News Canucks Team Notes

oh man where do i even start with this dumpster fire lmao

look i get it, rutherford and allvin are FINALLY using the R word (rebuild) after fighting it like it was gonna give them cooties. but lets be real here - they got dragged kicking and screaming into this position. you dont get to take a victory lap for admitting youre sick after youve been bleeding from your eyeballs for weeks

that stanchies writer nailed it - trusting this ownership group after watching the same movie play out for over a decade is like trying to pet the tiger at the zoo because "his eyes promised me he wasn't gonna bite this time" 😂😂😂

the montreal game was actually entertaining if you enjoy watching a team get absolutely torched by speed. demidov looked FILTHY out there, makes you wonder what couldve been if the canucks ever drafted in the top 5 huh?? tolopilo had some vintage 80s goalie saves though, love watching that chaotic energy even when hes getting lit up

and then ottawa... FIFTEEN SECONDS between goals. same exact play twice. thats honestly impressive levels of bad

garland remains my guy though. dude literally ninja kicked slafkovskys stick away lmaooo. him and hronek are the only vets id fight to keep around

EP40 scoring goals on the same day dreger says hes available in trades is peak petey energy. gotta respect the timing there

36 more games of this boys. tank commander garland taking that penalty at the end was *chefs kiss* 🏒
 
What’s a coach’s role in a rebuild?: Canucks Conversation

On Tuesday’s episode of Canucks Conversation, David Quadrelli and Harman Dayal discussed what a head coach’s role looks like during a rebuild, and how difficult it is to balance development, structure, and culture without derailing young players.

After the opening, Quads framed the discussion around a key tension rebuilding teams face every night.

“They’re not trying to lose games, obviously – you’re trying to win games and instill a strong culture – but you’re also trying to make sure young players develop,” Quads said.

That balance, Harm argued, is where coaching staffs often get it wrong. For him, development has to be the clear priority, but how it’s handled matters just as much as the intent.

“When I look at some of the specific challenges and tasks that come with properly developing young talent in the NHL, which should be the number one priority for a head coach during a rebuilding phase, one of them is teaching these young players NHL habits without limiting their offensive creativity and growth,” Harm said.

Harm pointed to a recent example of a coach who leaned too hard in one direction.

“I look at Greg Cronin, the former head coach of the Ducks, as an example of a head coach that went too far,” he said. “Yes, I understand you need to teach some of these guys responsible two-way hockey — you can look at Team Canada at the World Juniors, so much offensive talent but they had no idea how to defend. For those guys to become trustworthy, reliable NHL players and be the types of contributors who can have success come playoff time, you need to understand defensive positioning, how to manage the puck, how to manage the game in different scenarios, backchecking, forechecking — all these different details that matter.”

The problem, Harm explained, is when that structure overwhelms everything else.

“But how do you do that without stunting their creativity and growth?” he said. “Cronin was an example of harping too much on those details with this excessive focus on structure to the point where he robbed the creativity of Leo Carlsson, Cutter Gauthier, Trevor Zegras. Look at how all those guys have thrived since the coaching change, obviously with Zegras’ breakout happening in Philly; Cronin just went too far.”

At the same time, Harm cautioned against swinging too far in the opposite direction and giving young players complete freedom.

“But you also can’t go too far in the direction of letting the young guys do whatever they want, because that’s when they’re going to pick up bad habits,” Harm said. “When it comes time to winning games and taking the next step, you’re going to be the type of team that blows leads and has no defensive structure.”

That middle ground – teaching habits without suppressing skill – is what separates effective rebuild coaches from the rest. It’s also where Harm sees an instructive example in the Canucks’ own recent history.

“I actually look at Travis Green’s time in Vancouver, and he did a pretty reasonable job of managing both things,” Harm said. “Teaching some of the core guys responsible two-way hockey without sacrificing their ability to produce offensively – Elias Pettersson, Brock Boeser, and Nils Hoglander are good examples of players who developed a solid two-way game. I’m not holding Green up as the gold standard in the business – Marty St. Louis would fit that – but Green is an in-house example of a coach in Vancouver who found a pretty decent balance,” he said.

The guys agreed that balance is the real test for whoever is behind the bench during a rebuild. Winning every night isn’t realistic, but losing structure entirely is just as damaging. The job isn’t to chase the standings – it’s to make sure that when the team is ready to compete again, the young core has the right mix of NHL habits and creativity intact to actually take that step.

You can watch the full replay of the show below!

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/whats-coachs-role-rebuild-vancouver-canucks-conversation
 
Rutherford says Canucks plan to ‘improve without taking shortcuts’

We have received further clarity from Vancouver Canucks management regarding the organization’s impending rebuild.

PostMedia’s Patrick Johnston spoke with Canucks President of Hockey Operations, Jim Rutherford. He shared that it is his and General Manager Patrik Allvin’s duty to take calls on everyone, which even extends to players with full no-movement clauses as well. That said, Rutherford clarifies that just because they’re willing to listen on everybody, doesn’t mean they will move:

“We may end up saying no to offers, certainly, but we’re not going to say no to having conversations about any player. This is about improving this team without taking shortcuts,” Rutherford went on.

“That’s trying to do it too quickly. We’ve got to have the patience of living through where we are presently,” he explained. “Being cautious in what is being moved and what is the return. Continue to stick to either getting young players, 25 or younger, or getting draft picks.”

In November, when Rutherford sent out the memo to the rest of the league informing them that their pending unrestricted free agents were available, Rutherford put the focus on getting younger. Since then, the only trade they’ve made was the trade of their franchise-calibre defenceman Quinn Hughes. In that move, they fulfilled Rutherford’s desire to get younger, acquiring 24-year-old centre, Marco Rossi, 21-year-old winger Liam Öhgren, 20-year-old defenceman Zeev Buium and a first-round selection in the 2026 NHL Draft.

With those additions, as well as the rest of the prospects they have in the organization – Braeden Cootes, Tom Willander, Jonathan Lekkerimäki, Elias Pettersson, and Aleksei Medvedev – Rutherford believes that this could be a two-to-three-year rebuild, rather than taking six-to-10 years to complete.

“If we can just keep adding to young assets, hopefully we can do this in two or three years. It’s not an easy process, we have to be very methodical,” he said. “You can’t lose patience because you’re losing some games.”

The Vancouver market has suffered years of shortcuts by the previous regime, which handcuffed the organization into building a serious contender and ultimately was a determining factor in the Canucks losing their captain, Quinn Hughes.

Rutherford’s approach appears to differ from that of the previous regimes in this messaging, as the Canucks dive headfirst into their rebuild.

Read Johnston’s full interview with Rutherford here!

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/rutherford-vancouver-canucks-plan-improve-without-taking-shortcuts
 
Defenceman Kirill Kudryavtsev to represent Abbotsford Canucks at AHL All-Star Game

A prospect is being tabbed as one of the best players in the minors.

On Thursday, the American Hockey League announced the rosters for the 2026 AHL All-Star Classic. Among the names set to represent their respective clubs, Abbotsford Canucks defenceman Kirill Kudryavtsev has been named to the Pacific Division roster.

Kudryavtsev is the lone member of the Abby Canucks competing in the event and has been one of the team’s best players in a rebuilding season. So far in his second year in Abbotsford, the 21-year-old has scored a goal and recorded 12 assists for 13 points, tied with Sawyer Mynio for the team lead in defensive scoring and tied for third overall in points.

The Yaroslavl, Russia native is one of 43 first-time AHL All-Stars, and one of many who have already seen time in the NHL. He appeared in a couple of games with the Vancouver Canucks in April of last season, but didn’t register a point while averaging just over 14 minutes of ice time per game.

Kudryavtsev was a key part of Abbotsford’s run to the Calder Cup last spring. After posting an exceptional 26 points in 65 regular-season games, he notched 10 points in the postseason, leading the Canucks with a plus/minus of +18. He delivered three assists in the final against the Charlotte Checkers, as well.

In 93 career games in Abbotsford, Kudryavtsev has scored six goals and 33 assists for 39 points.

Kudryavtsev joins a laundry list of fellow prospects who have represented the Canucks at the AHL’s premier in-season event. Last season, defenceman Elias Pettersson was named an All-Star, but did not attend as he was with the big club in Vancouver. Ty Mueller filled his spot, while forward Arshdeep Bains represented Abbotsford in 2024. Christian Wolanin was the franchise’s first representative in the 2023 event.

The All-Star Classic is set to take place at the BMO Harris Bank Center, home of the Rockford Ice Hogs. The festivities begin on Feb. 10 with the skills competition. The four divisions competing in the All-Star Challenge on Feb. 11 feature eight-minute 3-on-3 games, with the two best teams from the round-robin facing off in the championship game.

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/defenc...epresent-abbotsford-canucks-ahl-all-star-game
 
The Stanchies: Losing streak hits nine as Canucks get swept on road trip with loss to Blue Jackets

We already knew the 25-26 Vancouver Canucks were bad. But the likelihood of them actually being a last-place hockey team has never felt more real.

There’s always been a level of skepticism about how real that possibility was. We’re used to being misled in Vancouver about the direction of the franchise, or being tricked into thinking the club would finally bottom out before going on a tear at the worst possible time. This feels… different.

Vancouver’s 4-1 loss to the middling Columbus Blue Jackets — their ninth straight loss — seemed to cement the freefall the team is facing. Yes, the shots totalled close, but did you ever truly feel like they were going to win? Even when Brock Boeser broke his 22-game goalless slump, and the lead was cut to 3-1, you knew deep down there was no miracle brewing.

The Canucks haven’t won a single game since the calendar turned to 2026. They finished their six-game Eastern road trip without a single point, and the on-ice product only seems to be getting worse.

The road was supposed to be where the Canucks could escape the noise. Now they’re coming back to face Connor McDavid and the Edmonton Oilers on Saturday with a franchise record losing streak on the line. And after Jim Rutherford’s bombshell interview with The Province’s Patrick Johnston on Wednesday, it’s safe to say the team is finally steering into the skid.

There will be no late-season surge, no last-minute rescue from the goaltending or newly acquired players. They’re playing for the future now, and the journey is going to be a grind.

Time to look over the death certificate.

Best asking the real questions
how is there always a canucks game

— g (@wholegrainne) January 16, 2026

Look I'm all on board for Team Tank, but can we at least have the occasional lucky win? As a little treat?#Canucks

Simon Little 🍁 (@simonplittle.ca) 2026-01-16T00:46:17.434Z

Best Öhlternate Universe

Things might’ve been different tonight had some early chances gone the Canucks way.

Liam Öhgren had himself a pair of good scoring opportunities early on, showing off his wheels and willingness to call his own number. David Kämpf and Conor Garland set up a nice give-and-go at the blue line for Öhgren, who just couldn’t get the puck under Elvis Merzlikins fast enough.

There was also this one, where Öhgren’s zone entry and shot were broken up by a well-timed stick from Dante Fabbro.

At least there’s one forward on this team to be excited about right now.

Best Clockwork
Coyle scored a beautiful goal but this defensive coverage by the #Canucks is something pic.twitter.com/pzkfXoRm2D

— Adam Kierszenblat (@Adamkblat) January 16, 2026


Forgive me, Charlie Coyle, but I always forget you exist.

After Max Sasson was called for caring too much, the Jackets’ power play caught the Canucks’ penalty kill napping at the right time. Coyle was left wide open near the post by Tyler Myers and Marcus Pettersson, and Kirill Marchenko easily found him with a pass.

Coyle then proceeded to deke out Lankinen in the space of a phone booth. (For any Gen Alpha people reading, a phone booth was a little room with a telephone where you could pay to make a phone call. They’re still used today as teleporters in the UK.) It was a very impressive goal, even if it was caused by the Canucks creating an easily exploitable situation.

It wouldn’t be a 2026 Canucks game without a very blatant defensive breakdown.

Best Tank Commander
not Marcus Pettersson's finest puck battle

— Jeff Paterson (@patersonjeff) January 16, 2026

Hindsight is 20/20, but man, the decision to trade the Rangers’ first-rounder to the Pittsburgh Penguins is looking especially bad right now.

The first 40 minutes of this game might’ve been among Marcus Pettersson’s worst; between the first defensive breakdown, a penalty for tripping Kent Johnson later, and almost pulling a Tonya Harding on Hronek. Could it get much worse?

Apparently, it could, because right off a faceoff, he lost a battle to Kirill Marchenko like Loki being thrown by the Hulk, and Marchenko wired the puck past Lankinen’s glove hand to double the Jackets’ lead.

Out of all the goals Canucks’ opponents have scored this season, that might’ve been one of the easiest they’ve allowed. Rookie settings on Chel, easy.

Best Make It Stop

The Canucks could’ve given up the 3-0 goal a few seconds earlier than they did. With MPetey in the box, the Canucks’ PK left Marchenko wide open on the far side.

But the Blue Jackets didn’t want to embarrass the Canucks completely, and instead set up a play that a minor hockey coach does when the score’s already reached double digits, and there’s a running clock. “Make at least one nice pass before someone shoots the puck!”

Kent Johnson drew Conor Garland in at the blue line long enough to get Zach Werenski the time and space for a back pass and a beautiful shot through traffic. 3-1 CBJ.

