Red Wings.

In speaking to the Morning Cuppa Hockey podcast, Elliotte Friedman highlighted the possibility of a Vancouver-Detroit trade in the near future.

Friedman on morning cuppa hockey discussing Hughes to Detroit. #LGRW
🎥@DailyFaceoff pic.twitter.com/26uKRcYfiC

— Red Wings Prospects (@LGRWProspects) December 3, 2025

While Friedman’s comments were centred almost entirely around Quinn Hughes, specifically, that’s not necessarily the only deal that could go down between the franchises.

Elliotte Friedman: Can you see [Yzerman] not being interested in Quinn Hughes? Can you see Hughes not being interested in Detroit when the time comes? So I think they're very legit, and Detroit has centers…and I'm not talking about the depth guys – Morning Cuppa Hockey (12/3)

— NHL Rumour Report (@NHLRumourReport) December 4, 2025

On the whole, these seem to be two teams that each has what the other is looking for. As of this writing, neither is in a playoff position, but the Red Wings are just two points back. In this, the seventh year of GM Steve Yzerman’s reign, Detroit has to be feeling a little desperate to make the postseason and, ideally, make some noise there. In a tightly-packed Eastern Conference, that’s probably going to require some veteran reinforcements.

The Canucks, meanwhile, are reportedly on the lookout for prospects and young NHLers they can use to supplement their youth movement. And that’s something that the Red Wings have in shocking abundance.

Should a trade occur between Vancouver and Detroit – and especially if that trade involves Hughes himself – these are the sorts of assets we can see the Canucks being interested in:

The Centres​


Friedman mentioned centres in his initial comments, and then had to later backtrack to specific that he was not talking about Detroit captain Dylan Larkin. Which centres, then, might the Canucks be looking at? Believe it or not, the Red Wings have multiple options to consider.

Marco Kasper​


The 21-year-old Austrian, selected at eighth overall in the 2022 Entry Draft, would really be the prize piece of the Detroit collection. Kasper put up 19 goals and 37 points as a rookie centre last year, and although he’s struggling a bit as a sophomore with just three goals on this current season, he remains an asset with an abundance of skill and natural physical gifts.

Kasper has good size at 6’1” and 203 pounds already, and uses that size well to battle for the puck and drive through the middle of the ice. He’s a sort of all-around talent that can score goals, make plays, or set up something more long-term in the offensive end. Most believe he’s got long-term top-six potential, but that potential might not arrive soon enough for the Red Wings’ current purposes. Kasper is one of the few young centres out there who might be good enough and available enough to make a reasonable centrepiece in a theoretical Hughes deal.

Nate Danielson​


And Kasper isn’t even the only 21-year-old centre with top-six potential that Detroit might have on offer. Danielson, hailing from Red Deer, was selected at ninth overall in the 2023 Entry Draft, and is currently in what might be his NHL rookie season (so long as he eclipses 25 games played.) Like Kasper, Danielson has some natural gifts, including size at 6’2” and a growing 187 pounds, and a right shot that makes him extra valuable.

But whereas Kasper brings a more general offensive skill to the table, Danielson brings a game that is all about speed and skating. He’s said to be one of those players who skates just as good, or even better, with the puck as without it. For a Vancouver team that is always trying to get faster, this is an obvious plus.

Danielson is seen as having a slightly lower offensive ceiling than Kasper, and that’s why the Canucks might prefer Kasper of the two. That said, Danielson put up 39 points in 71 games as an AHL rookie last year, and is up to five points in four AHL games this season. He’s got top-six potential, too.

If the Canucks and Red Wings make a major trade, one has to think it will involve Kasper and/or Danielson. And one has to think that one of them, or both, is the centre that Friedman was referring to.

Michael Rasmussen​


The 26-year-old Rasmussen is nowhere near the same tier of asset as Kasper or Danielson, even if he was once drafted at ninth overall himself back in the 2017 Entry Draft. But he is a young-ish centre who might hold some appeal to the Canucks for a couple of reasons, not the least of which is his birthplace of Surrey, BC. There’s also the hard-to-miss fact that Rasmussen is 6’6” and 223 pounds, making him one of the largest centres in the NHL, period.

Having averaged around 30 points a game through his career thus far, Rasmussen is most generously described as a middle-six centre, and more accurately as a 3C. But the Canucks are definitely beggars when it comes to centre depth, and cannot afford to be too choosy. Rasmussen makes plenty of sense as an extra addition to any trade that goes down, but definitely not as any sort of main feature.

The Other Young Players​


The Canucks might be most interested in centres, but they’ll need to acquire young players at virtually every position eventually…especially if they part ways with Hughes. Fortunately, the Red Wings have plenty to offer all over.

Simon Edvinsson​


The 22-year-old Edvinsson was drafted at sixth overall in the 2021 Entry Draft, and is probably the best young asset the Red Wings have, on the whole. He’s already been in the NHL and playing an ever-increasing role since 2022-23, and on this current season he’s averaging 21:50 a game for Detroit.

Also standing at 6’6” and 223 pounds, Edvinsson avoids the usual pitfalls of tough defenders through a great technical understanding of the game and a very efficient stride. He defends well with that reach, can carry the puck up the ice, and has good instincts both with and without it. In other words, Edvinsson is a long-term top-pairing impact D in the making.

He’s probably Detroit’s most untouchable young asset. But then, if we’re talking Hughes, there probably aren’t any untouchables. Hughes would usurp Edvinsson’s job at the top of the LD charts, so maybe that makes him more moveable?

In the end, the Canucks will probably focus on the centres instead, but if they so chose, they’d have every right to ask for Edvinsson.

Axel Sandin Pellikka​


If there is one area the Canucks don’t need to focus on, it’s the right side of their defence. Tom Willander looks like a long-term solution there, Victor Mancini has upside, and Filip Hronek is still under contract for a long, long time.

But then Sandin Pellikka is such a good prospect that if he were on offer, the Canucks would have to take a lengthy look all the same. Drafted at 17th overall in 2023, Sandin Pellikka’s stock has only risen since then, thanks to starring turns at the WJC and a shocking amount of production in the SHL from a teenager. Now Sandin Pellikka is in the NHL and finding his way. He’s probably not the piece for the Canucks, but he’s a strong asset all the same.

Carter Bear​


Also worthy of some mention is Bear, the Red Wings’ most recent first rounder. Selected at 13th overall last year, Bear is listed as a C/LW, but looks more likely to end up as a winger in the long-term. He’s a high-speed, high-octane, high-compete forward who profiles like a coach’s dream, and should make an impact at the NHL level eventually…though perhaps not for a few years yet.

Michael Brandsegg-Nygard​


Completing our tour of Detroit forward prospects with Brandsegg-Nygard, the player Detroit selected at 15th overall in 2024. He’s a hard-hitting winger who builds his game on collisions with the opposition, but also holds a surprising amount of skill. Brandsegg-Nygard is already up to 13 points in 14 games as an AHL rookie this season.

William Wallinder​


Wallinder is probably Detroit’s top young LD after Edvinsson, although at 23 he’s starting to run out of real estate to make some noise in the NHL. But, to be honest, we’re only really interested in him because of the potential to one day throw out a Wallinder-Willander pairing and really put John Shorthouse through his paces.

Picks?​


We have heard from some sources that the Canucks are not especially interested in draft picks, and would prefer the kind of young players we’ve listed above. That said, if they did want a trade offer to be supplemented with picks, the Red Wings are in possession of essentially all their own picks from here on out – save for their second rounder in 2027.

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Instant Reaction: Canucks turn in a strong effort, fall 4-1 to Mammoth

Welcome back to Instant Reaction, the series here at CanucksArmy where we give you our instant reaction to tonight’s Vancouver Canucks game and ask our readers to do the same in the comments section below!

Starting Lineup​

Warmup #Canucks lines vs. @utahmammoth

DeBrusk. EP40. Karlsson.
Boeser. Kämpf. Garland.
O’Connor. Sasson. Sherwood.
Bains. Räty. Lekkerimäki.

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

🥅Lankinen🥅

6pm on @Sportsnet650 https://t.co/J6DNM1DB0V pic.twitter.com/LQvSygjyVl

— Brendan Batchelor (@BatchHockey) December 6, 2025

Somewhat surprisingly, the Canucks went right back to David Kämpf in between Conor Garland and Brock Boeser. I liked the idea of Max Sasson’s speed between Garland and Boeser. Anyway.

First Period​


The Canucks started with some good pressure from the Elias Pettersson line, which was certainly a good sign for a team looking to start on time and get its four-game homestand started on the right foot. Those good shifts continued, as Linus Karlsson danced at the blueline to create a prime scoring chance out of nowhere. Shortly after, Quinn Hughes made some space for himself and lasered a cross-crease pass to Linus Karlsson, who was robbed by Karel Vejmelka.

Linus Karlsson is showing why he was moved up to the top line!

🎥: Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/aG8lBXG9zQ

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) December 6, 2025

The Mammoth got some good chances of their own, and Kevin Lankinen had to be sharp:

Kevin Lankinen makes three huge saves in a row!

🎥: Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/hlwuH6vkzX

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) December 6, 2025

Honestly, through the first 15 minutes of the game, things were basically only happening when the Canucks’ top line was on the ice.

Utah got the game’s first power play when Max Sasson was called for tripping. The Mammoth quickly converted on that chance, as a relatively soft point shot from Mikhail Sergachev deflected off Elias Pettersson’s stick and then Marcus Pettersson’s skate and went past Lankinen, who was sliding to his left.

Utah opens the scoring on the power play.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/Vk6lcWEjwL

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) December 6, 2025

1-0 Mammoth.

Some takeaways from the first:
-The Canucks’ top line was looking very good early, and Karlsson was meshing very well with Pettersson and Jake DeBrusk.
-Nate Schmidt is having a great year for Utah. Good for him.

Second Period​


The Canucks were pouring on the pressure to start the second period. Again, the Pettersson line was good, but they were especially dangerous when they were out with Hughes and Filip Hronek as a five-man unit. Karlsson set up Hughes for a prime scoring chance early in the period, and the chances just kept coming for them.

As a team, the Canucks were playing well, but that five-man unit was undeniably great and was giving the Mammoth all kinds of trouble. And wouldn’t you know it, it was another dominant shift from that fivesome that led to Dylan Guenther taking Utah’s first penalty of the game. On the ensuing power play, the Canucks got some looks but struggled to sustain pressure on the Utah PK, and continued to trail by a goal.

With just over five minutes left in the second, Utah scored on its fifth shot of the period, with minimal zone time on the whole:

2-0 Utah

🎥: Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/gIHEEX9KNL

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) December 6, 2025

After this, Adam Foote busted out the line blender, a move I heavily disagreed with, especially when it meant taking Karlsson off the top line. The Canucks headed into the third down by a pair of goals in a game they easily could have been leading in.

After 40 minutes of play, some quick stats for the Canucks’ first line:

15 chances for, seven against.
Nine High Danger chances for, one against.

Some takeaways from the second:
-Brock Boeser is a faceoff ace. Opposing centres must be starting to hate when they see the Canucks’ centre get waved out, and Boeser come gliding into the faceoff dot.
-If Nils Höglander can come back and boost another line, while the top line keeps cooking the way they did tonight…? That might become an even more significant boost for the Canucks’ forward group.
-#PutKarlssonOnPP1

Third Period​


The Canucks kept on pushing, and under five minutes into the third, they had their first goal. And funny enough, it came from one of the Canucks’ most quiet lines of the night: the Bains-Räty-Lekkerimmäki trio.

Räty moved into the zone, held the puck away from the Utah defenceman, and got a wrist shot through that Arshdeep Bains tipped past Vejmelka.

🚨CANUCKS GOAL🚨

Arshdeep Bains scores his first goal of the season! He gets the Canucks back in this game!

🎥: Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/ajka4IUmqF

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) December 6, 2025

2-1.

With just over 10 minutes left in the third, the Canucks went back to the power play after Kiefer Sherwood baited Kevin Stenlund into taking a slashing penalty. Again, the Canucks’ power play had some chances, but once again couldn’t beat Karel Vejmelka.

The Canucks were outshooting the Mammoth by a significant margin in this game. Adam Foote has said the Canucks were “right there” in games they lost many times this season, and has taken some lighthearted criticism for it. Tonight, he’d be absolutely right to use that line.

Before the Canucks could even think about pulling their goalie and sending out an extra attacker, Kevin Stenlund moved in and made a deke to the backhand and slid the puck underneath Kevin Lankinen’s legs to push Utah’s lead to two.

Utah takes a 3-1 lead late in the 3rd period.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/KwOeYzdCoF

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) December 6, 2025

3-1 Mammoth.

The game got a bit interesting when Mikhail Sergachev took a puck over glass penalty to give the Canucks a 6-on-4 power play for the rest of the game. Unfortunately, Utah hung on to win and added an empty netter in the process.

4-1 final.

Some takeaways from the third:
-It feels like every game this season, I find myself appreciating the work Filip Hronek is doing more and more. He has been so damn good for this team this year.
-Did not like Kevin Lankinen’s game tonight.

What’s your instant reaction to tonight’s game? Let us know in the comments section below!

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/instant-reaction-vancouver-canucks-strong-effort-4-1-utah-mammoth
 
Canucks Game Day: Looking to snap four-game skid in tough test vs. Wild

The Vancouver Canucks (10-15-3) play for the second consecutive night when they host the Minnesota Wild (15-8-5) in a 7 pm PT face-off at Rogers Arena.

The Canucks are out to snap a season-high four-game winless skid (0-3-1) after a 4-1 loss to the Utah Mammoth on Friday night.

What we know​


With the quick turnaround, the Canucks did not hold a morning skate. Adam Foote will conduct a media availability around 4:15 pm to confirm his lineup. He has a decision to make in goal after Kevin Lankinen allowed three goals on 17 shots last night. Lankinen is 0-4-1 in his last five starts. The Canucks could turn to Nikita Tolopilo, who delivered the team’s most recent victory (a 5-4 win against the Anaheim Ducks last week) and posted a 2-1 shootout win in an AHL start in Abbotsford on Wednesday.

It’s possible the Canucks will get Evander Kane back after the veteran winger missed his first game of the season due to an illness. It’s unclear who would come out of the lineup if Kane is healthy enough to play. Arshdeep Bains’ first goal of the season, early in the third period, cut into Utah’s 2-0 lead. But that’s as close as the Canucks got on the night. Bains has a goal and an assist in his last two games, while Aatu Räty has assists on the last two goals the Canucks have scored.