Once again, the Canucks aren’t watching the game plan set forward in the Stanchies Pregame videos. If anyone’s looking for a new coach, I am available for hire.

Best Slump Buster
BROCK BOESER SCORED A GOAL pic.twitter.com/RMDOzmplK4

— hay (@spookyghourl) January 16, 2026

BEEN A MINUTE pic.twitter.com/pisenkQUri

— k.d. madigan / read karma grinders (@riotsurvivor) January 16, 2026

Something good did happen in this game! Brock Boeser — FINALLY — scored a goal.

And it was a well-earned goal too. With Marchenko in the sin bin, Zeev Buium faked out Coyle and former Canuck Brendan Gaunce (remember him??) by looking at Boeser before whipping a pass around to an open EP40.

Petey quickly fired a pass through the Jackets’ coverage to Brock, who took a shot shortside that Elvis Merzlikins couldn’t squeeze.

Look at that man’s face. That’s the relief of a man who hadn’t scored in 22 games.

Best signs of… something
Öhgren-Pettersson-Boeser back-to-back shifts to start the 3rd and look great together.

Love seeing Öhgren getting a bigger opportunity #Canucks

— Tyson Cole (@tyson_cole) January 16, 2026

Adam Foote hasn’t shown a whole lot of character growth as a coach this season. Everything about the Canucks’ game plan has felt quite stagnant, and the same mistakes keep popping up.

But tonight he did do one thing right: he put Liam Öhgren and Brock Boeser on a line with EP40 in the third period.

One of the Canucks’ best opportunities came early in the third when Boeser and Öhgren forced a turnover behind the Jackets’ net. After a pinch by Tom Willander, Petey throws a puck behind the net, and Öhgren sets up Victor Mancini for a shot.

There’s something brewing here. Only the universe knows how much time they’ll get to see what it becomes.

Best call from inside the house
Rip

— Liv ✨🎷🐗 (@HuggyxHoggy) January 16, 2026

There’s something poetic about a local kid being the one to cement the Canucks’ place in the basement.

Port Moody’s own Kent Johnson has really struggled this season. The 23-year-old has just 14 points in 46 games and had been in the dog house with former head coach Dean Evason before he was replaced this week by Rick Bowness. Now he’s playing 17 minutes a night and getting the room to spread his wings more.

Tonight it paid off in the third period. The play began in the Blue Jackets’ end on Ivan Provorov’s stick, and ended with Boone Jenner setting up Johnson fast enough that Giphy’s 10-second limit still caught it all.

Once again, the Canucks are being nothing but great sports to their opponents. Boosting the confidence of other teams and players should earn the whole team votes for the Masterton Trophy.

Best History in the Making
#Canucks' loss to CBJ marks their ninth-straight loss and their longest losing streak since the start of the 2000s.

If they lose on Saturday night, they'll tie a franchise record for the longest losing streak, which was registered in 1997-98.

— Izzy 🪿 (@izzycheung37) January 16, 2026

If you look up the 1997-98 Canucks on YouTube, nearly all the clips are of fights, line brawls or Pavel Bure’s last 51 goals in Vancouver. That tells you a lot.

In 1998, the Canucks understood that it was time to empty out the roster, say goodbye to their veterans and start anew with the likes of Markus Naslund, Todd Bertuzzi and Mattias Ohlund.

There’s frankly a lot of parallels between that roster and this one. Both undoubtedly had big names and good pieces, but as a unit, they’re undeniably flawed and in desperate need of a new direction.

The only real difference is that one team had a Stanley Cup window to look back on fondly. The other had exactly two playoff series wins.

The current Canucks are figuring that out themselves in real time. And they’ll be a lot better off for it.

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/stanch...ks-swept-road-trip-loss-columbus-blue-jackets
 
Canucks trade rumours: Kings ‘kicking the tires’ on Evander Kane

With the Vancouver Canucks rumoured to have tried to peddle forward Evander Kane back to his former team, the Edmonton Oilers, it looks like another team might be “kicking tires” on the veteran winger.

According to an article published on LA Kings blog MayorsManor.com, the Kings could be in the mix to acquire Kane. Here is some of what they wrote:

While it remains a rumor — something that normally wouldn’t warrant much attention — it was intriguing enough to pause and take notice. Over the past week, two separate sources told Mayor’s Manor they believe Kings general manager Ken Holland is exploring the possibility of a Kane trade.

After being traded from Edmonton to Vancouver last summer in exchange for a fourth-round draft pick, Kane has tallied seven goals and 14 assists this season. However, he carries a minus-18 rating, the third-lowest on the Canucks, behind Tyler Myers and Brock Boeser.

Kane is currently in the final year of a four-year deal worth $20.5 million. He also maintains a 16-team approved trade list, giving him some control over potential destinations as he enters the later stages of his career.

The connection to Los Angeles makes sense given that former Oilers GM Ken Holland is at the helm. Not only did Holland originally sign Kane in Edmonton, but he has also brought in familiar faces form his former roster to bolster his current club. Corey Perry (10 goals, 13 assists) and Warren Foegele (six goals, two assists) were both added this season as the Kings look to finally get by the first-round of the playoffs.

After missing the entire 2024-25 regular season due to surgeries, Kane returned for the playoffs with the Oilers and recorded 12 points in 21 games during their run to the Stanley Cup Final.

As the rumour mill surrounding the Canucks continues to heat up, Kane’s name remains among the most discussed trade candidates. With his hometown club rebuilding its roster, the coming weeks could determine whether the veteran left winger remains in Vancouver or finds a new home.

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/vancouver-canucks-trade-rumours-la-kings-kicking-tires-evander-kane
 
At this point, who is the Canucks’ core?

Since the calendar flipped to 2026, the Vancouver Canucks are still searching for their first victory of the year. They failed to do so in front of the home fans early in the month against the Seattle Kraken and Boston Bruins, and couldn’t secure even a single point on their six-game Eastern road trip.

That’s not to say the road trip wasn’t entirely encouraging for Canucks fans, however. Vancouver widened their cushion to six points behind the Winnipeg Jets for last place in the NHL, and President of Hockey Operations Jim Rutherford further clarified that the team is headed toward a rebuild.

In Rutherford’s interview, he mentioned that at the start of their retool/rebuild process, the plan was to not part with any core player. Which got us thinking: at this point, what even is the core of the Vancouver Canucks now?

The core of a sports team is built around the players who best represents the identity of how the team wants to play. And before the Quinn Hughes trade, he was the clear core piece of the team. He was the entire Canucks identity; the team funnelled play through him, and it was evident on a nightly basis that the team was only going as far as he led them.

A handful of players were lumped into that core group with the Captain. But now with him gone, that group is more murky.

On paper, Elias Pettersson, Brock Boeser, Conor Garland, Jake DeBrusk, Filip Hronek and Thatcher Demko would be the players who stand out as the new core of the team. However, that’s not who the core appears to be internally.

Head Coach Adam Foote was asked whose voice he’s noticed picked up in the room as a leader since the Hughes trade.

“[Filip] Hronek has really stepped it up this year, as far as his leadership. [He’s] matured a lot,” Foote replied. “He’s got good support; [Brock] Boeser’s always there, [Conor] Garland; you’ve got [Tyler] Myers and Marcus Pettersson on defence as well. So they’ve got a good group there.”

The full response can be found at the 2:30 mark below:

"We're generating good offence, we just have to make sure we're helping our goaltenders out."

🗣️ Head Coach Adam Foote meets with the media ahead of today's game against the Senators.#Canucks | @theprovince pic.twitter.com/WeHzHDDlwS

— Vancouver Canucks (@Canucks) January 13, 2026

With that response from the Coach, the team presumably considers its core group of leaders to be Hronek, Boeser, Garland, M. Pettersson, and Myers. (Notice how a certain player, who’s making the most money on an annual basis on the entire team and consistently wears an ‘A’ nearly every game, was not listed as someone who has not stuck out to the Coach as a leader since the Hughes departure. Interesting.)

If those five players listed are the team’s core, then we’re here to argue that the Canucks really don’t have a core; that most of the Canucks’ next core players are either not on the team, or not even in the organization yet.

The Canucks have a pair of defencemen on the NHL team right now who could be part of the future core: Zeev Buium and Tom Willander. Last year’s first-round pick, Braeden Cootes, could be lumped into that category, but it’s likely their 2026 and 2027 – and maybe 2028 – first-round picks are the ones leading the Canucks’ core of the future.

With that said, if there really isn’t a core on the current Canucks roster, management should have no hesitation in moving any players on the team. In fact, management can view it as trading these “core players” will help the organization net futures that could turn into the next Canucks core.

In PostMedia’s Patrick Johnston’s interview with Rutherford, the Canucks President touched on the importance of keeping veterans, but that doesn’t mean they all have to be these veterans who stay and lead the next best Canucks core.

Along the way, there will be opportunities to also add veteran players who would play a developmental role for the team’s younger players. He cited Chicago’s signing of Nick Foligno in 2023 as an example of such a move. The veteran forward is now Chicago’s captain.

“I think signing veteran players is actually necessary,” he said. “You can’t just take a bunch of 22-year-olds and throw them to the wolves. It’s a tough, tough league.”

In other words, sure, they will take calls on the likes of Myers, Filip Hronek or Marcus Pettersson, but there’s no fire sale here. Some of those guys will stay.

The core of a sports franchise should be a player that the rest of the team looks up to; a player who will lead by example on and off the ice. It’s encouraging to hear that Filip Hronek has been the player who has stepped up the most for the team in Hughes’ absence. Maybe he’s one of the players who stays through this rebuilding phase to help mend the next best core of the Canucks team.

And at this point, Hronek might be the only player to really consider as a definitive core piece to this Canucks team right now. The team does not have a clear identity that they play to night in and night out, or somebody they lean on to help lead the charge. This management group will need to prioritize building the team the right way, focusing on strong character players, mixed with high-end skilled players that can lead by example and help mould the next best Vancouver Canucks core, because this team lacks a good example of that right now.

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/point-who-vancouver-canucks-core
 
Scenes from morning skate: Tolopilo surprise starter for Canucks, Draisaitl on leave for the Oilers

The Vancouver Canucks (16-26-5) open an eight-game homestand when they host the Edmonton Oilers (23-17-8) at Rogers Arena. Tonight’s game is part of Hockey Day in Canada and is set to begin at 7 pm PT.

The Canucks are trying to avoid their first double-digit winless skid in 28 years. The team has dropped six straight in regulation and is 0-7-2 in its last nine outings.

What we saw​

#Canucks this morning
Ohgren-EP40-Boeser
Kane-Kampf-DeBrusk
O’Connor-Raty-Garland
Bains-Sasson-Karlsson

MPett-Hronek
Buium-Myers
Willander-Mancini

— Jeff Paterson (@patersonjeff) January 17, 2026

After a day off following the team’s six-game road trip, the Canucks conducted a full morning skate at Rogers Arena. That included Filip Chytil and Teddy Blueger, who have both shed their non-contact jerseys and are close to returning to game action, although it won’t happen tonight.

With Kevin Lankinen under the weather, Nikita Tolopilio gets the start in goal. He made 35 saves in his last outing, a 6-3 loss to the Montreal Canadiens last Monday night. Lankinen will back up tonight, but due to his illness, the Canucks also had a practice goalie on the ice this morning.

Liam Öhgren will start tonight, where he finished Thursday’s 4-1 loss to the Columbus Blue Jackets on a line with Elias Pettersson and Brock Boeser. Boeser snapped his 21-game goal drought with a second period power play goal against the Blue Jackets. It was his 10th goal of the season. Arshdeep Bains will remain in the lineup while Nils Höglander is a healthy scratch for a second straight contest.

The Canucks will once again roll out their three rookie defencemen with Zeev Buium paired with Tyler Myers, while Tom Willander and Victor Mancini will play together. Called up from Abbotsford a week ago, Mancini will play his first home game since October 26th – also against Edmonton.

Canucks penalty killing has become an issue again as the team has managed to successfully kill just nine of 18 shorthanded situations in January. The Canucks have surrendered the most PPG in the league and are 31st on the PK at 72.1%.

The Canucks have dropped six straight games on home ice (0-4-2) and are 1-8-3 in their last 12 at Rogers Arena. On the season, the team is 4-12-3 at home and has played the fewest games in the league on home ice. The Canucks will play 19 of their next 24 and 22 of their final 35 games in Vancouver.

The Opponent​


The Oilers are here after a 1-0 shutout loss at home to the New York Islanders on Thursday night. Edmonton peppered Ilya Sorokin with 35 shots, but could not solve him. The loss snapped Connor McDavid’s 20-game point streak, during which he had 19 goals and 27 assists. It was the first time since December 2nd that McDavid did not collect a point. Like the Islanders game, that was also a 1-0 Oilers home loss to Minnesota.

McDavid, who turned 29 last Tuesday, leads the NHL with 82 points. Leon Draisaitl is tied for fourth in league scoring with 67 points; however, he has taken a leave of absence from the team to tend to a family illness in Germany and will not play tonight.

Oilers release statement regarding Leon Draisaitl. He won’t play this weekend and will miss a few games. pic.twitter.com/VePA8wQa40

— Jason Gregor (@JasonGregor) January 17, 2026

Edmonton has one win in its last four games, but has collected points in three of those contests (1-1-2). Surprisingly, the Oilers have not won more than two consecutive games at any point this season.

The Oilers are third in overall offence and have the league’s best power play, clicking at 33.3%. It’s actually better on the road at 34.4%. Edmonton has scored a league-high 44 goals with the man advantage this season. Draisaitl leads the team with 11 power play goals while McDavid has nine.

This will be the first meeting between these teams since the Oilers acquired Tristan Jarry prior to Christmas. The Delta native is 3-0-1 in his four starts in Edmonton, posting a 3.28 GAA and an .878 save percentage. He missed four weeks with a lower-body injury before returning last week in a 4-3 OT loss to the Nashville Predators.

Burnaby native Ryan Nugent-Hopkins is set to appear in his 999th career NHL game tonight, with Game 1,000 set for tomorrow at home against the St. Louis Blues.

EDM lines & pairings — Saturday’s Morning Skate:

• Draisaitl is taking a leave of absence for family matter

Podkolzin – McDavid – Hyman
Frederic – RNH – Kapanen
Howard – Roslovic – Savoie
Mangiapane – Lazar – Janmark

Ekholm – Bouchard
Nurse – Emberson
Walman – Stastney
Regula…

— Tony Brar 🚀 (@TonyBrarOTV) January 17, 2026

News and notes​


The Canucks and Oilers have split their first two meetings of the season, with each team winning on home ice. Edmonton posted a 3-1 victory on October 11th, while the Canucks were 4-3 winners in overtime on October 26th. The teams will conclude their regular seasons with a final meeting in Game 82 for both teams in the Alberta capital on April 16th.

The referees for tonight’s game are Graham Skilliter and Tom Chmielewski.

What we heard​


Adam Foote on injury updates on Kiefer Sherwood and Thatcher Demko: “It’s a big day for a couple of them seeing what is going to happen next.”

Adam Foote on his thoughts behind playing right-handed Tom Willander on the left side: “It’s a great question. We asked ourselves that this morning and before we did it. If we’re doing it, it shows how we value him and what his potential is. It’s always great to learn that. If you’re a defenceman and imagine one day playing for his country, if he can’t play his left side, there are other ways to look at it. If you’re a great defenceman in this league, like Fil (Hronek) can play his wrong side. You can flip. I played lacrosse and I liked playing on my wrong side when I played. There are little adjustments in the neutral zone. He’s got good enough hands on the blueline if the puck comes up. We’re going to watch it. Do we love it right now? No. Is it great for a player that someone values that in you. It’s a good thing.”

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/scenes...ouver-canucks-draisaitl-leave-edmonton-oilers
 
The Stanchies: Canucks lock in tenth loss in a row in 6-0 defeat to Oilers

The Vancouver Canucks find themselves mired in a bit of a tough situation at the moment. In a season that has gone off the rails, one in which the management has seemingly finally embraced the idea of a rebuild, losing is a prime component of their future plans. And when your Stanley Cup plans now resemble the village of Naukan, there is an acceptance to the entire situation you can try and embrace. It’s not fun, but you can at least accept what your life has become.

So realistically, a 6-0 loss to the Edmonton Oilers, marking their tenth loss in a row? That’s a good situation for a team looking to land a high draft pick.

But life is rarely that simple, as the intangibles and unknowns of the situation sort of lurk around the corner while this all plays out. You find yourself asking questions about the process unfolding before you.

Is the losing going to hurt the development of the younger players this season?

If so, do you bring in a new coach now to try and set up an actual system that doesn’t resemble drunkenly walking into a bar and pointing at the nearest guy, yelling “YOU!” before you and your buddies rush at them with chairs in your hands raised high above your head?

Or do you simply ride out the rest of the season chasing down as high a pick as possible before making coaching changes in the offseason?

And I realize there is a certain morbidity when openly discussing a rookie head coaches NHL career a mere half season into it, but I do think it’s fair to say that this looks to be one of the most poorly Canucks teams we have seen in quite a while in this city. The team’s record is one thing, but when you watch this team play, it’s truly confounding as to what, if any, system they are trying to deploy.

Which brings us back to the idea of what does the fanbase want right now? And while the simple answer is “losing for draft position” I do think you do need to sell the fans on a glimmer of hope in the near future. Whether that’s in the form of a coaching change or deep roster changes as it relates to the veterans on the team, you eventually want to reach a point where you at least see some fight from this roster. Where you see a team that doesn’t seem resigned to losing night in and night out, one that doesn’t seem either perfectly ok with it, or seemingly has no answer as to how to change it.

I am a big believer in having a winning culture, and I do think this team can improve on that front during the rebuild. In fact, they have to. I just don’t think the current group will ever be the ones to do it. For all the talk Jim Rutherford gave of keeping veterans around so you don’t throw the kids to the wolves, it’s hard to watch the Oilers stomp the Canucks without breaking a sweat and worry about it getting any worse that it is now. The truth of the matter is the veterans are struggling just as much as the rookies on this team, so it’s kind of hard to point to them being the guardians Rutherford has painted them as.

And to be fair to them, many of them signed on for a Quinn Hughes window that has shut forever. And sure, it’s a business, trades happen, and players have to play through anything that changes on that front, I get that. But it truly feels like a mountain too high to climb for the highest-paid players on this team to come together and rebuild a room that was shattered forever during the great JT Miller and Elias Pettersson divorce of 2025. This just doesn’t seem like a room that can overcome the mental damage from whatever fallout the collapse left them with.

So until then, we wait. We wait to see what trades the Canucks make. We wait to see which players rise to the occasion. We wait to see just how committed this ownership is to long-term planning. It means a lot of losing is ahead of us. But it has to be done in a way that builds actual hope. Give the fans something to believe in next season, even if all that is is a plucky roster of newcomers who aren’t bringing any mental baggage from the last core with them, as the team tries to build up a new future.

Otherwise, it’s hard to picture a future other than the one we saw Saturday night.

Best visual of the night
Damn, Tolo's #BlackSkate mask is niiiice.
Love the Vadar touch. #canucks pic.twitter.com/eFmg7BlWfw

— Dragon Was Slayed (@522IntoOvertime) January 18, 2026

Nikita Tolopilo got the start for Vancouver, and while he got lit up for six goals, at least he looked cool doing it.

It also marks the first collaboration between Darth Vader and the Lion’s Gate Bridge?

Best we were right there moments
Woke up today knowing i’ll be going to a Canucks game for the first time ever, sure we’ve been pretty shit and on a 9 game loosing streak but i’m honestly just happy to be there tonight. Hopefully we can at least win one of the 4 games that i’ll be attending 😂 Go Canucks go!

— Ellis🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿 (@EllisHockey2003) January 17, 2026

Despite the 6-0 loss, the Canucks and Oilers were dead even at even strength high danger chances with 16 a piece. The Oilers also outshot the Canucks 35-31 on the night, but that was also reasonably close.

Which is where we enter into evidence the “not all things are created equal” clause, as the Canucks’ high danger chances didn’t seem as great a danger as the Oilers’.

Where Vancouver would shoot from the point and slam at the rebounds in the crease to wrack up their high danger chances, the Oilers were setting up tap-ins and odd man rushes with theirs.

It’s basically like when you say you look a bit like a young Brad Pitt on your dating profile, there is some leeway in interpretation of it all that some people might not agree with, despite the fact that you felt you nailed your argument about Febreze being a perfectly suitable option over washing your clothes.

And if there was one period in which you felt like the Canucks might actually be “right there” in the game, it was the opening frame. Due mostly to, well, not being down 6-0.

Still, the Canucks generated their best chances of the night in the first period, and in front of a crowd that had one of the better atmospheres of the season. The invasion of Oilers fans, coupled with whatever bad blood remains from the playoff series a couple of years ago, meant there was a bit of energy in the air on the night.

Vancouver stormed out of the gates, walked cautiously out of the door, and got some momentum based on skating hard and ripping shots. Chaos Giraffe got the party started after a good backcheck from Max Sasson led to a counter attack early in the first:

Marcus Pettersson and Brock Boeser than got a shot each as the “skate really hard and rip shots at those jerks” strategy really began to settle in:

It was a mix of shooting into traffic and hoping for a rebound coupled with shooting at the goalie with no traffic and hoping Tristan Jarry would fall on a banana peel or something and let in a goal. Not the most scintillating hockey you’ll watch, but it’s what’s on the menu for the rest of the season.

Zeev Buium got into the mix next, when he skated into a pass just inside the blue line and unleashed a wrister on net, probably hoping for a tip from Drew O’Connor:

And when pushed back on by the Edmonton Oilers, Vittorio Mancini had a spirited race with Matt Savoie to make sure his earlier pinch at the blueline didn’t lead to a breakaway goal against:

And Fil Hronek, steady, dependable, Fil Hronek aka the Adam Foote Defensive System Whisperer was doing his thing as usual, cutting off pucks around the boards and calmly generating safe zone exits:

It was, by all accounts, a perfectly acceptable period of hockey from the Canucks. They were skating hard, they were generating looks on net, and they hadn’t been blown out yet. You watched the team play and you told yourself “I couldn’t possibly see THIS team lose 6-0 by nights end, certainly not this group of rapscallions.” before nervously eyeing Connor McDavid on the bench.

Best grasping onto the glimmers
Öhgren looked like the best forward out there. No one’s been faster or worked harder so far and that’s a good sign for the youth on this team #canucks

— David Mo (@Canuckrandom) January 18, 2026

I think Liam Öhgren stands out on this Canucks team because he has size and uses it well? Like he wins puck battles purely by being a bit of a bully, which this market absolutely loves. And you know how much I enjoy watching Conor Garland play hockey, that guy is a top puck battler in the league in my humble opinion. But there is just something about a hefty dude physically imposing his will that gets you a bit hyped. I think it’s the idea that if you’re ever being robbed in a dark alley, Liam Öhgren might happen to walk by and easily dispatch of said criminals.

Don’t get me wrong, Garland would also dispose of said criminals, but he would take like fifteen minutes of cycling around them to tire them down, and would probably give them a big speech about changing their ways, and it would become a bit of a production. You’d have your stuff back and you’d feel compelled to watch this battle play out because hey, Conor just stepped up to fight on your behalf. But it’s been over ten minutes now and you have to work in the morning, so like, how long are you obligated to stay here, you know?

The bar isn’t too high for highlights around these parts, is what I’m saying, as we’re not exactly watching a young Todd Bertuzzi undress players before scoring TSN turning point goals, but watching Liam Öhgren chase down pucks, generate shots on net, and then continue to chase down pucks defensively? That’s going to sell in this town:

In a season in which a highlight was an elderly fellow actually using the word “rebuild”, sometimes small things like the play of Liam Öhgren can stand out.

Best I pity the fool
Go Tolo 👏#Canucks

— Huggy🧸43 (@Huggy_Bear43) January 18, 2026

Someone on social media called Nikita Tolopilo “Mr. T” and if you know anything about me, you know we are SO running with that.

I’ve said it before, but I enjoy the splash of chaos in Mr. T’s game, as I find modern NHL goaltending can be a bit bland compared to what I grew up on. I’m not saying goaltending used to be better, but I do miss the days when Dom Hasek throwing his stick and jockstrap at the puck was considered a viable strategy for stopping the puck.

And early on, the chaos was working for Tolopilo, as he made a nice stop on Jack Roslovic in the slot in the first period:

Connor McDavid then started warming up, as he began wheeling and dealing as the period was coming to a close, ending in an Evan Bouchard rush to the net that Mr. T just got his gold chains on:

Evan Bouchard would then wheel out of the corner and get another good look on net, only to be denied by the Vancouver netminder:

And to end the period, you had McDavid setting up former Canuck Vasily Podkolzin in the one timer spot normally reserved for Leon Draisaitl, who was not dressed on the night due to being away from the team for a personal leave:

The main takeaway you can glean from these highlights? Edmonton is just a more skilled team. Their shots were all just a little bit closer to the net. The movement with the puck was better and more purposeful. It felt like Edmonton was moving around the ice trying to find elite looks on net, whereas Vancouver truly was set into “thoughts and prayers” shots into traffic.

I don’t know if I pictured the game ending quite like it did after the first period, but you definitely walked away feeling like Edmonton was starting to find their strides and that some goals were about to go down in the second.

Best question and answer
in a related thought as I watch this #Canucks defence, what's Evan Oberg doing these days? Would be interested in a few games?

— Jeff Paterson (@patersonjeff) January 18, 2026

Fun fact: Evan Oberg last played professional hockey in 2016, for the Augsburg Panthers of the German hockey league (DEL).

Fun fact 2: Evan Oberg was teammates with former Vancouver Canucks player Mark Mancari on that 2015-16 Panthers team.

Fun fact 3: Mark Mancari would later play on a team with former Canucks player Jozef Balej, thus completing my “Three degrees of Jozef Balej” journey.