As a team, the Canucks fell to 1-6-1 in their last eight games overall as well as on home ice. They outshot Utah 32-18 but could only muster a single goal for the third straight game. The 18 shots against matched the team’s season low, also accomplished in its October 9th season opener against the Calgary Flames.

Many of the team’s veterans have gone cold at the same time. Kiefer Sherwood has gone eight games without a goal, while Jake DeBrusk has not scored in seven. Brock Boeser has one goal in 10, Elias Pettersson and Conor Garland each have one goal in six, and Quinn Hughes has gone four games without picking up a point and has just 1+1=2 in his last seven. A power play that is 0 for 15 in the last four games goes a long way to explain many of those struggles. That group of six skaters combined for 22 shots on goal and 39 attempts last night.

With the loss to the Mammoth, the Canucks dropped to 32nd and last in the NHL by both points (23) and points percentage (.411). They start the day seven points behind the Chicago Blackhawks for the second Wild Card spot in the West and eight points back of the Los Angeles Kings for third in the Pacific Division.

Tonight, Elias Pettersson will appear in his 500th NHL game. He has 193 goals and 479 points in his career, which puts him seventh in all-time franchise scoring. He also leads his 2017 NHL Draft class in scoring.

The Opponent​


The Wild will be looking to bounce back from a 4-1 loss in Calgary on Thursday. That was the team’s first regulation loss since November 6th against the Carolina Hurricanes. Minnesota is 10-1-2 in its last 13 games.

The Wild were 3-6-3 at the end of October, but starting with a 5-2 win over the Canucks on November 2nd, the team is 12-2-2 in its last 16 games. It has given up a league-low 28 goals over that span.

Kirill Kaprizov leads the Wild in scoring with 17 goals and 31 points, while Matt Boldy has 14 goals and 29 points. NHL hits leader Yakov Trenin scored his second goal of the season to provide Minnesota’s only offence against the Flames.

Filip Gustavsson got the start in goal in Calgary on Thursday, which means rookie Jesper Wallstedt is likely to get the call tonight. The Wall of St. Paul, as he’s been labelled, is 8-0-2 this season with a 1.74 GAA and a scintillating .944 save percentage. He has four shutouts in his last six starts. Those four shutouts are two more than any other goalie in the league has so far this season. Wallstedt is also 7-0 in his last seven starts.

The Wild is sitting third in the Central Division behind the Colorado Avalanche and Dallas Stars. Minnesota is tied with the St. Louis Blues for the fewest times shorthanded this season (66). By comparison, the Canucks have had to kill off 95 penalties.

News and notes​


If Evander Kane plays tonight, the last two active Atlanta Thrashers remaining in the NHL will share the ice. He and Wild defenceman Zach Bogosian were teammates in Atlanta through 2011 before both moved with the franchise when it relocated to Winnipeg.

The Canucks and Wild will meet one more time this season in St. Paul on April 2nd. That will be the second game of a difficult back-to-back, with a game in Colorado the night before.

The referees for tonight’s game are Frederic L’Ecuyer and Carter Sandlak.

Don’t forget to join Rink Wide Vancouver for full postgame coverage after this game – and every game. The livestream starts moments after the final buzzer. Rink Wide is the place for full postgame analysis and discussion. Join the live YouTube chat with your thoughts on the hockey game.

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/vancou...snap-four-game-skid-tough-test-minnesota-wild
 
Instant Reaction: Räty scores a pair, Willander pots first NHL goal in Canucks’ 4-2 win over Wild

Welcome back to Instant Reaction, the series here at CanucksArmy where we give you our instant reaction to tonight’s Vancouver Canucks game and ask our readers to do the same in the comments section below!

Starting lineup​


Following Adam Foote’s media availability, the only lineup changes we were expecting were that Evander Kane would return and Jonathan Lekkerimäki would sit. However, the Canucks were hit with a significant blow, as Elias Pettersson left pre-game skate with an upper-body injury and would miss tonight’s game.

Elias Pettersson (F) will not play. Upper body injury. #canucks

— Dan Murphy (@sportsnetmurph) December 7, 2025

With Pettersson out, here is how the Canucks lined up:

Warmup #Canucks lines vs. @mnwild

DeBrusk. Lekkerimäki. Karlsson.
Boeser. Kämpf. Garland.
Kane. Sasson. Sherwood.
O’Connor. Räty. Bains.

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

🥅Tolopilo🥅

7pm on @Sportsnet650 https://t.co/5URkcFMDBa pic.twitter.com/ra8JyCeN1w

— Brendan Batchelor (@BatchHockey) December 7, 2025

First period​


With all the drama surrounding the team over the hour before the game, with the report of the New Jersey Devils and Canucks having a conversation on Quinn Hughes, and Pettersson being ruled out, the Canucks had a chance to get ahead early after Minnesota Wild goaltender Jesper Wallstedt took a tripping penalty on Filip Hronek.

Without Pettersson, the top power play unit consisted of Hughes, Brock Boeser, Conor Garland, Jake DeBrusk and Evander Kane. The Canucks failed to register a shot on goal. And shortly after the penalty expired, Mats Zuccarello was sprung on a two-on-one with Matt Boldy, who made no mistake to put the puck in the yawning cage.

Boldy right out of the box gets the scoring started early for the Wild.

🎥 Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/ispr4G42dt

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) December 7, 2025

1-0 Wild.

The Canucks had a few chances, but it was really the Wild who came up with the more threatening chances. But tonight’s starting goaltender, Nikita Tolopilo, made some solid saves to keep his team within one.

Linus Karlsson has been playing well of late. And while we did not get to see Karlsson, Pettersson and DeBrusk build off that impressive performance against the Utah Mammoth, Karlsson has not been afraid to get into the rough stuff. His bread and butter is at the net front, and he wasn’t shy to get physical during the play and after the whistle with Wild captain Jared Spurgeon.

Although they were outshot 10-4 in the opening period, the Canucks walked into the first break down just one goal.

First period takeaways:

– The Canucks did a fine job in the faceoff dot without Pettersson. They won the battle 60%-40%: Räty 4/4, Kämpf 3/4, O’Connor 1/2, and Sasson 1/3.

– The Wild converted on a lot of rush chances, including a Kirill Kaprizov breakaway. Kaprizov and Zuccarello also connected on a few East-West passes that led to dangerous scoring chances. The Canucks might be in trouble.

Second period​


Mere seconds after the second period puck drop, Marcus Pettersson takes a cross-checking penalty on Boldy in the defensive zone. But the Canucks killed it off.

Ryan Hartman appeared to get injured on a play in front of the Canucks net early in the frame. His replacement, Nico Sturm, came onto the ice and was hit with a high stick and seemed to be favouring his nose as he went to the Wild bench. Neither player would miss a shift.

The Canucks had some trouble breaking the puck out of their zone due to the offensive zone pressure from the Wild forecheckers. But Minnesota forgot about the one-man breakout, Quinn Hughes.

Hughes sends a long stretch-pass to Kane on the left side boards, who enters the zone on the rush. He sends a cross-ice pass to Kiefer Sherwood, who doesn’t have the best shooting angle and sends the puck to the net front. With a defenceman on his back, Räty enters the

1-1 tie.

Psych. The goal was reviewed, and it was determined that Räty kicked the puck in. No goal.

1-0 Wild.

But don’t worry, the Canucks didn’t let that disallowed goal discourage them.

Karlsson enters the zone with speed and keeps his head up, scanning the ice for a passing option. He stops up and finds Willander on the right side, who fires the puck into traffic and places it perfectly over Jesper Wallstedt – who never saw the puck – and under the bar for his first NHL goal.

🚨Canucks Goal🚨

There's no overturning this one. Willander gets his first career goal and we are tied!

🎥 Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/ogMDZZpyCm

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) December 7, 2025

1-1 tie. FOR REAL.

Elias Pettersson (D) gave as big a celebration for his teammate’s first NHL goal as Willander did. But Pettersson did not have to wait long to get a goal of his own.

Following a faceoff win by Räty, Willander goes D-to-D to Pettersson. He fires a floater toward the net, which sneaks through traffic and handcuffs Wallstedt, beating him between the high pad and under the glove.

🚨Canucks Goal🚨

Pettersson makes it 2-1 Canucks!

🎥 Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/pptXZHLi9T

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) December 7, 2025

2-1 Canucks.

There wasn’t much of a push back from the Wild after the Canucks took the lead. Boldy had a pair of shots, but in terms of scoring chances, the Canucks did a good job of limiting the Wild. The Canucks didn’t have many chances of their own until Räty got the puck on his stick.

With a board battle taking place behind the Canucks net, Räty goes back in support and gets the puck loose. Kane challenges the Wild defenceman along the boards and kicks the puck up the ice to a streaking Räty.

Räty wins the race for the puck and is sprung on a two-on-one with Sherwood. With Jacob Middleton playing the pass, Räty lines up for a shot at the top of the left circle and wires it into the top left corner.

🚨Canucks Goal🚨

Raty gets his goal! 3-1 Canucks

🎥 Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/AgW723KVKI

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) December 7, 2025

This one counts.

3-1 Canucks.

Aatu Räty has now been in on four of the last five Canucks goals.

The Wild did answer with a chance of their own, the best one coming off a Joel Eriksson Ek tip, which beats Tolopilo, but not the crossbar.

Vancouver only had six shots in the period, but they managed to capitalize on three of them. The Canucks lead 3-1 after two.

Second period takeaways:

– Canucks had a real problem breaking the puck out of their own zone through this game due to the tenacious Wild forecheck. But they made the most of it when they did.

– I’ve been really liking what I’m seeing out of Linus Karlsson. At the tail end of the period, Karlsson had a shift where he stepped up on Danila Yurov, which knocked the puck loose and straight to Max Sasson at the net front for a backhand chance. Later in the shift, Karlsson picked up a loose puck in the neutral zone and entered the zone slowly, pulling the defender, which gave DeBrusk time to catch up and get open for a one-time chance. The pass was blocked, but it was still encouraging to see Karlsson slow the play down.

Third period​


The Wild came to play in the final period, logging six shots in the first three minutes.

But any hope for a comeback was lost when Wallstedt mishandled the puck behind the net, and Räty scoops it up and buries it into the open net.

🚨Canucks Goal🚨

Raty steals it from Wallstedt and makes it 4-1 Canucks!

🎥 Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/96gHlA06cX

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) December 7, 2025

4-1 Canucks.

O’Connor gets a cross-checking penalty for sending Middleton into Tolopilo, who was down and in the splits with a 6’3″, 220-lb defender on top of him. The Canuck netminder was fine, but that couldn’t have been comfortable.

Sherwood was sprung on a shorthanded breakaway, but could not get a shot away after a slash from Brock Faber. This sent the game to four-on-four.

There wasn’t much else going on for the next 10 minutes. The Wild had their pushes, but Tolopilo and the Canucks played prevent defence and limited their opportunities.

Boeser took a late tripping penalty on Boldy with around three minutes remaining. Playing at 6-on-4 with the goalie pulled, Zuccarello circles the faceoff dot and fires a shot farside on Tolopilo, who Eriksson Ek was screening.

Zuccarello makes it 4-2.

🎥 Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/hdfbWWhJh7

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) December 7, 2025

4-2 Canucks.

Kaprizov took a cross-checking penalty on Karlsson in the Vancouver end, sending the Canucks to the power play late. The Canucks spent the final 40 seconds in Minnesota’s end to ice the game.

4-2 Canucks win.

Game takeaways:

– With the number of injuries down the middle of the ice, I don’t think it’s outlandish to say that Räty has been the Canucks’ second-best centre on the season. And he only built to that case tonight. After serving as a healthy scratch last week against the San Jose Sharks, Räty had a disallowed goal the following game against the Los Angeles Kings. Since then, Räty has scored two and been in on five of the last six Canucks goals. Two of those games he played under 10 minutes, and he went 29/36 (78%) in the faceoff dot.

– Karlsson has played himself into a bigger role on this team. The way he’s slowing the game down, finding time and space with his head up to find the right play, has been awesome to watch.

What’s your instant reaction to tonight’s game? Let us know in the comments section below!

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/instan...goal-vancouver-canucks-4-2-win-minnesota-wild
 
Canucks assign Jonathan Lekkerimäki to AHL Abbotsford

Following Saturday night’s win over the Minnesota Wild, Vancouver Canucks General Manager announced that forward Jonathan Lekkerimäki has been assigned to AHL Abbotsford:

General Manager Patrik Allvin announced today that F Jonathan Lekkerimäki has been assigned to Abbotsford (AHL).

— Vancouver Canucks (@Canucks) December 7, 2025

Lekkerimäki, 21, turned heads at training camp this season with his increased willingness to get into the dirty areas and his powerful shot. He turned that into a strong preseason, where he scored three goals and one assist in the final three exhibition games.

The Swede’s efforts were enough for him to make the NHL out of training camp. Lekkerimäki carried over that hot streak into opening night against the Calgary Flames, when he scored the Canucks’ fourth goal of the game halfway through the third period.

Through the first three games, Lekkerimäki was paired with 2025 first-round pick Braeden Cootes. That was the only runway the two youngsters would get, as Cootes was returned to his Seattle Thunderbirds of the WHL, and Lekkerimäki was made a healthy scratch.

After sitting out for two games, Lekkerimäki returned against the Washington Capitals. He lasted just one period as he was injured after receiving a hit in the first period. He missed the next 12 games and was then returned to AHL Abbotsford.

On a struggling Abbotsford team, Lekkerimäki stepped up and gave the lineup some spark. He scored three goals and five points in five games, registering 20 shots on goal. While his efforts weren’t enough to earn a victory for the Canucks, he was summoned by Vancouver after his scoring spree.

Since his recall, Lekkerimäki picked up an assist against the Utah Mammoth, but registered just one shot on goal in his four games. He played a season-low 6:35 in Saturday night’s win over the Minnesota Wild. Before the game, Head Coach Adam Foote announced that the returning Evander Kane would be replacing Lekkerimäki in the Canucks lineup. But once Elias Pettersson was ruled out with an upper-body injury, Lekkerimäki drew back in.

This now leaves the Canucks with an open roster spot, with forward Nils Höglander expected to return at some point during this homestand.

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/vancouver-canucks-assign-jonathan-lekkerimaki-ahl-abbotsford-canucks
 
The Statsies: A big game from Aatu Räty helps Canucks overcome Wild

It’s actually comical how inconsistent this team is.


The Vancouver Canucks somehow, someway, managed to beat the Minnesota Wild by a 4-2 scoreline. With Elias Pettersson being a late scratch on this roster, one might’ve been forgiven for thinking that it would be a one-way demolition at the hands of one of the best teams in the NHL so far this season. Instead, it was the Canucks who struck against all odds, the hockey gods perhaps paying them back a bit for being so unfortunate the previous night.