Best fun while it lasted
Interference all day. #Canucks

— Suffering Canucks Fan (@CanucksWontWin) January 18, 2026

Jack Roslovic would open the scoring after doing a little wiggle waggle to open up the legs of both Fil Hronek and Mr. T, a sentence none of us thought would ever be put into existence before tonight:

Part of the chaos of Tolopilo is that yeah, sometimes he gets some Roman Chechmanek movement to his game, and scoring chances open up where you didn’t think there would be. It also doesn’t help that Max Sasson was riding Curtis Lazar hard enough for the former Canuck to accidentally on purpose run into the Canucks goalie.

Adam Foote would challenge for goaltender interference because honestly, why not at this point, but the league sided with Edmonton. 1-0 bad guys plus they got a powerplay out of it for Adam Foote wasting everyone’s time.

And on that powerplay, Evan Bouchard would utilize Vancouver’s strategy of throwing the puck on net and seeing what happens, forcing Nikita to scramble a bit in his crease to keep the puck out:

Jake Walman, who once laughed his way into losing a Stanley Cup last season, also got an absolute ripper off a shot off on Mr. T off of a one T, only to be told he needed to sip tea, and listen about how he was guilty, of not scoring:

After Vancouver took another penalty in the period, Evan Bouchard would lean into a heavy heavy shot on a nice pass from behind the net from Ryan Nugent-Hopkins on the ensuing powerplay, but Nikita was in position to stop it:

But you can only dance with the devil for so long before they steal your identity and move in with your family, as Zach Hyman would make it 2-0 with the man advantage a moment later:

“Marcus Pettersson didn’t look so hot on that goal” has become a common refrain around these parts, but most of his teammates have fallen under that category under Adam Foote, leaving you once again to wonder just what exactly is the defensive plan here?

Clearly there is some luck at play on this goal, as the puck ultimately goes in off of Fil Hronek, but it’s another play where the Canucks give up position in front of their goalie and leave a guy all alone. Hyman is able to boot that puck in off of Hronek because he has time and space to wave at that puck after Marcus Pettersson jumps up and gets aggressive in the slot.

Best slippery slope
Challenging that first goal really secured the L in this game #Canucks

— Riley McLaughlin (@ZeusRJM) January 18, 2026

Whatever momentum Vancouver had in the first ten minutes of the game had vanished by this point, as even our beautiful boy Liam Ohgren was running into turnover issues, losing puck battles and giving up an odd-man rush, forcing Mr. T into making a big save:

Conor Garland was the next player to give up the puck along the board, as this time it led to a Darnell Nurse shot that Zach Hyman and Trent Frederic both took turns just missing on cashing it in for a goal:

There’s just a lot of instability to Vancouver’s game, and you can see other teams just skate with the puck and start cycling, waiting for the Canucks to break down in their own zone and surrender a good scoring chance when they get caught scrambling. It’s like the team has no reset button and when things go off the rails, they don’t know how to get things settled again.

And when you’re a team struggling in your own end, an offensive team like the Oilers makes you pay. Kasperi Kapanen would make it 3-0 halfway through the second period after sneaking in behind Vancouver’s defense for a breakaway goal:

You’ll also notice that Elias Pettersson looked like he had a good chance to get a dangerous shot on net off the Brock Boeser shot to start the clip, but the puck bounced over his stick at the last second. Which yeah, if you want to say the Canucks didn’t get some bounces this night, you’d be correct. But their entire offense currently is based on “sure hope a bounce goes our way tonight!” which doesn’t exactly lead to many offensive outbursts, either.

You’ll also notice it wasn’t exactly a grand plan of offensive creativity to generate this goal, it was literally Kapanen skating hard down the middle of the ice while Tom Willander and a covering Elias Pettersson failed to get back, combined with a pinching Vittorio Mancini not covering Ryan Nugent-Hopkins on the breakout.

Which again, this is how goals against the Canucks seem to happen the most. A breakdown in coverage leading to a breakdown in coverage, leading to a high danger chance and/or goal.

Best fighting the good fight
The funny thing is the Canucks haven't even committed to the tank yet, this is still them trying their best but just losing 10 games in a row 😂#Canucks

— -Travis• (@travizz007) January 18, 2026

The Canucks equivalent of JT Miller dragging them back into the fight was a couple of shots on net in the second period in which they had traffic in front of the net:

I do think it’s fair to say that had it been a lucky night for Vancouver, maybe they lose this game 6-2 instead of 6-0? I do think they deserved a goal or two, but alas, the hockey gods are a fickle bunch.

Roslovic would quickly get back on the scoresheet after that, netting his second goal of the game after all three Canucks forwards got caught high in the zone, leaving Buium and Mancini to deal with a four on two situation:

Mancini gets beaten five hole on the pass, which isn’t ideal, but I also feel like Buium is better served trying to take on the immediate threat of Roslovic instead of staying high and blocking a passing lane. I would assume Zeev thought Mancini had the passing lane to the front of the net cut off, so he tried to take out a high slot pass option, but I still feel like you take the guy down low there and hope Evander Kane derails the high slot option.

Either way it’s not a great situation to have two young defenseman in an odd man rush like that, but we can label it a “learning moment” and it makes it feel slightly better.

Best embrace your fate
Yes, Mr. Aquilini, this is the final humiliation after 12 years of futility. Please remember this next time you get an urge to take a shortcut during this very long and painful #canucks rebuild.

— Michael Paweska (@mrpaweska) January 18, 2026

Perhaps enraged by the fact Roslovic got two goals on the night and was attempting to outshine him, Kapanen would then get HIS second goal of the night before thirty seconds had even passed. Tyler Myers loses a puck battle behind the net and then Buium is slow to react in front of the net, allowing Kapanen to skate by him and tap in a relatively easy goal:

Even with three Canucks skaters standing around in the same general area, the Oilers manage to get a guy open right in front of their goalie, which has been a problem all season long.

Best we’re almost done I promise
John Shorthouse probably asking for a trade #Canucks

— Brock Jackson (@BrockTalk) January 18, 2026

To finish the night, who else but a player the Canucks were extremely quick to give up on as former Canucks first rounder Vasili Podkolzin would collect his 11th goal of the season after Connor McDavid scared every single Canucks player on the ice into trying to cover him:

Which on one hand, I don’t blame them? If I saw McDavid skating at me I’d be phoning every friend I had to come join me as we attempted to take on McDavid like a World of Warcraft raid boss.

But while the Canucks were focusing on the Oilers captain, Podkolzin was able to skate onto the loose puck and snipe home the final goal of the game.

Best final point
Canucks fighting to make a breakout pass

— Jim Lahey HNIC (@LaheyHNIC) January 18, 2026

The only clip I took of the third period? This lack of pushback after the Oilers, who were already up 6-0 at this point, the game well in hand, took a swipe at the glove of Mr. T:

Do I need Drew O’Connor to drop gloves there? Of course not. But I would like to, at one point in the near future, see a team who is losing 6-0 in a game like this go full Bieksa and headlock anyone to the ice who tries to stunt on the team in a blowout like this. Up 6-0 and you’re poking at a rebound? Get the absolute eff out of here with that garbage.

Look, I know the vibes around this team aren’t good, we all get that. The players saw their best player get traded and they are mired in a losing streak that many in the fan base are supporting, if not vocally, at least mentally. It’s a hard environment to care in, and I understand that. A lot of older players might be eyeing the exit sign and wondering if Jim Rutherford will be sending them a written letter via carrier pigeon informing them they’ve been traded any day now. Which is why it’s so important to make those deals. Finish out the season however you want, but lock in a new direction and culture for next season. Don’t let this losing mentality seep into the floorboards and poison the well.

Tank out the season, but start building the next core up and instill the fight into the team. Not an easy task, mind you, but I do think it’s vital that what we saw against the Oilers on Saturday night, doesn’t happen again next season. Build up your roster, put your pieces in place, and start finding those glimmers of hope where the team starts showing some life again. Commit to the process and give the fanbase a lifeline.

Otherwise all we’re going to be doing is looking for people wearing throwback jerseys instead of caring about what happened on the ice.

Best jersey Botch
@TheStanchion jersey collab of the century pic.twitter.com/IoJzB4036y

— Brett (@xBrett16) January 18, 2026

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/stanchies-vancouver-canucks-tenth-loss-row-6-0-defeat-edmonton-oilers
 
Scenes from practice: Blueger centres Canucks’ third line, possible return Monday vs Islanders

After their worst loss of the season, the Vancouver Canucks were back at practice at Rogers Arena on Sunday. It was a season-ticket holder event with a couple of hundred hearty fans in the stands taking in the 40-minute session.

What we saw​

#Canucks lines this morning
DeBrusk-EP40-Boeser
Kane-Kämpf-O’Connor
Öhgren-Blueger-Garland
Höglander-Sasson-Karlsson

(Bains-Räty-Chytil)

— Jeff Paterson (@patersonjeff) January 18, 2026

After being shutout 6-0 on Saturday by Edmonton, and with just two goals in their last three games, the Canucks re-arranged their forward lines in an attempt to spur some offence.

Veterans Jake DeBrusk and Brock Boeser flanked Elias Pettersson on the top line while Evander Kane and Drew O’Connor skated with David Kämpf. Teddy Blueger, out since October 19th, filled the third line centre spot between Liam Öhgren and Conor Garland while Max Sasson skated with Nils Höglander and Linus Karlsson. Höglander has been a healthy scratch the past two games. Blueger remains on injured reserve and will need to be activated before returning to game action. He is considered a possibility to return on Monday against the New York Islanders.

With a bevy of additional forwards on the ice, Arshdeep Bains, Aatu Räty and Filip Chytil comprised a line of extras during practice. Bains will likely be re-assigned to Abbotsford if Blueger is ready to go on Monday.

With a heavy workload of late, Filip Hronek was given a maintenance day Sunday, but will be ready to play on Monday night. In his absence the Canucks had P-O Joseph paired with Marcus Pettersson while Zeev Buium formed a tandem with Tyler Myers and Tom Willander skated with Victor Mancini.

As they did at Saturday’s morning skate, the Canucks had three goalies on the ice as practice netminder Alex Kotai joined Kevin Lankinen and Nikita Tolopilo to tend the nets.

Kiefer Sherwood was seen in the Canucks locker room, but he did not participate with the group at practice. Adam Foote had no further updates on either Sherwood or Thatcher Demko on Sunday. Marco Rossi, out since December 30th, was also spotted around the locker room area, but has not been on the ice with his teammates since leaving the line-up.

some hearty #Canucks fans checking out team practice today pic.twitter.com/adutdlpclq

— Jeff Paterson (@patersonjeff) January 18, 2026

What we heard​


Teddy Blueger on getting close to a return to game action: “Yeah, I’m feeling the best I’ve felt in a long time. It’s good to be out there with the guys. It’s been a long progression. It’s been difficult. But feeling the best I’ve felt in a while, so it’s good. We had a couple of setbacks through the process. It was a difficult rehab and it wasn’t as straightforward as we had expected and would have liked, so it definitely took more time than I thought it would. It’s been tough for sure.”

Blueger on how being ready to play for Latvia at the Olympics fueled his motivation to get back into action: “It wasn’t really at all until the last couple of weeks, probably, because the whole time I was thinking I had plenty of time really, not worries. Probably around the time when they announced the whole line-ups, it’s starting to come together and feel a little bit more real. And then it’s like ‘I haven’t played in a long time and the games are dwindling quick before I get to go’ so I think probably the last couple of weeks it’s been a little bit on my mind.”

Blueger on returning to a much different team without Quinn Hughes and one that’s winless in 10 games: “It’s a frustrating time, but that’s how it goes sometimes. I don’t think our job changes much regardless of what the direction of the team is or the outlook is. Our job is to show up and compete and work as hard as we can every day and try to win every game. That doesn’t change whether Quinn is here or not. It’s the same for whoever is in the line-up. It’s your job to compete and play for your teammates. Fans pay a lot of money to watch up play and they deserve an honest effort, I think. It’s a tough period, but I don’t think the overall outlook changes from game to game.”

Check out the availability from Blueger below!

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/scenes...-possible-return-monday-vs-new-york-islanders
 
3 Canucks Stars of the Week: Kevin Lankinen’s sharp saves not enough to carry Canucks to a win

Welcome back to Stars of the Week at CanucksArmy! Every week, we’ll be bringing you our Top Three best and brightest performers on the Vancouver Canucks that week. Disagree with our picks or have your own stars to nominate? Let us know in the comments below!

At this stage in the Canucks rebuild, two vital questions must be answered: why are they still trying to win games when they are inevitably going to come up short regardless, and what exactly is the player deployment strategy here?

The Canucks played four games this week without a single win, topped off with a particularly eye-watering 6-0 shutout at Rogers Arena at the hands of the Edmonton Oilers. A Leon Draisaitl-less Oilers group, at that.

It is one thing to go all-in on young players. It is another thing entirely to ensure those players have a positive learning experience, even through a losing season. First of all, putting rookies in positions that complement their strengths is a must – whatever was going on with Tom Willander and Victor Mancini this week, it was not the case. They cannot learn from their mistakes if they are not playing and making mistakes, but it’s much easier to make stupid mistakes when you’re not even set up for success. After a particularly bad game or two, it makes sense to scratch a young player and force a hard mental reset like you’re restarting an iPhone. Just don’t put a bad taste in their mouths before the team fire sale has even truly begun.

It’s time for head coach Adam Foote to start answering some hard questions, without bringing up any form of tree nut or Russian basement–dwellers.

Rock Bottom Stats Corner​


Games played this week: 4

Games won this week: 0

Goals scored this week: 5

Goals against this week: 18

Games since last win: 10

Games won in 2026: 0

Goals scored in 2026: 14

Goals against in 2026: 40

Players traded in 2026: 0…so far.​

Linus Karlsson​


It is unfortunate when a player has a breakout NHL season while the rest of their team is a proverbial dumpster fire, namely because their efforts are ultimately fruitless and their success is often overlooked. When firefighters show up at a house fire, none of them are commenting on how beautiful the portico is.

Linus Karlsson is that portico. Perhaps unassuming, standing tall in front, and most definitely not the first thing to burn. Okay, maybe we are losing the analogy here.

Karlsson is an ideally balanced player for the phase of life the Canucks are entering. He’s young enough, both in human years and in rostered NHL years, but he brings a finishing touch and more polished decision-making that the Canucks rookies are lacking at this point.

This week, Karlsson set up Elias Pettersson for key goals not once, but twice, in back-to-back games. First, he tipped a Filip Hronek monster-shot to get Pettersson a rebound to open the scoring against the Montreal Canadiens. In their well-fought 2-1 contest against the Ottawa Senators, he found Elias Pettersson in the slot, being the major factor on the goal that brought Elias Pettersson into the top-10 goal scorers in Canucks history. Amongst the sea of losses, it’s the little wins that should still be celebrated.

🚨Canucks goal🚨

Elias Pettersson gets the Canucks on the board and makes it a one-goal game!

🎥 Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/legZzy4JWt

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) January 14, 2026

Drew O’Connor​


Given the fact that Filip Chytil has hardly played many games as a Vancouver Canuck due to multiple injuries – a known factor when he was acquired – and that Victor Mancini has spent a significant amount of time in the AHL with Abbotsford, Drew O’Connor has unexpectedly become the most consistent player to come from last year’s series of transactions stemming fom the trade of J.T. Miller to the New York Rangers. My apologies to Marcus Pettersson. He knows how he’s been playing.

Despite some rough patches, O’Connor has emerged as a consistent and imposing bottom-six forward, particularly at even-strength deployment. In no uncertain terms, DOC has that DOG in him.

O’Connor was essentially half of the team’s driving force in their 4-1 contest against the Columbus Blue Jackets, a game that could have been an email – or even a nap. Earlier in the week, against the Canadiens, there was a two-man obstacle course O’Connor beat in order to set up Max Sasson for a goal. This game was a match-up against a far better Montreal team than the Canucks, frankly, had no business staying in as long as they did. Any attempt to put up a fight without actually overtaking the opposing team is exactly what this team should be aiming for at this time.

🚨CANUCKS GOAL🚨

Drew O’Connor makes a great play to set up Max Sasson, who ties the game at 3-3.

🎥: Prime | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/3n972n7VkZ

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) January 13, 2026

Kevin Lankinen​


While Thatcher Demko is still on injured reserve for the foreseeable future, Kevin Lankinen has once again taken over starting goaltender duties. Lankinen split this week’s games evenly with call-up Nikita Tolopilo – it has been a thankless job for both of them, and I do not envy the position of backing up the Canucks in the present moment.

While it is a difficult endeavour to shower praise on any member of the roster at the moment, it’s common etiquette to never place losses squarely on goaltenders, likely because it is often the truth. Phenomenal goaltending may very well win you games, but poor goaltending will rarely ever singlehandedly lose them.

Lankinen ended the week with an undisclosed illness, taking him out of commission, but he started it off strong. He made a handful of incredible saves on the road against both the Senators and Blue Jackets. This moment significantly raised my own blood pressure; one can only imagine what it did to Lankinen’s.

Kevin Lankinen gets juuuuuuuuuusst enough of the puck to stop it from crossing the line! 😳 pic.twitter.com/B8JPy5dRq3

— NHL (@NHL) January 14, 2026

Sponsored by bet365

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/3-vanc...vin-lankinen-sharp-saves-not-enough-carry-win
 
Seravalli: ‘Growing suspicion’ from NHL teams that Elias Pettersson is traded this season

Could the departure of top Vancouver Canucks centreman Elias Pettersson be coming sooner than anyone thought possible?

Amidst the Canucks’ rapid pivot to a rebuild, one thing is becoming clear: the team is open to offers on any of their core players if the price is right. Earlier this season it was Quinn Hughes, this week it was Kiefer Sherwood, and it could soon be Pettersson.

Joining Sportsnet 590 The FAN on Monday, NHL insider Frank Seravalli reported that teams across the league believe Pettersson could be traded this season, and potentially soon.

“I think there’s definitely a growing suspicion from teams that (an Elias Pettersson trade) happens this year. There are some thinking maybe even before the Olympics,” Seravalli said. “That feels kinda quick, but the Canucks have been in the spot where they’re ready and willing to consider anything and everything pretty much throughout the course of the organization.”

The NHL’s Olympic roster freeze begins on February 4th, meaning if the Canucks really are keen on getting something done before then, they have just over two weeks. As the Canucks’ first-line centre, Pettersson is obviously a key piece for the team, and at 27 years old, he’s hardly past his prime. But the once 100-point player has seen a rapid decline in his statline over the past few seasons. So far this year, he has 29 points in 40 games.

Seravalli added later on Sportsnet 650’s Canucks Central that he believes the return in a Pettersson trade would be better than what the Canucks got for JT Miller, which is making the team consider a move. On Sportsnet, he expanded on the market situation that is making Pettersson such a valuable asset.

“Look at the deals signed for Dvorak and Wennberg, $5.15 million for Dvorak and $6 million for Wennberg,” Seravalli said. “All of a sudden you turn around and you look at Elias Pettersson and you say, if we believe this is a guy we can rejuvenate, get his career going with a change of scenery, all of a sudden $11.6 million a year doesn’t sound like a crazy risk profile.”

Seravalli noted the Carolina Hurricanes as “one of a handful of teams” calling the Canucks right now, with the overwhelming interest being another reason to look into moving Pettersson. Of course, the Swedish forward holds a full no-movement clause, so he would have to approve of any deal Vancouver makes.

Later in the day, Seravalli went on Oilers Now and said that teams are “beating down the Canucks’ door” for Pettersson, and added that there has been “real and significant” interest in Pettersson over the last 10 days.

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/vancou...cion-nhl-teams-elias-pettersson-traded-season
 
The Stanchies: Filip Hronek battles until the bitter end in Canucks’ 4-3 loss to Islanders

Rest easy, Lonny Bohonos and Larry Courville, your spot in the Vancouver Canucks losing streak hall of shame has been removed. With the New York Islanders’ 4-3 victory on Monday night, the 2025/26 Canucks now lay claim to the longest losing streak in franchise history at 11 games. There is good news, however: eleven straight losses is something being welcomed with open arms in this city, as the thirst for first continues.

Back in 1997/98, though? That was the start of the Mark Messier years, back when he was supposed to be the final piece of the puzzle, which instead ended up being one of the darkest timelines you could have come up with. And although Bryan Allen, selected fourth overall with the draft pick from that horrendous season, went on to have a perfectly respectable NHL career, many in Vancouver are hoping for a bit of a higher bar this time around.

That being said, if you’re going to lose an 11th game in a row, at least the Canucks made it a good one. I won’t insult your intelligence by calling any of these games good, but in terms of effort level and excitement, this was one of the better nights of the season. This is how you want your team to play as it goes through its growing pains, showing some spirit and not just openly accepting the incoming loss with barely a flinch.

Fil Hronek in particular stood out to me, especially during a third period five-on-three penalty kill situation. With nothing to play for except pride, it was Fil Hronek battling like it was a playoff game, playing hard on the body, harassing the puck carriers, and at one point flinging himself through the air to make sure he cleared the puck out of the zone. In a season in which the “oh wow” moments have been few and far between, chalk that one up as one of the highlights of the season for me. Call me old-fashioned, but I still get hyped when I see a guy battling it out like his life depends upon it, even amidst a losing streak in a rebuilding season. If you want to keep veterans around as a good example for the kids, put Hronek at the very top of that list.

Overall, it was a decent game from Vancouver. They carried the play for long stretches of the game, utilizing an offensive cohesion we haven’t seen much of this year. Not every scoring chance was banging away at a rebound from a point shot; there were actual moments when they were slinging the puck around and looking for shots with bad intentions, a nice change of pace if we’re being honest.

Ultimately, the Canucks defensive coverage rose up to be the tank hero it needed to be, as the Islanders secured the win on less than ideal decisions from Vancouver in their own zone.

In the end, the Canucks got the result they needed with an effort that was appreciated, and that’s about as good as it gets in a season like this.

Let’s dive into this one.

Best Grey’s Anatomy update
#Canucks GM Patrik Allvin when asked if surgery may be required for Thatcher Demko:
"I think we are going through, taking opinions from other resources around the world to see where his status is and what needs to be done or not."

— Adam Kierszenblat (@Adamkblat) January 19, 2026

We have hit the “looking for answers all across the globe” part of the Demko timeline, which feels ominous?

Best big news of the day
With Kiefer Sherwood gone, Max Sasson is only three goals away from leading active players on this team.#Canucks

— Trevor Beggs (@TrevBeggs) January 20, 2026

The off-ice news of the day was, of course, the trade of Kiefer Sherwood, who was dealt for two second-rounders and some guy named Cole Clayton. There were always rumours of the Canucks wanting a first-rounder for Kiefer. However, a return of two second-rounders is still a pretty big win for Vancouver, who finally, finally, traded away a free agent signing at a much higher value than when they first got him.

In terms of the human side of things, it’s sad to see Kiefer Sherwood go. He seemed to truly love the city of Vancouver and appreciated the fan base, something that doesn’t happen all the time around these parts. His play on the ice was also a highlight on many nights, as his appetite for landing hits and his skilled hands made him an engaging presence in the middle of the roster. He’s one of those guys you want to see in the playoffs because you know he’s going to bring it every single night and won’t back down from a single battle. The Sharks are a fun, exciting hockey club, and I imagine many a Canucks fan will enjoy seeing him work towards a post-season berth this season.

From a business side of things, it was very much the right deal, however. As tantalizing as his combination of grit and skill is, he is turning 31 in March and looking to cash in on a big contract, which doesn’t align with the Canucks’ rebuild timeline.

And as they say, when one person leaves, another person has to step up, which is where we found ourselves when Max Sasson opened the scoring on the night, sniping home a pass from Linus Karlsson in the slot:

Tony DeAngelo attempts to make what I will charitably call a dogsh!t pass to Scott Mayfield in front of his net, only for Max Sasson to blow his spot by jumping up and hitting the puck away. David Kämpf makes a kind of incredible cross-ice pass over to Linus Karlsson (incredible in that I didn’t think he had that in him). Then Karlsson goes full Hank Sedin by choosing to not shoot in a spot where your soul was screaming for said shot, only to find a guy even more open than him in Max Sasson. It’s the kind of play Elias Pettersson is trying to make every time he passes out of a shot, except Linus made it work here.

Perhaps fueled by the best pass of his season, David Kämpf then almost scored off of a Drew O’Connor setup from behind the net, only to be denied by Ilya Sorokin:

It was a fun opening period, I won’t lie. The Islanders didn’t strike me as a super competent team on the night, as their defensive zone coverage often felt like a zone system where everyone just sort of followed the direction of the puck and hoped for the best, which led to more offensive chances than we’ve seen recently from Vancouver. At times, it felt like the Islanders were deploying the Canucks Quinn Hughes strategy of sitting back and biding their time until their young phenom defenceman, Matthew Schaefer, could generate some offence.

The Islanders did get a good look on net on the counterattack, however, when Jonathan Drouin almost tipped home a pass into the crease from Tony DeAngelo after sneaking in behind the Canucks coverage:

You’ll notice David Kämpf just sort of spinning in place at one point, releasing Drouin for reasons (bees?), which was just a nice, gentle reminder that breakdowns in coverage were surely coming.

One such breakdown should have made it a tie game, but Maxim Tsyplakov misfired on what looked to be a sure goal by the side of the net:

This is one of the more egregious defensive coverage mistakes on the night in my mind, because I truly don’t know how Aatu Räty can go from battling Tsplakov in the crease, to releasing him and skating wildly to the corner to try and harass the puck carrier. I have watched this video countless times, and I still don’t know when Aatu decides that “yes, now is the time to leave this guy alone in front of the goalie whilst I go chase Adam Boqvist in the corner.” At best, I think he thinks Hronek got beat on the drive behind the net, but even then, you cannot release a check in front of your net like that. If you do that in beer league, your goalie will pretend not to hear you when you ask him to toss you a beer at the end of the night, and/or possibly get a passive-aggressive comment about you later in the group chat.