Here’s the win, by the numbers.

As always, you can find our glossary guide of advanced stats here.

Game Flow


20252026-20451-xgdiff-5v5.png


At no point during this game was Vancouver in control. While the Canucks held a narrow 53.85 CF% in the first, their xGF% sat at 27.76 as the Wild managed to put up 1.03 xGF against Vancouver’s own 0.4. The closest this gap got was in the second period, where the Canucks had a 0.43-0.37 xGF lead. Funnily enough, that would be all they would need to strike three times in the middle frame. The third period featured them turtling with a 44.00 CF% and 27.31 xGF% as Minnesota looked to avoid losing to the worst team in the NHL – and despite giving up 5 high-danger chances alone in the period, the Canucks still held firm to take the win home.

Heat Map


20252026-20451-5v5.png


The heat map also reflects just what a one-sided game it was when it came to scoring chances. While the Wild only had a narrow 21-20 lead in overall scoring chances, the high-danger chances were a lopsided 10-2 for the visitors. That much is shown by the two drastically varying hot spots, where Minnesota had a veritable lake in front of Nikita Tolopilo, while Vancouver barely challenged Jesper Wallstedt from high-danger areas. Still, it’s interesting to see that Minnesota only got one goal at 5v5 play, and it wasn’t from one of those high-danger chances they racked up. As for the Canucks, one of their two high-danger chances was converted into a goal, which is a pretty darn good conversion rate.

Individual Advanced Stats


Corsi Champ: Aatu Raty had himself a night. The Finn saw himself get bumped up the lineup due to Pettersson’s injury and put on a show between Kiefer Sherwood and Evander Kane, putting up a team-best 69.57 CF% while also finding the scoresheet twice. With 2 goals and 1 assist, it shouldn’t be a surprise that Raty also had the second-best xGF5 on the team with 56.27, on ice for a 9-3 lead in scoring chances and 1-1 split in high-danger chances. It’s one of the best games of his professional career, and hopefully Raty can build on this positive going forward.

🚨Canucks Goal🚨

Raty gets his goal! 3-1 Canucks

🎥 Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/AgW723KVKI

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) December 7, 2025

Corsi Chump: Bringing up the rear of the pack in CF% was Jonathan Lekkerimäki, who recorded a 20.00 CF%. Demoted to the fourth line, Lekkerimäki barely saw any playing time at 5v5 action and was unable to dig himself out of a statistical hole. His 5.12 xGF% ranked him as the third-worst Canuck in that category, with the rest of his linemates joining him as the bottom 3. This was as the Swede faced a 0-3 hole in high-danger chances and the 5th-worst xGA at 0.93. Not the best performance, but it wasn’t as if he was set up for success.

xGF: With all the trade rumours swirling around him, Quinn Hughes has continued to play good hockey. His 58.49 xGF% was a team-best for the Canucks, with the defenceman out there for a 12-4 edge in scoring chances. That being said, Hughes was also on ice for a 1-3 hole in high-danger chances, but given just how much he played and the quality of competition, those numbers do make sense for him. He also led the team in raw xGF, sitting at 0.76 on the night.

GSAx: This was a gem of a performance by Nikita Tolopilo. The Belarusian netminder faced down one of the best teams in the league and came out on top, turning away all but 2 chances against 3.44 xGF to finish with a 1.44 GSAx. It was excellent, and from an AHL netminder, it is a lot more than one could be asking for. The only blemish to his record is that of the two goals, they were split between middle and low-danger chances, which isn’t the best. Still, Tolopilo more than did his part to get the Canucks the win in this one.

Impressed by Tolopilo with how calm he plays.

Small sample so far, but he’s stopped 2.16 GSAA at 5v5 this season in three starts.

With Lankinen not playing well enough, why not give Tolopilo the start on Monday vs. Detroit?

(I know ya’ll want Kevin Tankinen) #Canucks https://t.co/ZJH3YaZb2H

— Grady Sas (@GradySas) December 7, 2025

As a team


CF% – 44.76% HDCF% – 25.00% xGF% – 31.13%

Just as they deserved to win against the Mammoth, the Canucks deserved to lose against the Wild. The hockey gods really do have an ironic way of evening things out, as this group took care of business in a game where they didn’t play all that well. It was great to see the younger palyers step up in the absence of Pettersson down the middle, and especially more so for the likes of Raty and Tom Willander to find the scoresheet. Again, hopefully this isn’t an outlier and these performances can become more common from these players. As for the team… we’ll see exactly what’s in store for them.

Vancouver hosts the Detroit Red Wings tomorrow night.

Stats provided by naturalstattrick.com

Sponsored by bet365

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/statsies-aatu-raty-helps-vancouver-canucks-overcome-wild
 
Canucks trade rumours: What could the Devils offer for Quinn Hughes?

The Vancouver Canucks might be battling it out for last place in the NHL with the Calgary Flames right now, but they’re the ones with all the smoke.

The trade winds have been blowing in BC for more than a month now, and have recently approached near-hurricane velocity with the revelation that the Canucks and the New Jersey Devils have “had a conversation” about Quinn Hughes.

The topic itself is nothing new. Folks have been talking about Hughes-to-Jersey since at least this past April, when President of Hockey Operations Jim Rutherford brought it up unprompted in a year-end presser.

But what is new is that, for the first time ever, Rutherford and GM Patrik Allvin seem to be opening the door ever-so-slightly to openly discussing the trading of Hughes. If and when that happens, it’ll be the biggest and perhaps most consequential trade in franchise history.

As it stands, Hughes has a season-and-a-half remaining on his current contract and no trade protection. That’s why, although the logical outcome may be joining his brothers in New Jersey, that’s far from the only possible outcome. Any contender in the league could use Hughes’ services for the next two playoff runs, and several of them would be happy to make a bid or two towards acquiring him.

In other words, if the Devils want to get their hands on Hughes early – and retain the ability to sign him to an eight-year contract – they’re going to have to pay for the privilege. And pay mightily.

The importance of this trade means that it is one that the Canucks cannot afford to mess up, with ‘messing up’ here equating to getting anything less than maximal value back.

So, what’s the most that the Devils could offer up in return for Hughes?

The Big Pieces


Any Hughes trade should be focused on quality over quantity (or, perhaps, quality and quantity). If the Canucks aren’t walking away with multiple blue-chip pieces, they’ve done something catastrophically wrong. The Devils do, indeed, have a couple of interesting names to consider.

Simon Nemec

The 21-year-old right-shooting defender was selected second overall in the 2022 Entry Draft, but has taken a little longer than average to arrive. This 2025-26 season appears to be a bit of a breakout, however, with Nemec already up to six goals and 15 points through 29 games.

Nemec’s overall game is still a work in progress, and his deployment remains relatively sheltered. Still, he’s stepped up into a bigger role to cover injuries before and seems to grow with each new opportunity. Most still believe he has top-pairing potential in the long term, even if he’s unlikely to reach that in New Jersey with Brett Pesce occupying the top 1RD slot for the time being.

Nemec isn’t an ideal centrepiece for the Canucks, who already have Tom Willander and Victor Mancini on the right side, not to mention veterans Filip Hronek and Tyler Myers. But if they’re focused on getting the single-most value they can, present and future, that’s probably Nemec, one way or another.

Anton Silayev

Silayev is considered the Devils’ top prospect by a long shot after having been selected 10th overall in the 2024 Entry Draft. The LD stands out from the crowd due to his 6’7”, 207-pound frame that still might be growing, but that’s not his only gift. Silayev is a great skater, and not just for his size, which allows him to provide both puck-carrying abilities and a wide range of defensive coverage. Such an enormous player obviously has a bit of a learning curve ahead of him. Still, Silayev is expected to come over to North America next season to really start that NHL career in earnest. He’s a true blue-chip prospect, and plays at a position that the Canucks will suddenly be in need of should they trade Hughes.

The Medium Pieces


Even if the Canucks were to get both big pieces we’ve already listed, that still wouldn’t really add up to the full value of Hughes. That will need to be supplemented with at least one or two medium pieces, too.

Dawson Mercer

Mercer is a player the Canucks have reportedly had their eye on for a while. After a starring role at the WJC, Mercer has had an incredibly uneven arrival in the big leagues, scoring as many as 56 points as a sophomore, and as few as 33 the very next year.

The 2025-26 season seems to be an upswing for Mercer, as he’s now up to 21 points in 29 games. He’s a little undersized at 6’0” and about 180 pounds, but Mercer makes up for it with a clever approach to the game and a shifting skating style.

All that said, the Canucks would almost certainly be looking at Mercer as a potential centre solution. Although, he’s had more success on the wing at the NHL level, including this season, where he’s mostly spent time on Nico Hischier’s flank. It’s hard to know exactly what they’d be getting in Mercer, and that’s why he can’t be anything more than an additional piece in a trade like this.

Seamus Casey

Again, the Canucks aren’t particularly interested in RD prospects. But the Devils’ next best future asset is still probably Casey. The 5’10”, sub-180-pound defender who has enough skill to still be considered a future NHLer despite that size.

Casey is an expert puck-handler in every sense of the word, capable of carrying it up the ice, along the blueline, or even deep into the offensive zone when the situation calls for it. He’s an offensive defender, to be sure, but is also working on rounding out his defensive game to the best of his abilities down in the AHL right now.

The fit is less-than-ideal for the Canucks, but if they’re selling off a multitude of veterans, maybe having some redundancy at every position is a fine idea, anyway.

First Round Pick 2026

The Canucks aren’t interested in draft picks as the primary returns in the veteran trades, but that doesn’t mean they will turn them down. With the Devils seeming to overall have fewer interesting pieces to offer, they’ll need to supplement somehow, and a first-round pick goes a long way toward that.

The Devils have all future first rounds in hand. But the 2026 pick would be especially nice to acquire, because it has the potential to end up pretty high. Right now, the Devils are one point out of a playoff spot. But they’re also just three points ahead of the bottom-10. Acquiring New Jersey’s first – without any protective clauses – could be smart business with high upside.

Cap Considerations


To fit Hughes now and into the future, the Devils may require some cap cleanup. Whether that comes from the Canucks helping them out or some other side deals, there are some names worth thinking about.

Dougie Hamilton

Hamilton, and his $9 million cap hit until 2028, looks like the odd man out in a Hughes arrival. Maybe the Devils would want to keep him around if they had to deal Nemec away, but at some point, Hamilton’s contract is going to be a problem that needs solving.

He has a 10-team no-trade clause, and given his experience in Calgary, we kind of doubt Hamilton would waive it to go to Vancouver – nor would Vancouver have much need for an expensive veteran RD. But perhaps the Canucks could be a middleman, acquiring Hamilton and then flipping him elsewhere for a second-round pick or something similar.

Ondrej Palat

The Devils would especially like to ditch Palat and his $6 million cap hit. Unlike Hamilton, Palat is no longer a high-level player and has just 16 points in his last 100 or so games. Palat also has a 10-team NTC, and it’s unlikely he waives that to go from a contender to a rebuilder, but maybe the Canucks could play middleman with him, too.

Retention

Of course, the Canucks could always retain on Hughes’ contract to make a trade even more worth the Devils’ while. That would cost assets, though, to the tune of at least one extra medium piece, if not more. With the Devils already a little short on interesting things to offer, especially compared to some other potential suitors, one wonders if they can cobble together enough to swing Hughes at 50% – does a four-piece package of Nemec, Silayev, Mercer, and a first even get them there?

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/vancou...at-could-new-jersey-devils-offer-quinn-hughes
 
The Stanchies: Canucks continue apathy spiral in 4-0 loss to Red Wings

We’ve reached the point in the season where Quinn Hughes mentioning the New Jersey Devils GM by nickname has caused everyone to rethink their lives and wonder what any of it all means.

And I don’t mean that to discredit the emotions currently going on in the Vancouver fanbase, as it’s quite understandable after a decade-plus of losing, combined with almost two seasons of “wtf is going on with our team, emotionally,” you might find yourself a bit on edge. So while I don’t necessarily think Quinn Hughes saying “Fitzy” is that big of a deal, I do understand that when you have been given absolutely no answers, you might find yourself overanalyzing every single thing in an attempt to find an answer. It’s the equivalent of misplacing your keys, and after hours of searching everywhere you can think of, part of your brain is inevitably going to have a conversation with itself about whether you should check your freezer.

“I’ve never put my keys in the freezer.”

“But what if this time you did.”

“I would never have a reason to put them in the freezer, I think the starting point of this debate is flawed.”

“But what if you were getting ice for your drink and they fell in. It’s probably best if you just look.”

“OK but like…..ok fine, fine, I’ll check in the freezer.”

So who’s to say calling someone a nickname, or someone wearing green shoes, or someone not drinking coffee like they used to, ISN’T a sign of some sort of impending action. It’s a Knives Out mystery, and you’re all invited to participate.

Canucks Nation is basically at the point where all they can do is wait for Elliotte Friedman to get bored and casually mention the Hughes situation, and then act like he’s shocked it caused such an uproar.

“I’m not saying anything is imminent, but I wouldn’t be surprised if it’s revealed that it’s possible that it might be a reality that Quinn Hughes might one day be interested in pursuing the sport of hockey in a market that may or may not be Vancouver.” followed by him chastising the market for over-reacting to his report the next day.

All of which is to say the Vancouver Canucks played the Detroit Red Wings on Monday night, and it’s safe to say that the games kind of feel like they are firmly in the back seat of the Hughes situation, more so than ever before.

Which isn’t to say the 4-0 defeat at the hands of the Michigan-based hockey team wasn’t an exciting game. I am sure people who paid money to watch the Canucks lose on home ice are quite content to sit back and wait and see how another made-for-TV drama plays out over the course of a season.

But it’s probably safe to say we are currently knee-deep in the swamps of apathy in this market.

Were there boos at the end of this game? A few. But for the most part, it feels like the fan base is just trudging along in the rain, waiting for a sunny day that might never arrive. I think it’s hard for people to emotionally invest in a team that has asked so much of them the past few seasons, with so few returns. There is no grand plan on the horizon, and all you can do is wait and see how the Quinn Hughes situation plays out, which doesn’t exactly sell tickets or hope. “Want to see if we screw up trading our generational player that we backed ourselves into a corner with?” isn’t quite as catchy as “Compete is in our nature.”, alas.

Which isn’t to say there might not be hope one day. For all we know, Quinn Hughes could stay and turn things around. Or maybe they trade him, get an exceptional return, and start a rebuild/retool in earnest.

It’s just, again, it’s hard to believe in a team that has felt like it’s been following the same script for years, and there has been nothing to suggest they’ll try anything different.

It almost feels like nothing will change in this market unless you scare the owner with low ticket sales, but even then, it feels like a time loop of the next guy coming in, promising he can turn things around in a hurry.

Which kind of makes you think and ponder what the one common denominator has been with the Canucks ever since they fired Mike Gillis. Really makes you think.

Anyways, let’s dive into the game.

Best state of affairs
Quinn Hughes and Dylan Larkin tapped each other after the ceremonial pick drop. Quinn to Detroit confirmed😔#Canucks

— canucksdaily (@nucksabeautyeh) December 9, 2025

Is Quinn Hughes giving Brock Boeser a tip that he’s on his way to Detroit??

WE JUST DON’T KNOW.

Best designer seats
Whole lotta Red Wings jerseys in the crowd, eh? 😬#Canucks

— Lachlan Irvine (@LachInTheCrease) December 9, 2025

This isn’t the ’90s, must-see-tv Red Wings, this is the “haven’t made the playoffs in nine years, oh hey Patrick Kane is still playing??” version. Yet their fans are now a noticeable presence at Canucks games, which you know, probably isn’t a great thing for the team.

At least you can see the nice new black seats clearly? I never thought a moral victory would be “don’t have to look at the disgusting maroon-stained seats in 4K anymore,” but damn it, I am taking it.

Which on a side note, for the people who bought their old seats from Rogers Arena, what’s the deal? Everyone’s got their kinks in life, and I don’t judge fandom, but I just do not understand how you get one of those run-down seats that would be an absolute adventure under a black light and feel comfortable with it in your house. That’s all I am saying.

Anyways, to the Canucks credit, and for fans of being “right there” in the pursuit of victory, Vancouver probably deserved a better fate on the night? They controlled most of the first period, and Jake DeBrusk alone should have had around 27 goals, but this is also a team that is second-last place in the NHL, so it’s kind of hard to be like “oh man, I’m telling you, they HAD this one” and be taken seriously? We are firmly in the “Once is a mistake, twice is a habit, and twenty times is just who we are, this is emphatic proof of what we are; we can’t fight it anymore, please stop asking us about it.”

With the Canucks still dealing with the absence of Elias Pettersson, their centre depth makes me uncomfortable to look at, but as I said, they managed to dictate the opening frame of this game.

First up, you had Conor Garland finding Brock Boeser for an absolute bullet of a one-timer:

You know how a one-timer is good? When the guy drops to one knee to propose to it. And Brock leaned into that shot, but John Gibson, as he did all night, denied him.

Up next, you had Evander Kane giving the puck away, only to see Kiefer Sherwood steal it back and get it over to Kane again, who then found the Canucks hottest goal scorer, Aatu Räty, down low:

One day Aatu Räty will score between his legs, putting him up on the wall beside Ryan Shannon’s spin-o-rama shootout goal. Fun fact: Nikolai Khabibulin got so angry that he got deked out of his jock that he punched Shannon in the head. Also, that clip makes me miss John Garrett on commentary more than I realized.

Up next, we had Quinn Hughes dingle-dangle his way to setting up Jake DeBrusk setting up shop in Tim Horton’s, only to just tip the puck high and wide:

And then we had Fil Hronek long bombing the puck to Corolla, who once again set up Jake DeBrusk for a great scoring chance:

Jake does a great job of batting down the puck and then tries his vaunted shootout goal, where he cuts one way to drag the goalie with him and then softly chips it back the other direction as if to say, “ha ha, you’re so stupid, I can’t believe you thought I was shooting blocker side.” The puck was rolling, which made the accuracy on the shot tougher than normal, and it is probably the kind of situation November Jake scores on, but not December Jake.

Never, December Jake.

Best inevitable conclusion
It is baffling to me how Adam Foote succeeded as the defence coach under Tocchet. The defending in front of the net has been atrocious all year. #Canucks

— Mcsuper🏒 (@Macusian12345) December 9, 2025

If you got that sinking feeling after watching the Canucks dominate that there would be a defensive lapse leading to a goal, congratulations, you’re a well-versed hockey fan:

As well as the Canucks played to open the period, we know they remain prone to defensive breakdowns and bad coverage. Which isn’t even based on other teams coming out like the ’80s Oilers and just running the Canucks out of the rink. Most of the time, it’s just basic hockey, where the other team is cycling the puck, and before you know it, the Canucks have pissed their pants and a man is wide open.

I just find it hard to trust in Adam Foote’s defensive system because I still don’t quite know what he’s trying to do with it. All we have are the results, which are the Canucks attempting some sort of man-to-man defence that inevitably breaks down when two or more Canucks randomly swarm at a player with the puck.

And on this play, Aatu Räty leaves the net front to chase JT Compher, who had just beaten Marcus Pettersson behind the net. Conventional wisdom says you stand your ground if you’re Aatu, because you need to defend the crease. Let MP3 try to recover and see how things play out. Which maybe that’s a tall task considering how poorly Marcus Pettersson has played this season, but damn it, we’re a society and we have rules. Defend the crease.

But Räty doesn’t stand his ground; he instead chases down Compher behind the net, and JT finds a time-travelling James van Riemsdyk from 2013 all alone in front. 1-0 bad guys.

Was this Kevin Lankinen’s fault? No, it’s hard to blame any goalie for whatever…this season is. You can’t expect your goalie to bail you out for every major defensive breakdown.

But the fact remains: Kevin has probably been the worst goalie on the season for Vancouver, and his contract is looking a bit stinky, so he’s going to get some valid criticism.

All I am saying is I feel calmer when Nikita Tolopilo is in net, which I didn’t see coming.

Best we love you all equally
#Canucks 4 centres in first period
Sasson 4:55
Raty 4:51
Kampf 4:50
O'Connor 4:40

— Jeff Paterson (@patersonjeff) December 9, 2025

Best road hockey
This Detroit @ #Canucks game has had the feel of two teams at war with the puck.

— Thomas Drance (@ThomasDrance) December 9, 2025

Can I interest you in a nice Tom Willander rush?

Yes, a shot that was blocked and led to an awkward cover in the crease isn’t the sexiest highlight, but sometimes you take what you can get.

I just really enjoy Tom Willander when he busts out a mini-Hughes rush down the ice. Somewhere in the world, I like to imagine Jiri Slegr looks up and just smiles.

Best reporting from George
DeBrusk off the post on the break, now the Canucks set up, Garland to DeBrusk STONED BY GIBSON ONCE, TWICE, HUGHES STOPPED, Detroit clears at 58 seconds, Larkin shot stopped Lankinen.

— George Malik (@georgemalik) December 9, 2025

If you were in a court of law and looking across the table at Jack McCoy, Harvey Spector or Ally McBeal, this would be where you’d make your case that the Canucks didn’t commit murder and had a chance to win this game.

Jake DeBrusk, third in your program and first in your hearts, had three chances on a power play midway through the second period.

One was upsetting he didn’t score.

One was disgusting he didn’t score.

And one was merely average; as such, we won’t show it or mention it ever again.

But the first two chances? Nicolas Cage would be needed for the reenactment of how painfully close he came to scoring.

The best chance was probably the spiral pass from Quinn Hughes, sent in from around Robson Street, catching DeBrusk behind the Detroit defence:

Clang clang clang goes the trolley and the post, however, and the Canucks remained scoreless.

Which then led right into Jake DeBrusk having a glorious chance to swat a rebound, which, along with deft tipping, is his bread and butter. Unfortunately, John Gibson didn’t get the memo:

Even the play to set up the shot leading to the rebound is really slick, as Garland passes the puck in the slot to Sherwood, who just sort of spins and shoots it like he’s one of those players on a metal rod in a Bubble hockey game.

If you’re thinking to yourself, “man, sure would be nice if the Canucks shot near the top of the net”, you should 100% be thinking that. But even then, this was a tremendous save from a goalie who was sliding the other way before Jake got the shot off.

Then, after this, Jake rushed the puck on net for a third chance on the same shift, but you could tell by then his spirit was demoralized, and he needed some time to think about life before trying to shoot a puck again.

Best reaction shot

When you’re told the Canucks want to win now and aren’t looking at getting draft picks or young players.

Best all Copp are bad
How are they this shitty #Canucks

— KrazyKash 🇨🇦 (@KrazyKash0596) December 9, 2025

And that was pretty much the hockey game from Vancouver’s side of things. The good news is this article wraps up pretty quickly because there is only so much I want to talk about Detroit scoring three goals and then watching them park the bus for the third period against Vancouver.

Now, this might shock you, but Detroit’s second goal? It involved bad coverage:

I will say that Linus Karlsson and Drew O’Connor colliding outside the blue line at least provides a reasonable explanation as to why the Canucks had some trouble covering in their zone. This is better than “why did Evander Kane just skate off into the horizon?” levels of bad breakdowns.

That being said, it’s still a breakdown, and with two forwards unable to get back into the play, Detroit quickly moves the puck around the ice before ending on the tap-in from Andrew Copp.

I think Quinn Hughes is probably a bit too aggressive as he lunges at the puck going across to Axel Sandin-Pellikka, which takes him away from protecting the front of the net.

I think Fil Hronek is too slow to get back; he looks extremely casual skating back to his net, to the point that I had to check if he was wearing a hoodie and sandals.

And I think Kevin Lankinen overplays the east/west pass, as he slides out of his crease tracking the puck, which gives him no chance at making the stop on Copp. At the very least, he needs to toss his stick as he reaches back, at least give us the dramatics.

Best it’s all about how you view it
Frustrating #canucks game to watch, but enjoying the perfect tank game. 😊

— Michael Paweska (@mrpaweska) December 9, 2025

If you prefer traditional piss poor net coverage, can I present you with Detroit’s third goal?

Once again, Sandin-Pellikka sets up a man in front, this time finding Nate Danielson all alone in front of Kevin Lankinen after Marcus Pettersson and Conor Garland both chase Marco Kasper along the sideboards. Swarming is cool, right? All the kids are swarming, they tell me.

At one point, Danielson literally skates back and forth through Canucks coverage, and still nobody picks him up, leading to Nate tipping a puck (deftly) pass Lankinen, and then doing some pushups on the crossbar to further add insult to injury.

When Rick Tocchet left, so did any semblance of a defensive system that players understood and trust in, because I do not recognize the player Marcus Pettersson has been this season. It feels like every player has regressed in that regard EXCEPT Fil Hronek. It’s our version of Pluribus. I don’t know why Hronek is immune, but each week, I am waiting to see when the hosts finally figure it out and assimilate him into the hive mind.

Best branding
we were right there https://t.co/L6Dn4CHQ7E

— Lachlan Irvine (@LachInTheCrease) December 9, 2025

Best discussion
Kevin Lankinen replaced by Nikita Tolopilo for the 3rd period.

Lankinen is better than he’s shown the past few weeks, and clearly has a lot on his mind. He hasn’t played well enough to give Vancouver a chance to win lately, especially with the demands VAN puts on their goalies.

— Thomas Drance (@ThomasDrance) December 9, 2025

Goalie contracts, man.

I understand the theory behind signing Kevin Lankinen (Thatcher Demko will always be injured for half a season). I liked how Kevin played last season. I didn’t think Kevin would play as poorly as he has this season.

But that’s all the more reason why I worry anytime a goalie signs a long-term deal.

It’s not the old days where there were like three top goalies in Hasek, Roy and Brodeur, then a bunch of average goalies, and then Dan Cloutier.

Now we live in a world in which Casey DeSmith will be like a viable goalie for St. Louis in the year 2032 and can get you some wins. You have options.

On the other hand, you watch Edmonton, and you wonder, “That will never be us, right?” So I get the fear of that.

But still. Signing goalies to long-term, high-dollar deals always seems like a risk, especially when you have two of them on the roster.

I think the Canucks had to go with either Demko or Lankinen and then kept Arturs Silovs, but then again, “what if everything goes perfectly right this season?” game planning probably allows you a level of delusion I’ve never experienced.

Best tradition
Surprised we haven’t seen a #Canucks jersey on the ice yet

— Demko’s Kneebones 🇨🇦 (@BluelineBardown) December 9, 2025

I like how in Vancouver, you know they won’t fire anyone until a jersey is tossed on the ice; it’s our version of white smoke.

Anyways, here is Kiefer Sherwood getting a shot on net to start the third period:

Experience Canucks hockey!

Best asked and answered

discord.png


Best oh there were multiple dudes
but but but were outshooting the #Redwings . Doesnt that count for something.
Signed
The #Canucks

— Doctor my Time (@Lotto6445151) December 9, 2025

For posterity’s sake, here are clips of the Canucks fighting back in the third period and trying to make a game of it.

Up first, you had the returning Nils Höglander setting up Aatu Räty right in front, only to be denied by Gibson:

I like how Aatu Räty shoved off his check to get open, circa 2003, Todd Bertuzzi, before the coward known as Barry Trotz publicly complained about it, and officials started calling penalties for it.

Then you had number one centre David Kampf setting up Fil Hronek, who can dance for days, and landing a boom, headshot:

And then you had multiple dudes just banging at the puck in the crease as if to say “see? we tried” as the time wore down on the clock:

It was another third period, that’s about the best I can describe it. The Canucks went for a skate, took some shots, and hopefully drank some beers in the parking lot.

Best sure why not
Foote is team tank. Empty net with over 5 min 😂😂#canucks

— NuckenFutz (@itOKimALimoDrvr) December 9, 2025

I keep waiting to see how early Adam Foote will pull the goalie and by what margin. Will we ever see a 7-0 lead where the Canucks pull the goalie two minutes into the third? I can only hope so.

But on this night, Corolla, sweet, reliable Corolla, stalled on the breakout:

Did Dylan Larkin wink at Quinn Hughes? One can only hope.

Best put a bit of mustard on it
i'm sherwood rn #canucks

— velsita 🫧 (@velmeid) December 9, 2025

Full credit to Kiefer Sherwood for showing a modicum of “eff you” energy, as he landed a big hit on Lucas Raymond to close out the game:

That is one of those hits where people debate for days about if it was a headshot or not, leading to AI generated thesis presented at 2 am, followed up by still photos of the exact moment they believe contact was made with a body part, all of which is to say it was a big hit and Raymond is fine, so we don’t need to fight.

And that was the game. Now we can get back to waiting for Elliotte Friedman to tweet about Quinn Hughes again.

Yay.