Despite the defensive issues, at least Vancouver was causing another team to have issues of their own, as Conor Garland almost tipped him a shot in his office at the side of the net, just pushing it wide:

Even in that clip, you can see that Vancouver was playing better than in any of the recent games. Good pressure on the forecheck, winning puck battles, and when they got the puck to the point with time and space, they looked for a high-end finish with the tap-in, instead of just flinging the puck on net.

Best crack in the armour
Looked like Lankinen was sliding on concrete. Should’ve got the body on that one. Tie game. #canucks

— just a guy. 🇨🇦 (@jaycee24_) January 20, 2026

The Islanders would eventually make the Canucks pay for their defensive coverage when Defensive Minded Elias Pettersson played things a bit loose, backing off of Anthony Duclair to double up Hronek’s man in Anders Lee, and cannot get back in time to block the shooting lane:

It’s not the worst error you’ll see, but it just sort of speaks to the whole Canucks experience this season. Instances where a player just sort of wanders into the sewer looking for their paper boat, leaving a guy open for a goal.

That being said, Kevin Lankinen will absolutely want that goal back. He gets into position but then gets beat short side, which isn’t ideal.

Best stonks
Kane value ⬆️ quick. Trade him!!! #Canucks.

— R Yap (@Kaotikz3000) January 20, 2026

Fil Hronek and Evander Kane would pull off a faceoff strat that has a time-honoured tradition in beer league, the one in which you win the draw while a dude busts his ass down the rink and looks for the Hail Mary pass:

A bit of luck, a bit of skill, that’s how Hronek makes that pass, and it works. If you ever want to see passion and energy and hustle in a player, let Evander Kane think he has a shot at a breakaway. Nobody faster in the world. He tries a good move but gets stopped, but he wouldn’t be denied long, as on the same shift, Kane would eventually tip from a Defensive Elias Pettersson shot from the point:

Honestly, Evander Kane had a really good offensive night. Defensively, he will forever and always be Planet Ice, but offensively? It might have been the best he’s looked all season. The jokes about upping his trade value write themselves, but laughs aside, this is the kind of tape you can sell other teams on should you want to move him.

The second they ask to see his underlying defensive stats, you slap them in the face and throw water at them, of course. But putting that aside, good game.

Remember, they can fix him. That’s how you sell any player.

They.

Can.

Fix.

Him.

Best fresh hotness
#canucks this will not count, but man Boeser with the giveaway

— Biff Mcfly (@BiffMcfly43) January 20, 2026

The Canucks continued to rush the puck with purpose, as Jake DeBrusk and Elias Pettersson both took turns running the puck to the net. Both men used different strategies as Jake chose the Mason Raymond method of shooting high and wide, whereas Elias actually did a pretty dope fake out where he threw a puck on net instead of the pass Sorokin was looking for:

On that same shift, with momentum on their side, Brock Boeser tried to force a pass to thoughts and prayers, which the Islanders turned into what looked like the tying goal:

When you pass it in the middle
And you never hear a whistle
And you don’t think you can skate back in time
By the time you grab your stick
And you start feeling sick
You’re at the blueline watching Schaefer skate by

It’s alright ’cause you’re saved by the bell.

If Zeev Buium has a test
And he falls down in a mess
And he ends up scoring on Lankinen in tight
Riding low on the bench
Giving his teeth a mighty clench
He sighs knowing an offside will make it alright

It’s alright ’cause you’re saved by the bell.

I will say that I almost wanted that goal to count because it was such a ridiculous move from Schaefer. He truly has that Quinn Hughes aura where you’re like, “There is no way this young kid can be this good, right?” even though you know he is. He is absolutely worth the price of admission.

Best trading chances
Apparently post-trade bumps are a thing. Canucks playing with jump and heart tonight #Canucks

— Breanne (@BreenyLou) January 20, 2026

As I said, though, it was hard to find much to complain about on this night, defensive issues aside. It was nice seeing Brock Boeser take the puck hard to the net while DeBrusk and Elias Pettersson attacked at the rebound like the vultures they are:

And in case you forgot, here is Schaefer once again walking around people at will, almost creating goals out of nothing:

Fun opening period all around, I wouldn’t be against letting the Islanders come back to Vancouver at a future date.

Best mushy middle
So did the #Canucks decide 20 Games in was a good time to play fun hockey at home? Hell, if they played like this at home & lost 16 we'd at least be entertained.

— Hughes Sports Podcast (@HSP_Pod) January 20, 2026

The Islanders chased the puck a lot in this game and felt very reactive at times and not very proactive. It would lead to extended shifts where they would be stuck on the ice, and Vancouver would do their best to take advantage of it:

You can see a bit of the passivity from the Islanders in that clip, where they lose a puck battle and then spend the rest of the time sort of following the puck around the ice, not really challenging for it, and not cutting it off at any point. DeBrusk ends the play by making a strong move to the middle and getting a good shot off.

Aatu Räty would then charge in hard on the forecheck, throwing a big hit, resulting in Liam Öhgren setting up Linus Karlsson for a high danger shot on net:

Even Liam Öhgren passing that puck there, that’s fun to see. It’s a higher-skilled play, and at this point, I’ll take the team trying to get creative now and then over the standard “put puck on net, look for rebound” mode they usually find themselves in.

And Räty would generate a scoring chance once again off of his strong forecheck, as this time Evander Kane would collect the puck and then try to ram the puck directly into the net of the Islanders:

It just felt nice to see the team trying, you know? They gave a glimpse of that world in which the team is young, and rebuilding, and not everyone hates their lives, and they actually still have a dream of winning in Vancouver instead of forcing a trade to Minnesota.

It’s the little things, you know?

Best shake and bake
Almost gif-worthy ankle-breaker by #Canucks Elias Pettersson on Matt Barzal lol

— Andreas Wahl (@AndehWahl) January 20, 2026

Matthew Barzal got embarrassed on live television in the second period, as Elias Pettersson not only drove right around him to get a wraparound shot on net, but he would then later break the ankles of the Coquitlam native with a little NBA Jam razzle dazzle in the corner:

I pumped the tires of Hronek in the opening, but let me also pump the tires of Elias Pettersson, as he was also noticeably one of the better players on the night. These are the games where you can see other teams really leaning into the “we can fix him” mantra that fuels half the trades in the NHL.

Best shooting your shot
#Isles get the kill. Holmstrom/Sorokin deny a backdoor try with 10 seconds left on the #Canucks PP.

— Stefen Rosner (@stefen_rosner) January 20, 2026

Up by a goal and with a power play in hand, Vancouver had the chance to make it a two-goal lead on this chance from Öhgren, set up by who else, Fil Hronek:

Ilya Sorokin makes a really weird save animation on the pass from Hronek, but recovers in time to make what I would call a game-changing save on Liam in the crease, just getting a pad on the puck at the last second.

It just felt like Hronek wanted no part of setting a losing streak record, which is something I can respect. Dude was busting his ass all over the ice.

Best why I do Duclair
Why the hell is Jake DeBrusk on the PK….WTF #Canucks

— Ocean Park Nancy🇨🇦 🏒🥅 (@Nancy_Simonetta) January 20, 2026

Jake is on the penalty kill because Teddy Blueger is in witness protection, and because he gets delightful breakaway rushes now and then.

That being said, David Kämpf and Jake DeBrusk team up to somehow both not cover Duclair on the power play, who beats them by…standing still:

He literally just glides into position, and then every Canuck on the ice just sort of forgets he exists. Kämpf decides the cross-crease pass is the ultimate danger, so he dives to the ice to block a hypothetical pass, and Jake is slow to get back, so nobody ends up taking the stick of Duclair.

I actually kind of enjoy the fact that Kämpf thinks a pass is the biggest threat there, to the point he dives to the ground, taking himself out of any future plays in the next couple of seconds. It’s a bold play, I’ll give him that. He did it with conviction.

Best swarm swarm swarm
it's the #NHL. Just can't give a player that much time and space. Doesn't matter if it's a low-scoring dman. Guys are too good. Will score that 3-2 goal all day

— Jeff Paterson (@patersonjeff) January 20, 2026

The Islanders would then take the lead for good after the Canucks coverage once again broke down, as this time they did the unthinkable; they forgot about Ryan Pulock:

Never forget about Ryan Pulock.

For reasons (bees) I cannot quite understand, Nils Höglander and Linus Karlsson get into a heated rivalry as they both decide that they should be the one to get back into their zone quickest. They end up hustling down low and along the boards, while David Kämpf watches with what I can only hope is a sense of wry amusement. Kämpf then continues to watch his friends race around the ice, and continues his own journey into the corner, thus giving us the Ryan Pulock moment none of us saw coming.

It’s just a bad play overall where the Canucks once again overstuff one side of the ice, and nobody seems to recognize that they are, in fact, in danger.

And of course, who else by Matthew Schaefer is the one who finds Pulock open with time and space to unleash what I’m told was a pretty fast wrist shot.

Best punish them all
Evander Kane is having himself a good game today. Nice to see that physical side. #Canucks

— Dominik Sodin (@Dominik171888) January 20, 2026

Evander Kane randomly decided to murder Adam Pelech at one point, so there’s that:

There’s a freeze frame in which Pelech’s mouth is open in a mixture of shock and pain, where you can tell he’s going to be feeling that hit tomorrow.

I truly think Evander Kane will round into better form as the major surgery he had gets further and further into the rearview mirror.

I just think all the gains will be made on one side of the ice only.

Still seems worth three first-rounders, minimum.

Best understanding the mission
Myers wanting a high draft pick. Atta boy #Canucks

— NuckenFutz (@itOKimALimoDrvr) January 20, 2026

With his team down a man already, Tyler Myers knew a cross-check could seal the deal for Team Tank on this night. And the Chaos Giraffe? He don’t miss:

And with the Canucks looking like their night was done, down a goal in the third and facing an extended five-on-three situation, what happened next surprised me.

The Canucks didn’t just hold things down. They shut things down.

The best chance the Islanders got? A shot on net where they prayed they’d get the rebound:

That was the extent of it. Marcus Pettersson, Elias Pettersson, and Fil Hronek put on a master class of defending, and this was a situation in which MP3 didn’t have his stick for most of it. The final part of that clip, Hronek slaps the puck while falling down, adding the proper amount of drama and respect to the moment.

If you talk about moments where you can earn yourself an emotional clap from Charles S. Dutton, this would be one of them. Just one of those bad ass moments where you find yourself nodding your head, going “**** yeah, well done boys” and there isn’t a single thought of Team Tank in your mind. It was just nice to see them lock in and do well at hockey, something that we can sometimes forget to enjoy during bleak seasons such as these.

Best is there anything he can’t do
SCHAEFER JUST SAVED A GOAL! #Isles #Canucks

— LuckyIsles_13 (@LuckyIsles) January 20, 2026

Evander Kane came about this close to tying the game up on a power play in the third period, if it wasn’t for those damn kids:

Looking like a young Dan Hamhuis, Schaefer shoves the puck back under his goaltender, and danger was averted.

Best there are four lights
Who’s getting traded tomorrow after this game #canucks

— j (@canuckscrazy37) January 20, 2026

Alas, New York would get their fourth goal off of an Anders Lee rebound, as Tony DeAngelo would jump on a rebound and put it past a slightly surprised Tyler Myers:

Again, another situation where a player is wide open, and nobody is in the area to do much about it. There is clearly a bit of bad luck at play here in that the rebound bounced out to DeAngelo, but you also have all five Canuck skaters staring at Anders Lee, which makes it easier for bad luck to befall you.

Best asking the hard questions
What the hell ever happened to Jack Rathbone?! #Canucks

— Canadian Luigi (@CanadianLuigii) January 20, 2026

Jack Rathbone would have been impressed with the gumption shown by Fil Hronek, as he did everything in his power to get the puck on net, where he knows their best offensive threat, Drew O’Connor, will take care of the rest:

That fake slapshot to freeze the defender so Hronek could get the wrist shot through? Oh, you better believe that’s the good stuff.

Drew would tip home his 11th goal of the season, and with over half the season completed, I worry he won’t hit 20 goals.

But doubting Drew is what fuels him. I look forward to goal number 20 by the end of the season, good sir.

Best rules are rules
Broke the record for the longest losing streak in Canucks history. I’m never watching this team again. I can’t wait to watch the game on Wednesday night #Canucks

— Darrin Lessard (@dsardd) January 20, 2026

Evander Kane ended the night with four hits (two on Schaefer alone), five shots, one goal, and several “that could have been a goal” moments:

Worth at least five rounders is what I’m thinking.

Best sage advice
He needs to go now. I don't make the rules

— Arr Sea (@6o4boi) January 20, 2026

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/stanch...vancouver-canucks-4-3-loss-new-york-islanders
 
Foote’s postgame remarks rightly cast doubt that Canucks have proper group of veterans to lead team into next era

As much as some Vancouver Canucks fans – and perhaps team management, too – would like to be able to simply press a button and shoot the team’s entire roster into outer space right now, the fact of the matter is it’s not that simple to completely strip down a National Hockey League lineup.

Head coach Adam Foote rightfully put his veterans on blast with his most pointed postgame remarks of the season in the wake of Monday’s 4-3 defeat at the hands of the New York Islanders. The latest loss – the team’s 11th in a row – set a franchise record for consecutive defeats and had the coach questioning his group’s focus, leadership, and the overall culture of the hockey club.