PRESENTED BY VIVID SEATS




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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/stanch...inue-apathy-spiral-4-0-loss-detroit-red-wings
 
Abby Canucks give up late goals on back-to-back nights to drop a pair of games at home

It may not be resulting in nightly wins, but the Abbotsford Canucks’ recent stretch has at least offered baby steps in the right direction.

The team welcomed the Coachella Valley Firebirds to the newly minted Rogers Forum for the final pair of games of a four-game homestand. Despite strong efforts from goaltenders Jiri Patera and Aku Koskenvuo, the Canucks dropped both games to draw their record to 5-15-1-3 on the season.

Game One​


It was a Saturday night in Abbotsford, and as the team hosted its fifth annual Teddy Bear Toss game, the building buzzed with energy.

After staving off an early Jujhar Khaira hooking penalty, the fans did not have to hold onto their teddies for long.

On a power play of their own, Jackson Kunz jumped on a failed Firebird clearing attempt. Collecting the puck behind the net, he found Nils Aman in the slot, who wasted no time from his knees to send the teddy bears flying.

IT'S RAINING BEARS IN ABBY THANKS TO NILS ÅMAN! 🧸 pic.twitter.com/lAStPrrXr7

— Abbotsford Canucks (@abbycanucks) December 7, 2025

He joins a list that includes Jett Woo, Chase Wouters, Phil Di Giuseppe, and Will Lockwood as Teddy Bear Toss goalscorers in franchise history.

Carrying play for much of the remaining period, the Firebirds evened the score on yet another man-advantage. Collecting the puck on the goalline, Oscar Fisker Molgaard spun and found Jagger Firkus with the perfect dish to send Jiri Patera spinning.

THE FIRKUS CIRCUS STRIKES AGAIN 🎪🔥 POWERPLAY GOAL TO TIE IT UP! 🚨

1-1 pic.twitter.com/Mh5waFIJJ6

— Coachella Valley Firebirds (@Firebirds) December 7, 2025

But the stalemate was short-lived, as Jimmy Schuldt responded promptly with his first as an Abbotsford Canuck. Following the initial face-off, Schuldt sent a pass intended for the front of the net, which took a fortuitous bounce off a skate and past Nikke Kokko.

JIMMY RESTORES THE LEAD 🤩 pic.twitter.com/FugiZVHRtp

— Abbotsford Canucks (@abbycanucks) December 7, 2025

Despite being outshot by a 17-6 margin, the Canucks enjoyed a 2-1 lead after 20 minutes of play.

Just three minutes into the second frame, Mackenzie MacEachern provided some insurance. Jockeying for control on the rush, he fired a quick snapshot to the short side to beat the netminder for the 3-1 advantage.

BIG MAC NETS ONE ON THE BREAKAWAY! 🚨 pic.twitter.com/stjrYjFjqW

— Abbotsford Canucks (@abbycanucks) December 7, 2025

The middle stanza saw a total of six penalties called, and despite being outshot for a second straight period, the Canucks enjoyed a solid lead heading into the final stretch.

But the Firebirds had other plans and responded quickly to kickstart an eventual comeback.

Just seconds after the opening minute of the third period, defenceman Tyson Jugnauth sent a relatively routine shot from the blueline toward Patera. Unable to control the puck, he gave up a juicy rebound that bounced out to Firkus. Despite the netminder’s best attempts to slide over, the young sharpshooter deposited the puck for his second goal of the game.

OH YEAH FIRK!! 🔥🎪🚨

3-2 pic.twitter.com/BJSycw5MyU

— Coachella Valley Firebirds (@Firebirds) December 7, 2025

Despite allowing a goal that he likely wants back, Patera was the story of the game. Heading into the final minutes of the match, he had made close to 40 shots and kept up his end of the bargain to provide the team’s second win of the homestand.

But with their netminder pulled in the final two minutes, the Birds pressed hard. With some terrific puck movement, the puck found its way to Ben Meyers in the slot, who sent a one-timer past Patera to tie the game late to send this game to an eventual shootout.

BEN MEYERS TIES UP THE GAME WITH 1:34 LEFT IN THE 3RD PERIOD!! 🔥🔥

3-3 pic.twitter.com/8AXKHmRBYJ

— Coachella Valley Firebirds (@Firebirds) December 7, 2025

The visiting team would score on their first two attempts in the shootout en route to a 4-3 victory to spoil the Tedyd Bear Toss event at the Rogers Forum. Despite the loss, Jiri Patera earned the game’s second star with a 42-save effort on home ice.

Game two​


Unlike Saturday evening, game two wasn’t nearly as electric and eventful. Aku Koskenvuo received his fifth start of the season and was only tested five times in the opening period. For the first time all weekend, the Canucks enjoyed the advantage (9-5) on the shot clock.

The Canucks did draw first blood in the second period, courtesy of Duncan, BC’s Ben Berard. Gaining entry, Nils Aman patiently held onto the puck before firing a spinning pass to the slot where Berard was lurking from the corner. Redirecting the pass, the puck found its way through Victor Ostman for his sixth of the campaign.

HE'S JUST BEN AND HE SCORES GOALS! 🔥 pic.twitter.com/wt7WEEyDVS

— Abbotsford Canucks (@abbycanucks) December 8, 2025

But like most leads from the weekend, it was relatively short-lived. While killing a penalty of their own, the Firebirds jumped for an odd-man rush on the Canucks.

Collecting the puck on the entry was J.R. Avon, who snapped the shot shortside on Koskevnuo to even the score.

AVON EVENS THE SCORE 🔥
1-1 pic.twitter.com/uthAXHl0P7

— Coachella Valley Firebirds (@Firebirds) December 8, 2025

Like Patera on Saturday, the young Finnish netminder played a strong game and kept his team well within the game up until the final buzzer.

With under five minutes to play in the third period, however, the Firebirds struck for yet another late dagger.

Having felt like he was held up, Jimmy Schuldt was caught complaining to the referee, allowing the Firebirds to jump ahead for an odd-man rush. Jacob Melanson dropped the puck back for Ben Meyers before he placed a perfect shot to the short side top corner to ice the game.

BENNY TO BRING THE BIRDS ON TOP 🔥
2-1 pic.twitter.com/eahob2W8CP

— Coachella Valley Firebirds (@Firebirds) December 8, 2025

With the netminder pulled, the Canucks provided a late-period push, but weren’t able to find the equalizer. For a second consecutive game, a Canucks goalie was awarded with a player of the game honour (third star) as Aku Koskenvuo stopped 25 of 27 shots in the 2-1 defeat.

Despite being in each game, the Canucks conceded late tallies and dropped both matches to the Coachella Valley Firebirds. They will enjoy a week-long break before heading to Calgary for a quick two-game road trip against the Wranglers.

The puck will drop for game one at the Scotiabank Saddledome at 5:00 pm PT on Saturday, December 13.

Sponsored by bet365

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/abby-canucks-late-goals-back-nights-drop-pair-games-home
 
Blackfish: 2025 World Juniors invites, AHL struggles, OHL cold streaks, and more

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

To our regular readers: our sincere apologies for missing last week’s edition. The good news is that this report comes jam-packed with everything we missed!

It’s been a turbulent stretch for the farmhands in Abbotsford. Results remain hard to come by, but a win and several close losses have shown proof of life. A handful of young defenders continue to shoulder heavy minutes, Danila Klimovich finally found the back of the net, and the return of several bodies to the lineup has helped bring about a semblance of stability.

Across the CHL, the momentum is a bit stronger. Riley Patterson erupted with nine points, Gabriel Chiarot continued his rugged scoring pace, and Braeden Cootes pushed himself into consideration for a spot on the World Juniors roster.

Speaking of which: three Canucks prospects were invited by their respective nations’ squads ahead of this year’s tournament.

With progress, growing pains, rebounds, and international intrigue all in the mix, this week’s report is a busy one. Let’s dive in.

Abbotsford Canucks​


Abby.png


Before we get to the farm team, we thought we’d talk a bit about Tom Willander and what he’s been up to since being recalled in late October.

Since returning to the NHL roster, not only has he picked up seven assists in his 20 games played, but he scored his first NHL goal courtesy of a wicked snapshot release that we’ve seen from him in the past. Instead of looking back at an AHL return, the rookie rearguard’s strong play has prompted calls for even more NHL ice time.

Tom Willander snipes his first NHL goal! 🎯 pic.twitter.com/y8rt09Tmho

— Sportsnet (@Sportsnet) December 7, 2025

Here at CanucksArmy, the consensus for a player to have graduated out of our official prospect rankings is 25 NHL games; Willander looks poised to surpass that mark by Christmas.

Willander’s promotion, along with an extensive list of injuries and absences of other defenders, has naturally taken its toll on the Abbotsford Canucks. Fortunately, things are starting to look better now that capable bodies are returning to the blueline. Not great, but it’s a start!

As you can see from the statistical ledger above, there are very few stat lines worth highlighting. Also, don’t bother looking at the plus/minus category. It’s horrendous. The team’s play as a whole has looked better. They picked up a victory in one of their four home games this past week, with all three of their losses coming courtesy of extremely late third-period tallies to lose by a single goal. Again: Not great, but it’s a start!

Kirill Kudryavtsev returned to the lineup after a brief absence due to injury. He continues to rack up heavy minutes, even surpassing the 28-minute mark at one point last week. Through six games since our last report, he is the only player on the list who posted a positive plus-minus rating (plus 1) while adding two assists to his boxcar stats.

Admittedly, the bar is egregiously low. However, given the minutes he is playing and everything else that is going on in the NHL and AHL organization, it’s the only mildly impressive number worth highlighting.

During that same stretch, Sawyer Mynio added just a single assist and finished with a plus-minus of minus-5.

We’d been wondering whether Danila Klimovich would ever show up for the 2025-26 season. Mercifully, he did. Albeit briefly. Not only did he score his first goal of the season in the club’s 5-2 regulation win against the Tucson Roadrunners, but his second, third, and an eventual shootout winner a few nights later against the Calgary Wranglers!

THE KLIM-REAPER WE ALL KNOW AND LOVE 🔥 pic.twitter.com/mhEIqK1yhV

— Abbotsford Canucks (@abbycanucks) November 30, 2025

WIND IT UP, KLIM 🎯 pic.twitter.com/i1SRpC1yUW

— Abbotsford Canucks (@abbycanucks) November 30, 2025

With such a battered and beaten-down roster, Klimovich dusting off the cobwebs to produce at all was vital to the Abby Canucks’ offence.

With just three goals, five points and 45 shots in 22 games, this can’t even be considered something close to a bounce back. It’s something. However, it’s production along the lines of someone who has played their way out of a contract extension, not someone playing themselves toward an AHL top-six role, let alone an NHL future.

Vilmer Alriksson has been a much more impactful player than when he first stepped into the league. In three short months, Alriksson has worked his way out of the bottom six and into a top-six role.

While the production hasn’t been there, his work rate at the net front and in the corners should eventually lead to more on the stat sheet. On a nightly basis, the big man does a solid job of making his opposition’s job tough. He currently sits second on the team in hits with 42, precisely what you want from a player of his ilk: crashing, causing havoc, and making life difficult for defencemen in the d-zone.

On the polar opposite side of the physicaity coin sits Jonathan Lekkerimäki, who returned to Abbotsford after posting one assist in a four-game stint with Vancouver. Down in Abbotsford, he’s a clear difference maker, where his willingness to shoot is a considerable help to a team struggling to put the puck in the net.

Lekkerimäki did not dress in Sunday’s loss to Coachella Valley, meaning he will need to fly and play with the team in their two-game stint in Calgary to be eligible for an NHL recall. If the organization even wants to, that is.

If you’ve been following us here at Blackfish, reading the Farmies, or simply existing in this market, you know that the 2025-26 season has been tough on the Abbotsford Canucks. No position has felt that struggle more than the organization’s goaltenders. Nikita Tolopilo has been solid, but a carousel of absences in Vancouver has seen him start just six times in three months!

It took time, but Jiri Patera climbed himself over the .900 save percentage threshold, while the two rookie netminders, Aku Koskenvuo and Ty Young, continue to operate well below a passing grade.

For Koskenvuo, his play has been much better than his numbers may suggest. He looks calm between the pipes and squares up nicely. As for Young, he has struggled. Winless in seven starts, Young not only sports disappointing numbers, but his struggles have been visibly apparent when facing AHL shooters.

To help him with a reset, the club reassigned Young to Kalamazoo to collect himself and hopefully rebuild his game. Young has previously shown well in the ECHL and AHL levels, and now it’s simply a matter of returning his form to that level. His first opportunity to start for Kalamazoo is Wednesday, when they host the Bloomington Bisons.

World Juniors​


For prospect enthusiasts, we’re inching closer to the best time of the year. No, not Christmas. The World Juniors. This year’s event takes place in Minnesota, and the Canucks will have a trio of prospects attending tryout camps for their respective countries.

The first to receive the call was 2025 fifth-round pick Wilson Björck, who was invited to attend the Swedish camp. Inviting just 26 players, the team is set to make just one cut, giving the forward a very high chance of earning a spot, likely to play alongside his younger brother.

Shortly after, Basile Sansonnens received the invite to attend Team Switzerland’s camp, and is a near-lock to make the team. Sansonnens is a shutdown-type of defenceman who carries previous World Juniors experience and logs time for Lausanne HC of the men’s Swiss National League. It would be a surprise not to see him play a significant top-four role for Switzerland.

Finally, the third name announced was Braeden Cootes, who was invited to Team Canada’s camp, which will take place from December 11th to the 22nd.

Sources close to the tournament have told us that Team Canada expects to make three cuts, one from each position. That would bring their roster down to just two goalies, which would be an interesting choice. The team will also keep its roster open until December 22nd in the hopes that a few names will be loaned to them from their NHL clubs.

For Cootes, there aren’t many NHL forwards who could jeopardize his potential to make the final team. Berkeley Catton of the Seattle Kraken would have been a serious candidate before being announced week-to-week with an injury last Monday. The other is Ben Kindel, who would easily earn a spot should he be loaned by the Pittsburgh Penguins. Anaheim’s Beckett Sennecke feels like a bit of a pipe dream for Canada, given that he’s currently fourth on the Ducks by points.

He may not be a prominent member of the lineup, but our money has Cootes earning a spot over a few of the names invited to the camp.

He’s had a productive five-game slate since our last report, picking up three goals and three assists, with 26 shots fired on net. Through 17 games, Cootes is now firing at well over a point-per-game pace with 10 goals and 23 points. And just because, enjoy some of Cootes’ best moments from this season.

For no real reason, here are some of Braeden Cootes' top plays from his 2025-26 season. #Canucks pic.twitter.com/ave1vaqk6u

— Dave Hall (@davehall1289) December 5, 2025

All three teams will take part in preliminary action, with Sweden and Canada in a doubleheader.

Braeden Cootes:

  • Sweden – Dec. 17 & 20
  • Denmark – Dec. 23

Wilson Björck:

  • Canada – Dec. 17 & 20
  • Switzerland – Dec. 23

Basile Sansonnens:

  • Minnesota State (NCAA) – Dec. 16
  • Denmark – Dec. 21
  • Sweden – Dec. 23

CHL​


CHL-.png


Elsewhere in the CHL, Riley Patterson led the week with four goals and five assists over four games, sliding into a clear lead in the Niagara IceDogs scoring race.

Running at an 80-point pace, he’s well on track to shatter his previous career high of 59 points. Despite being on the top power play unit, only five of his 30 points have come on the man-advantage. That his 5v5 production covers most of his points totals is very encouraging.

One area of play that significantly improved over the last stretch was his face-off numbers. After a slow start, he’s brought his percentage up to 50% thanks to a string of games that saw him go 9/14, 10/13, 10/12, and 11/19, just to highlight a few.

Sitting just below the IceDogs in the standings is Gabriel Chiarot’s Brampton Steelheads. Despite the team’s middling results through 2025-26, the Canucks’ sixth-round pick has been a decent story. Last week, Chiraot added another four points to his ledger along with 25 shots on goal. With three more goals, he now leads his team with 13 on the year. Though he’s producing at a rate that will eclipse his previous highs, he’s still producing at a disappointing under a point-per-game pace (56 points in 64 games).

Considering his profile, it’s not overly surprising that his production leaves a lot to be desired. However, his “grind you down” style carries a lot of intrigue. Most of his 13 goals have come from jam plays around the net or from a wicked release from in the slot.

chiarot-chart-269x300.png


It’s been a tough go for Kieren Dervin and the Kingston Frontenacs, who are winless over their last nine games. Dervin’s production took a mighty dip over the last couple of weeks, with just a pair of assists in his last six games. The Frontenacs have only scored 10 goals during that stretch. Still, it’s a disappointing stretch from an intrigued follower’s standpoint.

The cold streak appeared to run through the majority of the Canucks’ OHL representatives.

Aleksei Medvedev’s numbers dropped to earth after an incredible start to his draft-plus-one season. The London Knights have a 5-5-0-0 record in their last ten, with Medvedev posting a .883 save percentage during a run that saw him win just two of his last five starts.

Medvedev’s 2.63 goals against and .0.910 save percentage are still top-ten in the OHL. However, these past few weeks have been a low point. Medvedev will need to shake it off if he hopes to bring the Knights out of the gutter and back to their typical winning ways.

Finally, Parker Alcos continued his positive season over in the dub with another plus-five across four games. Alcos now sits in a tie for fourth among all defenders with a plus-22 on the season.

He’s found a comfortable home paired alongside Ethan Mackenzie, who earned an invitation to Team Canada’s World Junior camp. Together, they have matching plus-minus’ and have formed one of the best defensive pairings in the league.

NCAA​


1-NCAA.png


Over in the College circuit, Anthony Romani had a decent stretch, with two goals and two assists in four games. His week was highlighted by his first multi-goal game at the NCAA level.

The situation for the former OHL winger hasn’t changed this season. Romani is on a stacked Michigan State team, building chemistry with the same linemates on the team’s third line. His production hasn’t been off the charts, but he’s found ways to score at 5v5.

The NCAA will head into its final weekend before the league goes on hiatus for the holidays.

Rest of the world​


1-row.png


Ilya Safonov continues to plug along as a fascinating profile overseas in Russia. With another two goals, he’s up to 10 on the season. We’re still not convinced that he has much NHL upside. Still, he’s a large body with good hands in tight, who offers tons of intrigue as a potential net front presence.

Ilya Safonov hits the 10 goal mark and is now on pace for a career-high 21 on the year. pic.twitter.com/xvNLKLiXx8

— Dave Hall (@davehall1289) November 30, 2025

Beautiful goal from Ilya Safonov earlier today. #Canucks pic.twitter.com/cmMlWGaeEd

— Dave Hall (@davehall1289) November 28, 2025

That will do it for this week’s instalment. With the World Juniors now right around the corner, we’re getting excited to cover some of the preliminary play over the next few weeks.

Until next week, folks — thanks for reading.

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/blackfish-world-juniors-invites-ahl-struggles-ohl-cold-streaks-more
 
Canucks injury update: Chytil ramping up intensity, Pettersson unlikely Thursday vs. Sabres

After an optional practice on Tuesday, the Vancouver Canucks hit the ice for a regular practice session on Wednesday morning.

The club’s top two centres, Elias Pettersson and Filip Chytil, who are currently injured, did not join their teammates on the ice for practice. But according to Donnie & Dhali’s Rick Dhaliwal, both Pettersson and Chytil practiced together ahead of the rest of the team’s skate:

“No Elias Petterson at practice today. He did skate [before the team] this morning. … The other thing I want to mention is that Filip Chytil was on the ice this morning with Petterson, and he’s picking up the intensity of his skates.”

Chytil, 25, has been out of the Canucks lineup since the Washington Capitals game on October 19. Capitals power forward Tom Wilson caught Chytil with a hit in the neutral zone late in the first period.

The Czech centreman has struggled with concussions throughout his nine-year NHL career. In that time, he has played over 70 regular season games in just two seasons. Chytil set career highs in goals (22), assists (23) and points (45) and plus-minus rating (plus-15) in 74 games with the New York Rangers in the 2022-23 season.

Acquired as the centrepiece of the JT Miller trade, Chytil has played 21 games in a Canucks sweater over the past 10 months, scoring five goals and four assists for nine points.

Pettersson, 27, has missed the last two games – against the Minnesota Wild and Detroit Red Wings – with an upper-body injury. The Swede took pre-game skate on Saturday against the Wild, but left early and was ruled out afterwards.

Canucks Head Coach Adam Foote shared after Monday’s pre-game skate that they were hopeful to have more information later in the day on the extent of Pettersson’s injury. After their shutout loss to the Red Wings, Foote was wary of giving Pettersson a distinct timeframe on his return. Following today’s practice, Foote shared that Pettersson is unlikely to return on Thursday against the Buffalo Sabres but will be travelling with the team on their upcoming five-game road trip.

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/vancou...y-pettersson-unlikely-thursday-buffalo-sabres
 
Canucks: Comparing Tom Willander’s strong start to his draft peers, NHL comparables, and teammates

Once the Vancouver Canucks drafted Tom Willander 11th overall in the 2023 NHL Entry Draft, there was immediate pressure on him. The 2023 draft was considered very deep, with potential impact players at every position, including in the middle of the first round. His ultimate upside was considered less than, for example, Axel Sandin-Pellikka, but his elite mobility made him a sure bet to at least play in the NHL. His profile was that of an elite puck supporter who can shut down the rush game with his legs. To justify his selection, Willander needed to demonstrate strong development in the details of his game, and early in his career, the results are promising.

Two defencemen were selected before the young Canucks’ rearguard in the draft: David Reinbacher and Dmitry Simashev. Five more were selected after him in the first round. Only Willander, Simashev, and Sandin-Pellikka have actually suited up in the NHL. Expanding this out to include the entire 2022, 2023, 2024, and 2025 drafts reveals that only 19 defencemen have played 20 or more NHL games.

xGF% = this is the difference between Expected Goals For and Expected Goals Against, represented as a percentage
SCF% = this is the difference between Scoring Changes For and Scoring Chances Against, represented as a percentage
OZ Start % = percentage of time the player starts their shift with an offensive zone faceoff (only accounts for offensive and defensive starts, not neutral zone starts)
DZ Start % = percentage of time the player starts their shift with a defensive zone faceoff (only accounts for offensive and defensive starts, not neutral zone starts)
AVG TOI = average time on ice per game

Draft Peers​


2025-12-10-12_21_38-CA-Various-Research-Google-Sheets-—-Mozilla-Firefox.png


Willander is sixth in xGF% and fourth in SCF%. This means that when he is on the ice, there is an equal amount of scoring chances for and against the Canucks. It’s not so much that he is winning his minutes but holding the opposition to a draw. For a young defenceman, this is actually very good as it means he is not being taken advantage of or blowing his coverage.

Early in their careers, Willander is outperforming Simashev, who was selected five spots earlier in the 2023 draft, and is roughly on par with Sandin-Pellikka’s results and production. In stark contrast to the vast majority of his peers, however, is that Willander averages less than 14 minutes in ice time. Only teammate Elias Pettersson averages less ice time among these players. The early results and his underlying numbers show that Willander can handle more responsibility.

It’s all well and good to compare him to his peers, but how do these numbers compare to more established NHL defencemen? Well, CanucksArmy has that covered!

NHL Comparables​


2025-12-10-12_29_19-CA-Various-Research-Google-Sheets-—-Mozilla-Firefox.png


The defencemen were chosen as having a comparable playstyle to Willander. Typically, these are strong defenders who provide support in the offensive zone through one-touch passes and constant movement to keep opposing defenders on their toes. Charlie McAvoy, for instance, was frequently cited by Craig Button as an NHLer with stylistic similarities to the Canucks defender.

From a pure production standpoint, Willander is tied for second in points over this 20-game sample size. Once again, his xGF% and SCF% hold up very well, sixth and seventh, respectively. These metrics are in line with Jonas Brodin’s numbers. Brodin and Willander are roughly the same size and are both excellent skaters whose offence comes from supporting rather than driving. One primary difference, and this leads to Brodin’s counting stats being very muted, is that the offensive and defensive zone starts between the Wild and Canucks defenders are opposite of each other.

His ice time remains obscenely low with the second-lowest average. He has averaged nearly two and a half minutes less than Jaccob Slavin, the next player above him. In comparison, Brodin averaged an even 22 minutes a game through his first 20 times on an NHL surface.

For the season, the smooth-skating defenceman has provided top-four results from below third-pairing minutes.

Teammates​


2025-12-10-12_30_48-CA-Various-Research-Google-Sheets-—-Mozilla-Firefox.png


Willander is third in points, one of only two defencemen on the team to have a positive +/-, second to Quinn Hughes in xGF%, and third, barely behind Filip Hronek, in SCF%. In very limited icetime, he’s produced like a top-four defenceman. However, we would be remiss if we didn’t mention his rather gaudy OZ Start%.

He is second on the team with over 55% of his zone starts coming in the offensive zone. Much of this is driven by small sample size, limited ice time, and getting usage on the second unit power play. At 5v5, his OZ Start% drops to 51% which would put him in line with Elias Pettersson’s deployment.

The power play deployment does not significantly affect his counting stats, either. Seven of his eight points have come at even strength. When adjusted to 5v5, his xGF% drops to 44.67% and his SCF% falls to 45.98%. The sample size is very small, and one game, good or bad in either direction, can greatly skew his numbers.

Ideally, his icetime begins to climb. On December 8th, against the Detroit Red Wings, he saw the ice for 15 minutes. However, the previous game was a gutsy 4-2 victory over the Wild, where Willander scored his first NHL goal and added an assist; he only played 13:18.

As the Canucks’ season collapses in on itself, Tom Willander’s play has been a bright spot. Given his extremely limited icetime, his counting stats are impressive. Putting up eight points through his first 20 games while averaging under 14 minutes a night was not something any of his comparables, peers, or teammates have replicated. With how the Canucks’ season has gone, there’s no reason not to give him more responsibility.

Sponsored by bet365

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/vancou...g-start-draft-peers-nhl-comparables-teammates
 
Instant Reaction: Sabres 3, Canucks 2

Welcome back to Instant Reaction, the series here at CanucksArmy where we give you our instant reaction to tonight’s Vancouver Canucks game and ask our readers to do the same in the comments section below!

The Toilet Bowl. The Sad Club Showdown. The At Least We’re Not Them Cup. The Battle for the Basement. No matter what you were calling tonight’s game between the Buffalo Sabres and Vancouver Canucks, we’re here to give you our instant reaction to it!

Starting Lineup​

Warmup #Canucks lines vs. @BuffaloSabres

Boeser. Kämpf. Garland.
Kane. O’Connor. Sherwood.
DeBrusk. Sasson. Karlsson.
Höglander. Räty. Bains.

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

🥅#DemkoTime 🥅

7pm on @Sportsnet650 https://t.co/J6DNM1E8Qt pic.twitter.com/0vmsvmmkyn

— Brendan Batchelor (@BatchHockey) December 12, 2025

It was the return of Thatcher Demko to the Vancouver goal crease!

First Period​


The building was quiet in the first period, and for good reason. This one was a snoozefest early on.

Rasmus Dahlin opened the scoring on the Sabres’ fourth shot of the night, and this was one that Demko wanted back:

Rasmus Dahlin opens the scoring for Buffalo.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/ri3hfhsUbM

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) December 12, 2025

1-0 Sabres.

Before the end of the first, the Canucks got their first power play of the game after Tom Willander took a high-stick to the face. If you didn’t watch the game, I want you to watch this play and tell me how you think the officials dished out the penalties. Your hint is that Willander was bleeding.


If you guessed double minor for Jack Quinn, and a minor penalty to Willander for high-sticking, you’d be correct. And no, I won’t blame you if you need to go watch that replay again. What a silly call.

The Canucks did get a power play out of the ordeal though, and Kiefer Sherwood didn’t waste much time to make good on it, scoring his first goal in 11 games:

🚨CANUCKS GOAL🚨

Kiefer Sherwood scores his first goal in 11 games!

🎥: Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/Hg9w583ASo

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) December 12, 2025

1-1 with just over 10 seconds to go in the first.

Some takeaways from the first:
-Really liked some of what I saw from Nils Höglander tonight. It’s good to see him getting more comfortable.
-Who is the Canuck you’ve noticed the least lately? For me, it’s Evander Kane.

Second Period​


The Canucks started the second period with some great jump in their game, and it was fitting that Max Sasson pulled away and capitalized on a breakaway attempt to give the Canucks their first lead of the night:

🚨CANUCKS GOAL🚨

Max Sasson goes five hole on Alex Lyon and puts Vancouver up 2-1!

🎥: Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/xq3M8Morsl

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) December 12, 2025

2-1 Canucks.

The Canucks busted out the shoddy defensive zone coverage once again, and this time it was Tage Thompson who took advantage of that.

Tage Thompson rips a shot past Thatcher Demko to tie this game.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/uQppTGdyii

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) December 12, 2025

2-2.