Foote: Our veterans are the ones that feel defeated first. It's been going on here for a few years. We get off our game, we get frustrated, we over-complicate it…It's something we have to get out of our culture. Our culture's not going to be that anymore. #Canucks @Sportsnet650

— Brendan Batchelor (@BatchHockey) January 20, 2026

It came just hours after General Manager Patrik Allvin gave a vote of confidence to the veteran leaders who continue to underperform for this team on a nightly basis. So who’s in the right here? The general manager in his belief that he has quality players and people in that locker room who deserve to set the culture for the organization moving forward? Or the head coach that clearly feels he has a group of players that is now letting frustration get the better of them as the losses mount with no apparent end in sight?

Allvin has to wear plenty of this season’s failures for committing both time and money to players who haven’t come anywhere close to performing at the levels expected of them. The scoring struggles of Brock Boeser, Jake DeBrusk, and Conor Garland are well-documented, and the numbers speak for themselves. Boeser has one goal in 24 games, DeBrusk is sitting on one 5-on-5 goal all season, while Garland has not scored since an empty netter at Madison Square Garden on December 14th and, incredibly, has not beaten a goalie since November 26th in Anaheim. Regardless of what they say in the room or how many dinners they attend on the road, these guys are all paid – and paid handsomely – to perform. What kind of impression are those struggles making on the younger players the Canucks are trying to integrate? How much weight do their words truly carry when their stat lines scream woeful underachieving this season?

Elias Pettersson, as the club’s highest-paid player, isn’t exactly blazing a trail to be followed by anyone. While the effort level and engagement on most nights have met the baseline one would expect from a player of his stature, it’s hard to suggest Pettersson has gone above and beyond as any kind of difference maker. And this is a bottom-line business, and there simply hasn’t been much of or enough of a bottom line from a guy cashing massive paycheques every two weeks.

But it doesn’t stop with the forwards. Both Marcus Pettersson and Tyler Myers have struggled to defend on so many nights this season. Pettersson’s having a forgettable 2025-26 campaign, and turning 36 in 10 days, Myers looks on many nights now like a player who is fighting both the puck and the aging curve. Again, they can say whatever they want to any of the young players, but much of that advice rings hollow when judged against the actions on the ice.

And then there is Thatcher Demko. And as much as he despises the notion, injuries are simply too much a part of his career story now. And it’s hard to be a veteran leader when the team is playing on the ice, and the team’s number one puck stopper is yet again on the training table. Obviously, Demko doesn’t want to be injured, but he can’t do his part to help the hockey club through the struggles if he’s not available as often as he should be.

The only veteran to really earn a pass with his play this season is Filip Hronek, who has been steady from the outset, continues to log big minutes and has found a way to produce offence when so many around him have not. Hronek has appeared in every game this season, leads the current roster in time on ice (24:28 per game) and is second on the club in scoring with 28 points.

With the club flailing to find its footing and the Canucks announcing their rebuild plans, the idea of keeping veterans around to insulate the younger players is fine, in theory. But which veterans absolutely need to remain, and which ones deserve to be the mentors to the next group to wear the uniform? After all, it’s not like this collection of seasoned players has done a lot of winning here or brought much glory to the organization or the city.

It’s time for management to get ruthless in its pursuit of excellence. For years, the fanbase has had its doubts about the makeup of this roster. And now the head coach seems to have made his views known by questioning the character of his veterans. Keeping some veterans around, sure. But all of these veterans? It seems pretty clear by now that the answer to that question is apparent. They haven’t been the right mix to lead the Canucks to success. And by that logic, they shouldn’t be the ones given the opportunity to lead this team out of the wilderness and back to relevance.

Sponsored by bet365

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/footes...ucks-proper-group-veterans-lead-team-next-era
 
The Farmies: Lekkerimäki’s late goal not enough as Abbotsford Canucks fall 4-3 to Rocket

The Abbotsford Canucks returned from their three-game California road trip with tans, a bit of leftover American currency, and a two-game losing skid. It was an unfortunate turn for a team that had finally begun to find its footing after putting together its first three-game winning streak of the season.

That momentum didn’t get any help on Tuesday night, as Abbotsford welcomed the Eastern Conference–leading Laval Rocket to town. On paper, it was a tough assignment. On the ice, however, it played out much closer than expected. The Canucks never held a lead, but they refused to go away, clawing back time and again behind a productive power play and a group that stayed competitive throughout.

It ultimately came down to a costly mistake with just 13 seconds remaining. Until then, Abbotsford had gone toe-to-toe with the league’s best, turning what could have been a routine result into a frustrating, hard-fought 4–3 loss.

Starting lineup​

Tuesday's Troop!

TUNE IN | https://t.co/HUVZm7aSFK pic.twitter.com/kYpVuqWgl3

— Abbotsford Canucks (@abbycanucks) January 21, 2026

First period: Dauphin stays hot

This game kicked off with an immediate penalty, as Canucks’ Dino Kambeitz was called for an early tripping call.

Yet, it was the home team who saw the sequence’s best chance. Thanks to some quick pressure at their own blueline, captain Chase Wouters was sent on a clear-cut breakaway. Fresh off a Montreal Canadiens reassignment, Jacob Fowler was up to the test for his first stop of the evening.

And just as the initial penalty expired, it was the Canucks’ turn to go to the man-advantage. Neither side was successful in their push.

Although no goals were scored, the line of Jonathan Lekkerimäki, Ty Mueller and Ben Berard was firing on all cylinders. Midway through the period, they nearly opened the scoring. First, it was Nikolai Knyzhov who rang a floating shot off the post. Off that rebound, Lekkerimäki was left all on his own in the slot before getting the puck high over the net.

It was just before the five-minute mark when the visiting Rocket got one, courtesy of the American League’s second-best scorer.

Laval goal — 1-0 — Lauren Dauphin from Sean Farrell and Nate Clurman

After a fueled clearing attempt, Sean Farrell sent a slick saucer pass over to Lauren Dauphin, who showed incredible patience to outwait Nikita Tolopilo.

It was a period where Abbotsford was unfortunate to come out of it down by a goal. The line of Lekkerimäki, Mueller, and Berard carried the momentum, nearly cashing in on many of their attempts.

Shots: ABB 9, LAV 8
Score: ABB 0, LAV 1


Second period: It’s Wouters time

The middle frame began with another early power play, with the Canucks enjoying the early chance. They didn’t capitalize on the initial chance, but were given a second chance shortly after. There, the captain went to work.

Abbotsford goal — 1-1 – Chase Wouters from Ben Berard and Danila Klimovich

Klimovich showed some nice patience, wrapping around the net to find Berard, who made a nice move to get the puck to the net. Although Fowler got the leg on it, the puck kicked out to Wouters, who pounced on the rebound to get his team on the board.

Midway through the period, Laval got the perfect chance to break the 1-1 stalemate. Breaking out all on, a late Victor Mancini got his hands on Lauren Dauphin. As you probably guessed from the play, the referee pointed to the centre circle for the penalty shot.

But Tolopilo stuck with the league’s second-best scorer, throwing out the paddle to put an end to the chance.

But it wouldn’t take long for him to seek revenge.

Laval goal — 2-1 — Sean Farrell from Lauren Dauphin

While hemmed into his own zone, Captain Chase Wouters committed one hockey ultimate sin: a pizza in his own zone.

Rather than go hard up the glass, Wouters turned and provided Dauphin with a gift before he sent the finishing touches over to Sean Farrell.

But a second Laval penalty further troubled the Canucks, allowing them to crawl back into the game. While on their third man advantage, Danila Klimovich showed off his trigger hand.

Abbotsford goal — 2-2 — Danila Klimovich from Jimmy Shchuldt and Chase Wouters

Thanks to some fine work down low, Wouters found Jimmy Schuldt alone at the point. He put the puck on a tee for the sharpshooter, who blasted his fifth of the season through Jacob Fowler.

Shots: ABB 17, LAV 19
Score: ABB 2, LAV 2


Third period: A Mancini mistake

The third period was all Laval out of the gate, and it was the visiting team who broke the seal.

Laval goal – 3-2 – Sean Farrell from Alex Belzille and David Reinbacher

Collecting the puck at the point was Alex Belzille, who fired an innocent shot toward the net. Streaking toward the puck from the middle was Sean Farell, who got a stick on it to change its course ever so slightly. With two players barreling into Tolpilo, the puck slowly found its way through the crease. Notably angry with the play, Abbotsford contested the play before it was deemed a good goal.

That goal held until the third, after the Rocket put themselves into more penalty trouble.

Abbotsford goal – 3-3 – Jonathan Lekkerimäki from Lukas Reichel and Ty Mueller

Breaking up the ice, Ty Mueller and Lukas Reichel played give-and-go before a streaking Lekkerimäki finished off the perfect centring pass from Reichel.

Up to this point, all three Abby goals had come from the man advantage.

But it mattered not. The Laval Rocket iced the game with 13 seconds left off a stinky giveaway from Victor Mancini.

Laval goal – 4-3 – Florian Xhekaj

With bodies being pinned behind the net, Mancini collected the puck. Attempting to find Danila Klimovich, he fanned on the pass and had it directly to Florian Xhekaj. Tolopilo did what he could to fend off the open chance, but Xhekaj stuck with the puck, sending the eventual game-winner to the top shelf.

Ouch.

Final shots: ABB 27, LAV 30
Final score: ABB 3, LAV 4


Final thoughts​


Although it ended in a 4–3 loss, the Abbotsford Canucks delivered a competitive, hard-fought effort against one of the league’s top teams. They never held a lead, but they refused to let the game slip away, responding each time and ensuring Laval never stretched the margin beyond a single goal. The power play carried them offensively, accounting for all three goals and keeping them within striking distance throughout the night.

Of course, it wasn’t a flawless performance. A handful of defensive miscues proved costly, particularly late, but the forward group largely held up its end of the bargain. Chase Wouters and Danila Klimovich — the game’s second star — were effective in key moments, and Abbotsford’s willingness to push back against an elite opponent was evident.

Still, moral victories only go so far. After riding their first three-game winning streak of the season, the Canucks now find themselves on a three-game slide, searching once again for consistency as the schedule rolls on.

What’s next?​


These two will rematch for game two on Wednesday. The puck drops at 7:00 PM PT at Rogers Forum.

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/farmie...ough-abbotsford-canucks-fall-4-3-laval-rocket
 
Canucks assign forward Arshdeep Bains to AHL Abbotsford

On Wednesday, Vancouver Canucks General Manager Patrik Allvin announced that forward Arshdeep Bains has been assigned to the AHL Abbotsford.

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

— Vancouver Canucks (@Canucks) January 21, 2026

And per Donnie & Dhali’s Rick Dhaliwal, Bains will suit up for Abbotsford tonight as they host the Laval Rocket.

Bains is playing for Abbotsford tonight.

— Rick Dhaliwal (@DhaliwalSports) January 21, 2026

Bains began the season in Vancouver, playing a role on the team’s top six before falling to the fourth line. In December, he was placed on waivers and cleared to join the team in Abbotsford. Earlier this month, he was called back up to Vancouver when forward Marco Rossi was placed on injured reserve.

So far this season, Bains has played a career-high 28 NHL games, with a goal and four assists to show for it, averaging 9:12 time on ice per night. In only five games in Abbotsford this season, Bains has three goals and three assists. Last weekend, in a shutout loss to the Edmonton Oilers, Bains led all Vancouver skaters in xGF% at 88.85%, but was unable to capitalize on his opportunities.

The 25-year-old Surrey native originally signed an entry-level contract with the Canucks in March 2022, undrafted out of the WHL. He played a big part in Abbotsford’s Calder Cup win last season, scoring seven goals and tallying 24 points in 24 playoff games.

Bains returns to an Abbotsford Canucks team that currently sits last in the AHL’s Pacific Division, 11 points out of a playoff spot with a 12-22-3-3 record. Tonight will be the second half of a back-to-back series with the Laval Rocket.

In yesterday’s game, the Canucks and Rocket traded chances back and forth until a Victor Mancini turnover in the dying seconds of the game to Florian Xhejak, Arber’s brother, at the net front sealed Abbotsford’s fate. Chase Wouters, Danila Klimovich and Jonathan Lekkerimäki were Abbotsford’s goal scorers on the night. They will host Laval again tonight at the freshly named Rogers Forum.

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/vancouver-canucks-assign-forward-arshdeep-bains-ahl-abbotsford-canucks
 
Instant Reaction: Canucks snap 11-game losing streak with 4-3 win over Capitals

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. @Capitals

Kane. EP40. DeBrusk.
O’Connor. Kämpf. Boeser.
Öhgren. Blueger. Garland.
Höglander. Sasson. Karlsson.

EP25. Hronek.
Buium. Myers.
MP29. Willander.

🥅Lankinen🥅

7pm on @Sportsnet650 https://t.co/J6DNM1E8Qt pic.twitter.com/66E1vcVDCk

— Brendan Batchelor (@BatchHockey) January 22, 2026

Teddy Blueger officially makes his return after missing over three months of action. He takes Aatu Räty’s place, centring Liam Öhgren and Brock Boeser.