With just over five minutes to go in the period, Filip Hronek took a penalty, giving the Sabres their second power play of the game. Buffalo wasted little time in capitalizing, scoring their third goal of the game on their 12th shot:

The pride of Chilliwack Zach Benson puts the Sabres up by one.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/AotEuOHdiN

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) December 12, 2025

3-2 Sabres.

With 46 seconds left, the Canucks went to the power play once again, and were once again looking for a late goal, having already gone 1-for-1 on the night with Sherwood’s tally late in the first. That didn’t happen, so they entered the third with over a minute of power play time to work with.

Some takeaways from the second:
-Quinn Hughes just makes so many things happen whenever he’s on the ice. I hope amidst all the trade speculation and sad times in Vancouver that people are still allowing themselves to enjoy watching the greatest defenceman in franchise history do magical things.
-Brock Boeser missed a couple defensive assignments tonight, including covering Zach Benson in the bumper while the Canucks were on the PK.
-I noticed Evander Kane more in this period than I did in the first!

Third Period​


The third period started with utter chaos, as Thatcher Demko raced out to play a loose puck and rifled his clearing attempt off of Tyson Kozak and scrambled back to his crease. Thankfully, the puck stayed out and the Canucks continued to trail by only one.

That was a close call 😳

🎥: Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/WDDYx8ZcCh

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) December 12, 2025

Unfortunately, that killed some precious moments off of what was left of their power play.

They didn’t have to wait too long for their next one though, as Nils Höglander drew a slashing penalty with over 13 minutes to play. The Canucks generated some decent looks — there was Brock Boeser’s hard pass thorugh the crease to Jake DeBrusk and Filip Hronek’s point shot that hit the crossbar — but they couldn’t score, moving to 1-for-3 on the night.

That stood as the final.

What’s your instant reaction to tonight’s game? Let us know in the comments section below!

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/instant-reaction-buffalo-sabres-3-vancouver-canucks-2
 
The Stanchies: Canucks reach crossroads after 3-2 loss to Lyon-hearted Sabres

“This is NOT happenstance. This is NOT a simple pattern of failure. This is NOT inspirational. This is active, malicious torment.”

“This is hell.“
– Jon Bois, The Browns live in Hell (2017)

Losing to the modern-day Buffalo Sabres is a statement, no matter how you slice it.

Losing to the Sabres – in regulation, no less – is a fate worse than purgatory. The Sabres haven’t made the playoffs in a generation, and as it currently stands, they’re on par with a Canucks team that’s spent years avoiding a true rebuild, only for those shortsighted decisions to truly come to roost in 2025-26.

Last month, when the Canucks lost to the Blackhawks, it spelled out how they had officially lost ground on a team that had been completely in their rearview less than a couple of years ago. Chicago hasn’t even done a particularly good job rebuilding their roster, the Sabres even less so. But here we are, with both teams (and a few notable others like San Jose and Anaheim) firmly ahead of the Canucks in the standings and beating them on nights where Vancouver played objectively well.

The Canucks’ efforts over the last week against the likes of the Sabres, Red Wings and Mammoth have been among their best of the season. But that good play only amounted to three goals across all those games, with the rest of their offence only showing up against the Minnesota Wild. Today, when it was all said and done, the Canucks had outshot their opponents by a ratio of 2-to-1, were on the wrong end of the score again.

Everyone sees the writing on the wall. The fans at Rogers Arena tonight could barely even muster an angry response, having been in this exact situation so many times before. And if recent history is any indicator, they know there’s no real hope coming.

There’s no way out of this cycle other than steering into the skid, a direction Canucks ownership has routinely been unwilling to go. But maybe – just maybe – a game like this will be the straw that breaks the camel’s back.

Or maybe it”ll be business as usual, taking shortcuts and aiming for the middle from now until the sun burns out. As a positive guy, I’m choosing to believe in the former.

After a loss like this, something’s gotta give.

Best Win-Win-Win
Win or lose Canucks will stay in 32nd overall.

— Taj (@taj1944) December 12, 2025

Best Fit Check
happy thatcher demko return to all who celebrate

— annissa (@fieldingannissa) December 12, 2025

Thatcher Demko made his long-anticipated return to the Canucks’ lineup, and he did so with some new pads.

For those of you who are big pad design nerds like me, you were probably disappointed to see Demko take the net in plain white pads, as opposed to the more colourful black pads he paired with the Skate jersey at the start of the year.

Odds are that this was a choice that would make Ian Clark crack a smile: the old optical illusion that white pads create for shooters as they blend into the net behind them. How much it actually works is up for interpretation, but if the advantage is possible, why not take it? But it’s definitely the less fun choice.

Demko’s night wasn’t the smoothest ride. He definitely looked a bit rusty in his mechanics, was slow to get up after a few saves, and ended up allowing three goals on just 15 shots. I think getting rid of those cool Skate pads is to blame.

RIP, fun black, yellow and red pads. You shall be missed.

Best Foreshadowing
Shorty just said that the Sabres' Benson has gone 30+ games without a goal.
So, of course he's scoring tonight, right? #canucks

— Dragon Was Slayed (@522IntoOvertime) December 12, 2025

Best *Pitbull voice* Dah-lin
lol

— Chandler ✨ (@chan_bing) December 12, 2025

lmao of course #Canucks

— cat 🫧🇨🇦 (@canucksgrande) December 12, 2025

Rasmus Dahlin loves playing in Vancouver. It’s gotten to a point where he’s one of the longest point streaks an opposing player has had in this city, and it continued tonight thanks to some help from the Canucks’ defence.

It’s no secret that under Adam Foote this season, the Canucks have become overly reliant on the swarm defence approach, with players often surrounding the puck carrier from all angles as opposed to playing man-to-man coverage. And it just keeps burning them.

Tonight, on a Sabres zone entry that worked its way around Demko’s net, four Canucks all glided in towards the hashmarks. That choice left a wide open lane for Ryan McLeod to get a soft pass to Dahlin, who stepped into the top of the circles and fired a low knuckler that snuck under Demko.

If the Sabres are having that easy a time finding open ice against your defensive coverage, it’s time to toss those plans in the trash and try something new.

Best Fire with Fire?
Tom Willander, 2 minutes for getting high-sticked?? #Canucks

— Tyson Cole (@tyson_cole) December 12, 2025

willander villain arc is starting tonight pic.twitter.com/WKB0auNRNT

— Tommy (@tommykippes2) December 12, 2025

Tom Willander’s night was mostly quiet, save for one ridiculous moment late in the first.

In the final minute in the Canucks’ zone, Jack Quinn tried to juke Willander out in the corner, and somehow managed to smack him right in the schnoz, cutting Willander open. The high stick threw him for such a loop that he fell over and his own stick caught Quinn in the face.

The referees got together, and decided that even though Quinn would be getting a double minor, Willander deserved a penalty too. For being high-sticked!

What’s he supposed to do? Aside from say, “I’m sorry my hands went up, I was literally smacked in the nose with a hockey stick?”

Was it the right call by the precise letter of the law? Sure. But it’s still a dumb call, and you may quote me on that.

Best Puck Don’t Lie
CANUCKS REVENGE GOAL pic.twitter.com/fHZynIPO0K

— stephanie (@Stephabues) December 12, 2025

Kiefer Sherwood GOAL Fck yeah baby #Canucks pic.twitter.com/39UMGEwKgi

— Huggy🧸43 (@Huggy_Bear43) December 12, 2025

You know who else thought that penalty call was stupid? Kiefer Sherwood, because he wasted no time in erasing the deficit.

With the Canucks on a power play two minutes shorter than it should’ve been, Sherwood took the puck from Quinn Hughes and put a puck on goal that Alex Lyon got in front of. The rebound bounced out to Conor Garland, who couldn’t get it through the sticks in front, but by that time, the initial shooter had followed his own shot to the netfront.

“Coincidental minors, my ass,” he practically said with that goal.

That other sound you hear is Jim Rutherford calling the league’s GMs to let them know the price for Sherwood just went up by a second first round pick. And that’s such a deal for this franchise face, you’re practically robbing them!

Best Max Homeroom
upon further inspection, Sasson's first home *point* of the season https://t.co/ePSAOAT0Kx

— Jeff Paterson (@patersonjeff) December 12, 2025

As more and more centres have left the Canucks’ lineup, Max Sasson has been carrying more and more of the workload. Today, he took his turn in the Elias Pettersson, “bring the fans out of their seats” role.

This goal starts with Junior Pettersson smashing a zone exit from behind the net all the way to Jake DeBrusk waiting near the Canucks’ bench. As Josh Dunne closed in on Jake n Bake, he slipped the puck through the Sabres’ checker to the A-Sasson, who split the defence and slid the puck incredibly neatly through Lyon’s legs.

There haven’t been a whole lot of genuine success stories for the Canucks this year, but man, is Sasson really becoming one. He’ll certainly be part of any solution in the short term.

Best Oops, I did it again
#Canucks Perhaps Foote should mention to the fellas that they should cover the slot and the front of the net

— dustin fluff (@DustinFluff) December 12, 2025

what if we didnt leave guys open IN THE FUCKING SLOT

— tatiana🏒 (@tatituzzi) December 12, 2025

Some people never make the same mistake twice. The Canucks, on the other hand, make the same mistake over and over again.

The Canucks swarming tactic once again led to a few too many checkers below the hashmarks, and this time it left Tage Thompson with far too much time and space at the top of the circles. And once he got the puck, nobody even made a real effort to rush him. They simply sat back and watched as Thompson fired the puck over Demko’s blocker.

If I ever see this defence again, it’ll be too soon.

Best Easy Bet-son
Your guy just scored @ThomasDrance

— Harman Dayal (@harmandayal2) December 12, 2025

That one’s on Shorty. How many times did he have to mention that Benson stat?#Canucks

Ian St. (@ian-st.bsky.social) 2025-12-12T04:32:16.839Z

Sometimes even the greats make mistakes. Today the oft infailable John Shorthouse made two.

One was thinking an earthquake had happened during the broadcast (though one did happen in Japan, so he might just be reaching god tier powers). The other was reminding everyone that Zach Benson hasn’t scored all year.

I made the same error in today’s Stanchies Pregame video, literally naming Zach Benson as a player to watch knowing he hadn’t yet found the back of the net. A rookie mistake.

Anyways, Benson waited for the slot to open up on the penalty kill as Doan fed him a quick pass from the goal line. Benson’s shot wasn’t the firmest, but it came off his stick fast enough that an “below game speed” Demko couldn’t cut the angle down in time.

In a completely unrelated story, Tom Willander played just 12 minutes of ice time and was a -1 in that time. And got totally jobbed on a high stick.

I don’t know whether or not this loss will officially close a chapter, but it would be a bit poetic to end on a Zach Benson game winner, no?

Best Lowering Trade Value
quinn just tried to kill sherwood

— tatiana🏒 (@tatituzzi) December 12, 2025

Quinn Hughes is secretly playing the long game. He doesn’t want to leave Vancouver, and he doesn’t want Sherwood to leave either.

That’s why he obviously purposefully ripped a bullet of a shot directly into the back of Sherwood’s leg at the end of the second period. After all, you can’t trade for an injured guy!

Look, I’m just reaching for any semblence of a life raft in the ocean at this point. Never let go, Jack.

Best Almost Nightmare
I LOST 10 YEARS DEMKO PLEASE #canucks

— quinn’s raccoon eyes (@hogsbighog) December 12, 2025

Thatcher Demko narrowly avoided the ultimate disaster early in the third.

With Buffalo’s Tyson Kozak pressing on the penalty kill, Demko made the decision to leave the net and play the puck. But he somehow shot it right into Kozak instead, sending the puck sailing backwards into the air. Luckily for Thatcher, Kozak had zero clue where the puck had gone until it was too late, and he ran out of real estate to tuck a shot into the empty net.

If that puck had gone in, this game might’ve ended with a few more boos than it did in a one goal game.

Best Lyon in the Snow
Alex Lyon bringing back the lost art of planking

— arielle (@ellycelly) December 12, 2025

For what it’s worth, Alex Lyon did everything the Sabres asked of him in this game. The Canucks threw a lot of good shots his way, and while he didn’t goalie them, he did outplay the guy at the other end.

He even got to the puck he couldn’t find, like this Fil Hronek shot that he lied down to cover up.

Sometimes the smartest path to a save requires some mediation and self reflection.

Best Horseshoes and Hand Grenades
so many chances and still can’t score #Canucks

— cat 🫧🇨🇦 (@canucksgrande) December 12, 2025

To borrow their coach’s favourite saying, The Canucks “were right there” in the last stages.

The closest the Canucks came to tying the game were both off the stick of Drew O’Connor. The first was thanks to a steal by Linus Karlsson off the stick of Connor Timmins. Karlsson threw a between the legs pass to Run-DOC to avoid a pokecheck from Lyon, but O’Connor couldn’t get a clean shot.

Then a few moments later, O’Connor got a small break off a pass from Arshdeep Bains and deked Lyon out, but once again rolled a nat one on finishing.

The Canucks worked for a few final chances, knowing the Oilers had managed to find a late tying goal during the Sabres’ last game. But these are not the two-time defending Western Champions. Far from it.

Sherwood took a few one-time opportunites, but the Sabres threw their entire bodies into the shooting lanes like King Harold protecting Shrek from the Fairy Godmother.

No one turned into a frog, but you might’ve heard a clock strike midnight on something else.

Best Star Promotion
They switched up the players on the ene of first intermission video. It used to be Boeser and that other guy. Now it's Hoggy and…. ? Can anyone help with my terrible face blindness?Not sure why the pic of the screen is so ass. Sorry.#Canucks

Ryan avgtraveller (@viewfromtherog.bsky.social) 2025-12-12T04:03:40.482Z

Linus Karlsson is becoming such an integral part of the Canucks, that they went out of their way to film a new video segment with him and Nils Höglander in the style of the opening video.

If that doesn’t mean you’ve made it to the NHL for good, nothing will. Good for Linus.

Best It’s a Sign of the Times
There it is.. first jersey on the ice this season pic.twitter.com/LZaHRaHDPD

— Lina Setaghian (@Linaset) December 12, 2025

Welcome to the final show, I hope you’re wearing your best clothes.

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/stanch...reach-crossroads-3-2-loss-lyon-hearted-sabres
 
A quick look at the pieces coming back to the Canucks in the Hughes trade

The Vancouver Canucks have parted ways with their captain, Quinn Hughes.

While it’s a stinger to trade a top-10 player in the NHL, Hughes came with a hefty price tag. The Canucks acquired centre Marco Rossi, winger Liam Öhgren, defenceman Zeev Buium, and a 2026 first-round pick.

Let’s take a quick look at these pieces the Canucks acquired in the trade.

Marco Rossi​


Rossi is a 24-year-old, left-shot centreman. He set a career-high in goals (24), assists (36) and points (60), serving as the Wild’s number one centre. He mostly played with Mats Zuccarello and split his time with either Kirill Kaprizov or Matthew Boldy on the left side. In the dot, Rossi has a career 46.1% faceoff percentage. However, we have seen him improve over the previous two seasons, with a 46.8% last season and up to 48.6% this season. Is it great? Not when you’re below 50%. But it undoubtedly is an upgrade to what they’re icing down the middle currently.

The biggest gripe about Rossi is his size: 5-foot-9, 182-lbs. While that height isn’t ideal down the middle, Rossi has still been able to produce, as he showed last season.

The Canucks were interested in Rossi over the summer before the Wild extended him to a three-year, $5 million AAV contract. They finally get their hands on him.

Rossi has been out of the Wild’s lineup since November 11, after sustaining an injury in a game against the San Jose Sharks. He has been skating on his own, and the Wild deemed him a “possibility” for Sunday, meaning he could be an option for the Canucks on Sunday morning against the New Jersey Devils. When he does step into the lineup, he will slot in as the team’s top centre until Elias Pettersson returns.

Zeev Buium​


Buium, 20, is a left-shot defenceman and is viewed as the centrepiece of the return for the Canucks. The rookie has three goals and 11 assists for 14 points while averaging 18:28 minutes per game through the first 31 games of his career. Buium has spent time quarterbacking the Wild’s top power play, collecting eight points on the man advantage.

He’s not going to be a Hughes replacement, not many could be, but I would expect Buium to take Hughes’ spot on the top pair with Filip Hronek to start, and potentially work on the top unit power play.

The Wild selected Buium 12th overall pick in the 2024 NHL draft. Coming into the season, The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler had Zeev Buium fifth in tier one of his top-100 drafted NHL prospects rankings.

Daily Faceoff’s Steven Ellis had Buium ranked as the top Wild prospect coming into the season, and had this today regarding the new Canuck defenceman:

“This is a player who is built for big-game moments. You look at those two World Junior Championships and his Under-18 title, too. Buium won an NCAA championship and he almost won another. This is a guy who has played so much meaningful hockey already at such a young age. I would like him to be a bit stronger, and I feel like if he just had an okay season in the NCAA then he probably would have gone back for another year to focus on being more physical. Many people like to compare Buium’s college career to that of Cale Makar. Makar was more important to UMass than Buium was to Denver, but Buium was more productive. He had two of the best seasons by a defenseman that I’ve ever seen, and now he’s set for the spotlight in Minnesota.”

Donnie & Dhali’s Rick Dhaliwal spoke with Buium, who’s excited to come to Vancouver and show what he’s got:

Just talked with Zeev Buium : I am very excited and honoured that Vancouver made the trade for me. I want to show them that they made the right call.

— Rick Dhaliwal (@DhaliwalSports) December 13, 2025

Dhaliwal shared that Buium will be joining the Canucks tomorrow.

Liam Öhgren​


Öhgren is a 21-year-old winger who has yet to find his game at the NHL level this season. Through 18 regular season games with the Wild this season, Öhgren is still searching for his first point of the season with a minus-three rating. However, Öhgren has been playing limited minutes in a fourth-line role, averaging sub-10 minutes per night.

The 2022 first-round pick has a connection to fellow Canuck Jonathan Lekkerimäki, playing with each other all through the Swedish junior ranks, as well as at the World Junior Championships in 2021-22, 2022-23 and 2023-24. Öhgren served as the Captain for Team Sweden in 2023-24, when Lekkerimäki took home MVP honours.

As for where he slots in when he makes his Canucks debut, it would likely be in a bottom-six role for the time being. But if more players are moved out, Öhgren will have an opportunity to move up and produce higher in the lineup.

Ellis ranked Öhgren fifth in his piece on the Wild’s top-10 prospects list over the summer, with this write-up on the forward:

“Öhgren had a 24-game stint with the Wild last year, putting up a modest five points while playing around 11 minutes a night. It wasn’t much, but I felt like he made the most of it near the end of his time with the club, doing a lot to keep the puck in the offensive zone. Öhgren was great in Iowa, serving as one of the team’s premier offensive leaders despite playing around half the season. I like what he does with the puck, and while he isn’t aggressive, Öhgren seems to make his linemates better with his work ethic and passing ability. I think Öhgren can become a top-six threat for the Wild, and I expect him to get much more ice time this season.”

The first-round pick acquired from the Wild is unprotected, according to PuckPedia.

Were you ever going to win a Quinn Hughes trade? No. Whenever you give up a player of Hughes’ calibre in a deal, you’re never going to come out on the right end of it. But to come out with three young, promising pieces – all of which were former first-round picks – and an unprotected first-round pick, this is a decent return in a move the club unfortunately had to make with Hughes likely not willing to extend long-term with the Canucks.

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/quick-look-pieces-coming-back-vancouver-canucks-hughes-trade
 
‘Zeev already had Hughes upside’: Wild fans react to Quinn Hughes trade with the Canucks

Much like Vancouver Canucks fans have been coming to grips with the club trading away Quinn Hughes, Minnesota Wild fans have been trying to process the trade package GM Bill Guerin sent to acquire him. The Canucks’ additions of centre Marco Rossi, winger Liam Ohgren and perhaps most notably, defender Zeev Buium, give the franchise the first key players in a rebuild that’s begun with a bang. But those pieces that Minnesota gave up have a number of Wild fans questioning if the return was worth it.

Much of the Wild fans’ dissatisfaction with the trade stems from the subtraction of Zeev Buium in the deal. At 20 years old, Buium was starting to round into his own at the NHL level fairly quickly this season. But every fanbase tends to overrate their own prospects, and Buium’s ceiling in Wild fans’ eyes was Quinn Hughes. And a lot of the immediate reactions don’t seem to like the idea of getting the real thing instead. We scoured the

trillwhitepeople: I hate this. Zeev already had Hughes upside. He’s not signing here either. He will be in a NJ sweater first chance. This is so short sighted.
Giving up Zeev Buium is a hard pill to swallow. Buium is still raw, but he's going to become a good player regardless. Like I said u either getting Hughes or Shea Theodore in Buium once he pans out. Did we overpay? Yea, but for superstars u always overpay #mnwild

— Kalisha Turnipseed (@KalishaTownsell) December 13, 2025

Painwracker_Oni: I was jumping for joy when this first got reported then the next tweet that included Buium killed the joy a bit for me personally. Literally any of our D core besides Buium and Faber I could handle trading away without being sad but [expletive] man this honestly kinda sucks. Hughes is amazing he’s going to be insanely good for us, he’s what you hope Buium turns into but he lacks size.
This is almost a dream trade, losing Buium sucks though.

swallowrazors: I’m legit bummed about Zeev. He’s been looking solid.

Wild fans are also worried about the likelihood of Hughes resigning. The same problem exists for the Wild as it did for the Canucks, albeit with a different flavour. Minnesota is firmly trenched in the playoff race, but their history as a middling team might sway Hughes’ opinion on resigning.

drtrobridge: Better re-sign his ass at that price

PayneTrain181999: If we do, this is probably worth it. If we don’t? Worst trade in league history.
RedEyeBadGuy: See this is stupid.. why would we trade away a haul for him only to have to trade him away in another year for a lot less of a haul (he will be a one year rental next season). It just makes no sense unless there’s some agreement that he will re-sign here which was reported that there wasn’t. I definitely love this if Hughes is here long term but I don’t think he is so I’m left scratching my head.
atom-wan: It’s mortgaging our future on a guy that may or may not re-sign with us in a couple years and will be expensive. At least 2 of the 3 guys we traded were starting to hit their stride

gregthestrange: I fully understand how good quinn is but what they gave up just doesn’t make sense. if he signs an extension sure, but he’s stated so many times he wants to play with his brothers

But for all the comments upset with the trade, there’s plenty that love and understand the move as well. The Wild are trying to win now, and Hughes makes that dream a much closer reality for the Twin Cities, especially part of a roster that already boasts Kirill Kaprizov, Brock Faber and Matt Boldy.

dafreak999: Hughes with Boldy will be magic

EducationGold: Are people in this thread [expletive] stupid? We just got the 2nd best D-man in the NHL, a team’s franchise player. Imagine the Avs giving us Cale Makar for this. Zeev is good but he’s not even sniffing close to this.

Ok_Nature645: Billy G over here thinking “let’s put Faber and Hughes on the same D-pair to get them used to each other for team USA”
QUINNESOTA https://t.co/MKzefOFSv4

— Seth Toupal (@sethtoups) December 13, 2025

There were plenty of upset Wild fans who also joined last night’s emergency edition of Canucks Conversation, which you can watch the replay of below!



Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/zeev-u...ns-react-quinn-hughes-trade-vancouver-canucks
 
Was this the absolute best time for the Canucks to trade Quinn Hughes?

The Quinn Hughes trade will go down as probably the most significant in Vancouver Canucks history. The post-mortems have already begun, and the dissection of this deal will continue for decades to come. The Post-Hughes Era begins now, and it begins with an examination of how we got to this point.

As most opinions on the trade have already stated, the Canucks did very, very well here. Zeev Buium is one of the best young defenders in all of hockey. Marco Rossi is a 2C already at 24 with the potential to be even more. Liam Ohgren is a 21-year-old former first rounder who still profiles as a top-six talent with character. And a first round pick is a lottery ticket, sure, but it’s the best kind of lottery ticket.

This was, of course, absolutely crucial. If the Canucks were going to be forced to trade their franchise player, they needed to absolutely nail this trade and maximize the return. And it seems like, in the present moment, they’ve done so. POHO Jim Rutherford said that many teams made offers, but no offer ever came close to the value given up by Bill Guerin and the Minnesota Wild. This was the most on the table right now.

It’s only natural, then, to wonder about the timing. If this is the most the Canucks could get for Hughes right now, is it the most they could get for him at any point? In other words, was this the best time for the Canucks to trade their captain, or might a greater value have been gleaned if they waited for another opportunity?

The answer, fortunately, is probably not. Given all that we’ve learned prior to and following the trade, within the 2025-26 season looks like it was in fact the prime time to move Hughes.

We have to assume that we’re being told the truth that there was some indication from Hughes and his camp that he was not likely to extend with the Canucks. We’re told that indication came in various stages throughout the offseason and into training camp, and then most directly at American Thanksgiving, and we’ve got no reason to doubt that.

So, if Hughes was intending to walk as a UFA, then there’s little debate that trading him at some point was the right call. To have a franchise walk for nothing is an unmitigated disaster to be avoided at all costs.

But the Canucks still had options. Had they not traded Hughes now or by the 2026 Trade Deadline, they could have traded him in the offseason. Or, they could have traded him at some point within the 2026-27 season.

Now, however, seems like it truly was the best of times.

We can safely write off next deadline, as Hughes would be a straight-up rental at that point. It comes down to now, or this offseason, as the two best potential times for a trade.

The major point of dispute on this topic has always been this: what’s more valuable, two potential playoff runs with Hughes, or the ability to talk extension with him right away? A team trading for Hughes now gets him for the rest of this regular season, the 2026 playoffs, the whole 2026-27 season, and the 2027 playoffs, if they wish. That’s an awful lot of hockey for one of the best defenders in the sport, and carries immense value.

If a team were to trade for Hughes during the upcoming offseason instead, they’d lose out on using him for the 2026 playoffs, which is a detriment. But if they traded for him around July 1, they’d also be able to start talking extension immediately – and still be able to offer him a max term of eight years and full signing bonuses, an opportunity that is going away shortly. That, too, has immense value.

But from the Canucks’ perspective, trading Hughes after he has the ability to sign an extension might have actually hurt his trade value.

Right now, Hughes and his camp were firm that they would not be giving any team any reassurance of extending, and that reportedly includes the Minnesota Wild. So, none of the teams attempting to trade for Hughes right now were able to guarantee they’d re-sign him. But each of those teams had the freedom to believe they could re-sign him, or at least spend the next one-and-a-half years convincing him to re-sign.

Were we past July 1, that illusion would come crashing down. As soon as teams were able to talk terms with Hughes and camp, they’d soon learn whether he was willing to sign an extension with them. And we are guessing that, for many teams, the answer would be ‘no.’

So, had they waited until the offseason, there is the likelihood that teams would have pulled out of the bidding, or reduced their offers, as Hughes informed them that he wasn’t willing to re-sign.

Sure, if Hughes was willing to re-sign with a team, there is a chance that team might be willing to give up even more in return for him, since they’re obtaining a more long-term investment. But we’re not too sure about that. In a sense, it could actually lead to a team reducing their offer, as they felt more secure about Hughes joining them eventually – especially if they were part of a relatively short list of teams he was willing to sign with.

In other words, by trading Hughes now, before he’s eligible to be extended, the Canucks made a market out of every team who was happy with just a year-and-a-half of Hughes, and/or who felt confident they had a chance to re-sign him.

Had they waited until the offseason, the Canucks would have a smaller market of teams who were either happy with a one-year rental of Hughes, or who knew first-hand he was willing to extend.

On top of all that, we think the 2025-26 regular season, in particular, was an especially good time to wring maximum value out of Hughes. The league standings are so tight right now, that we’ve definitely got more teams out there than usual that think they can make some noise in the playoffs this year – and that thus might be interested in adding a player like Hughes to their roster. Not every regular season goes like this. It’s also the first season with a playoff salary cap, which makes Hughes’ $7.65 million cap hit an extra-valuable bargain.

Plus, trading Hughes right now, as opposed to toward the 2026 Trade Deadline, has the dual benefits of avoiding this storyline continuing any longer than it has to, and of avoiding the awkwardly interrupted trading schedule brought on by two impending roster freezes.

It really does seem like the Canucks managed to trade Hughes at the point at which the most teams would bid for him, and one has to think that equates to the point at which they’d receive the most value. Really, it’s hard to imagine any realistic bid outdoing the Wild’s offer of Buium, Rossi, Ohgren, and a first. And it’s especially hard to imagine a better bid coming with fewer suitors in the running for his long-term services.

It’s tough to feel good about making the best of a bad situation, because it’s still a bad situation at the end of the day. But if the Canucks had to trade their captain – and it sounds like, at this point anyway, they had little choice – they’ve at least picked the very best time to do so.

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/absolute-best-time-vancouver-canucks-trade-quinn-hughes
 
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