First Period​


The first seven minutes of this game were a competitive back-and-forth. The Washington Capitals got the first few chances, but back-to-back shifts from the Canucks’ bottom-six registered a few chances of their own.

However, the Canucks found themselves in a bit of penalty trouble when Max Sasson got a two-minute penalty for holding the stick. It was a weird play. So, Sasson and Hendrix Lapierre go for the loose puck. Lapierre beats Sasson to the puck, but gets his stick lifted out of his hands. Lapierre kicks the puck out of danger while protecting the puck with his body away from Sasson. The Canuck forward gets his stick in the area, and Lapierre actually holds onto Sasson’s stick. But Sasson puts his hands in the air, which certainly made it look like he was trying not to look guilty, and the penalty got called on him.

So, to summarize, Sasson got a two-minute penalty for Lapierre stealing his stick. Makes sense.

On that kill, Marcus Pettersson caught a returning Tom Wilson up high with his stick, giving the Capitals a two-man advantage for 69 seconds – and they made the most of it.

The Canucks get caught playing too high in coverage, allowing John Carlson to send a feed to Wilson near the goal line, where it was just him and Dylan Strome to capitalize on a one-touch pass and open the scoring.

The Capitals score on the two-man advantage and get the scoring started early.

🎥 Sportsnet | #canucks pic.twitter.com/dQEjXwhzQW

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) January 22, 2026

1-0 Capitals.

Still on the power play, Alex Ovechkin attempts to send a cross-ice pass to Strome. The pass gets deflected, but he still manages to corral the puck and send it to the net front. Richmond, BC native Justin Sourdif gets his stick on the rebound off the post to double the Capitals’ lead.

Sourdif sneaks one home, and it's 2-0

🎥 Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/KvDQM4qPpc

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) January 22, 2026

2-0 Capitals.

Over this losing streak, a two-goal deficit would kill all the confidence in this team, especially this early in a game. However, the Canucks had a spark of offence when an unlikely duo connected.

David Kämpf comes in heavy on the forecheck to pressure Rasmus Sandin. Kämpf picks his pocket, attempts a pass to Boeser in the slot, which Sandin deflects off course. But Boeser is able to quickly adjust to the new angle by dropping a knee and perfectly placing the puck in the top right corner to put the Canucks on the board.

Brock Boeser gets the Canucks on the board and cuts the lead to one!

🎥 Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/0DaSxMbl93

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) January 22, 2026

It felt like once Boeser broke his 21-game goalless streak, all was good in Canucksland; nobody was on his case anymore for his poor play. But that continued over the next few games, so it was nice to see him back on the scoresheet.

2-1 Canucks.

After the goal, the Öhgren-Blueger-Garland line had some offensive-zone time and threatening scoring opportunities. And while it may not have been their line that connected, it sparked enough juice into this Canucks team to tie this game.

Evander Kane corrals the puck from behind the net, takes it out wide and fires a prayer toward the front of the net. Sometimes, prayers are answered, as the puck deflects off Matt Roy’s skate and behind Logan Thompson.

🚨 Canucks Goal🚨

It's an own goal, and we are tied!

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

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) January 22, 2026

2-2 tie game.

Takeaways from the first:

– Sure, the two top-six lines scored. But in all honesty, it was the bottom two lines that actually generated more in the offensive zone.

– Zeev Buium is intriguing to watch. He’s so much fun when he has the puck on his stick in the offensive zone; the fluidity and movements he makes are fun to watch. But then he has plays that aren’t so great. Buium attempted a cross-ice stretch pass, which Ryan Leonard picked off in the neutral zone, and the Capitals head back on the offence. The Canucks earn the puck back, and Buium then attempts another stretch pass, which doesn’t connect and goes down for an icing. Not an ideal way to end the period for the young defenceman.

Second Period​


After surrendering two on their 5-on-3 in the first period, the Canucks got a two-man advantage of their own to start the middle frame, after John Carlson and Connor McMichael took infractions. The Canucks registered four shots on goal on their power plays, but could not beat Thompson outside of this Elias Pettersson howitzer off the crossbar.

Pettersson rips one off the bar on the Power Play.

🎥 Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/IACvF6W6tH

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) January 22, 2026

But the team didn’t let themselves get defeated after not capitalizing in the same situation their opponents did twice. A few minutes later, on a similar play to their first goal of the game, the Canucks took their first lead.

Boeser and Kämpf pressure the Capitals on the forecheck, with the latter getting his stick on the puck first. Kämpf blindly sends a backhand pass toward the net as he gets dumped over along the boards. The pass connects perfectly to the tape of Drew O’Connor, who fires a one-touch snapshot far side on Thompson.

🚨Canucks goal🚨

Drew O'Connor gives the Canucks the lead in the 2nd!

🎥 Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/FFi5rdduTe

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) January 22, 2026

3-2 Canucks.

And the Canucks actually managed to build on their lead. Following minor penalties to both Kane and Leonard, the Canucks capitalized on a two-on-one with DeBrusk threading the pass to Filip Hronek at the net front, who elevates the puck through Thompson.

🚨Canucks goal🚨

Hronek makes it four unanswered goals!

🎥 Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/M3NiUK28CS

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) January 22, 2026

4-2 Canucks.

This was their first two-goal lead since December 19.

Who are you and what have you done with the Canucks team that lost 11 straight? Because this team is playing differently tonight.

Takeaways from the game:

– The Washington Capitals had a very active bench all night. After morning skate today, I stayed back to catch up on some work at the rink and watched the Capitals’ pregame skate. They were hootin’ and hollering the entire time they were on the ice. It just showed me that that’s a team. Those guys are having fun and enjoying each other, and they did the same when one of their players blocked a shot throughout the game.

– Sure, he took too many penalties in this period, but Ryan Leonard is the exact type of player you want on your team. He was all over the ice, creating offence, antagonizing the opposition. Canucks have got to find a guy like that through the draft during this rebuild.

Third Period​


Drew O’Connor came to play in this final frame. He had three quality scoring chances in the first minute of the game, and then followed that up with another chance on his next shift. He was determined to get his second of the game, but to no avail.

Other than that, most of the period was what you would expect in a two-goal game: the losing team (Capitals) were pushing the pace and trying to claw their way back, while the winning team (Canucks) were parking the bus, playing to protect the lead and secure their first win in what feels like forever.

But they couldn’t make it easy, could they?

The Capitals would be aggressive down two by pulling the goalie. Marcus Pettersson had a shot at the empty net from his own end, which went wide and wound up costly, as Strome tallied his second of the game.

Strome scores his second of the game and cuts the lead to one

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

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) January 22, 2026

4-3 Canucks.

And at one point, it felt like the Canucks were going to crumble and let the Capitals come back and tie this game because the Canucks had a few chances to score on the empty net. But they didn’t need the insurance marker.

4-3 Canucks Final.

The Canucks walked away with their first win of 2026 and snapped their 11-game losing streak. But fear not, Team Tankers, they still have a seven-point cushion over the St. Louis Blues.

Takeaways from the game:

– I had a funny feeling about this game. Canucks had already beaten the Capitals this season, giving them confidence they could do it. And they were just publicly called out by their Head Coach. Typically, you see the team really come together and rally around that. As a proud member of Team Tank, I will say that I am happy for the guys in the room that they can go home feeling proud after a win for the first time in nearly a month.

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

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/instan...ame-losing-streak-4-3-win-washington-capitals
 
Abbotsford Canucks receive their Calder Cup Championship rings

After 213 days since your Abbotsford Canucks defeated the Charlotte Checkers in Game 6 of the Calder Cup Finals, the players and coaching staff finally have their Championship rings.

CanucksArmy’s Jeff Paterson shared earlier this morning that the Canucks were hosting a ring ceremony for the Calder Cup winners at Rogers Arena later in the day.

#Canucks hosting a ring ceremony for Abbotsford’s Calder Cup winners at Rogers Arena this afternoon

— Jeff Paterson (@patersonjeff) January 22, 2026

Abbotsford later shared a social post featuring a video montage of the Championship run and unveiled the design of the rings the players and personnel received.

“Through the ups and the downs, we always showed up with a smile on our face. That’s important. I’m so proud of this group who battled every day to reach our end goal of bringing the trophy to Abbotsford. We are Champions forever,” Captain Chase Wouters.

Earned through… pic.twitter.com/p9nXo6dvkb

— Abbotsford Canucks (@abbycanucks) January 23, 2026

Here is a screenshot of the ring from the video:

Rings.jpeg


A handful of players who were on the Championship team from last year have made the full-time jump to the NHL: Linus Karlsson, Max Sasson, and Aatu Räty.

After leading the entire Calder Cup playoffs in goals (14) and points (26), Karlsson has made an impact with Vancouver this season. He has produced on the fourth line, but also on the top line when given his opportunity with Elias Pettersson and Jake DeBrusk. Karlsson is tied with Sasson for fifth on the team in goals (10) and is tied with Conor Garland for sixth in points (22).

Sasson and Räty bring something to the Canucks team that sets them apart and makes them valuable pieces of the nightly lineup. Sasson’s speed and scoring touch have earned him a role, sometimes as high as the second line centre. Räty’s reliable faceoff ability has proven to be a stretch, despite not always being in the lineup.

Arshdeep Bains, Jonathan Lekkerimäki, Victor Mancini, and Nikita Tolopilo have spent time with the big club this season. Bains is the most experienced of the trio, having played 28 NHL games this season, scoring one goal and five points. Lekkerimäki started the year in the top nine, but his lack of production (one goal and two points in eight games) has him back down developing in Abbotsford. Mancini has appeared in nine games in Vancouver and has a minus-five rating. Tolopilo has impressed at the NHL level, but is currently getting more work in Abbotsford.

Other Abbotsford Canucks Champions have moved on and earned contracts with other teams, with some even earning NHL minutes: Sammy Blais with the Montreal Canadiens, Arturs Silovs with the Pittsburgh Penguins, Phil Di Giuseppe with the Winnipeg Jets, Tristen Nielsen with the Colorado Avalanche and Cole McWard with the New York Islanders.

It was a long way, but Canucks fans can breathe a sigh of relief now, knowing that the players who brought them so much joy during their beloved Calder Cup playoff run now have a piece of Championship memorabilia.

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/abbotsford-canucks-receive-calder-cup-championship-rings
 
What should the Canucks’ forward lines look like when Chytil returns?

Filip Chytil is set to play for the first time since the hit he took from Tom Wilson in Washington on October 19, 2025. With Blueger returning on Wednesday night against the Washington Capitals, and Chytil potentially returning tonight against the New Jersey Devils, the Vancouver Canucks will be adding some much-needed centre depth to their lineup.

However, given the injury concerns, is it as simple as slotting Chytil back into the middle of the ice? What role can we expect him to take on after missing so much time? These are questions that we’ll likely find out after the game on Friday night. But let’s take our best guess at some possible forward line combinations the Canucks could ice once Chytil returns.

Given the aforementioned centre depth issue, particularly the lack of another top-six centreman, the Canucks coaching staff may feel he’s ready for top-six deployment down the middle of the ice right away.

Here’s our first lineup arrangement:

DeBrusk-Pettersson-Boeser
Öhgren-Chytil-Kane
O’Connor-Blueger-Garland
Höglander-Kämpf-Karlsson

If Chytil is going to play centre, having bigger wingers to insulate him a bit would be a smart option. Not only that, but both Evander Kane and Liam Öhgren have shown some offensive ability recently that would complement Chytil’s playmaking ability.

Kane and Öhgren would be able to handle the majority of the forechecking and play below the circles in the offensive zone, which would give Chytil the chance to play a bit more passively and find the soft spots in the offensive zone. They are also capable puck carriers through the neutral zone, and could take that pressure off Chytil in his return to the lineup.

If they’re going to give him this kind of deployment, it would be crucial that the coaching staff gives him a reliable duo on the wing that can take a lot of pressure off the Czech centreman.

Now let’s try something different and see how Chytil would look on the wing:

Kane-Pettersson-DeBrusk
O’Connor-Kämpf-Boeser
Chytil-Blueger-Garland
Öhgren-Sasson-Karlsson

This lineup is very similar to what they had against the Capitals on Wednesday; we’re just sliding Öhgren down and taking Höglander out of the lineup, which Adam Foote has not been shy of doing in the past.

The O’Connor, Kämpf, and Boeser line looked good the other night, so they’ve likely earned themselves another look in the coach’s eyes. Giving Chytil two defensively reliable players in Garland and Blueger could benefit him by alleviating the defensive responsibilities he would have as a centre in his return to the lineup.

Garland, being an excellent puck carrier, also takes that pressure off him. This line would allow him to match up against the Devils’ third line, giving him a softer matchup and a lesser role, just allowing him to settle in early on as he tries to find his game once again.

The third option might be the simplest and most conservative, but it does make sense.

Kane-Pettersson-DeBrusk
O’Connor-Kämpf-Boeser
Öhgren-Blueger-Garland
Höglander-Chytil-Karlsson

Swapping Sasson out for Chytil, giving him around 10 minutes of ice time and a very soft deployment, could be the right thing to do to ease him back into the fast pace of the game.

It’s not easy coming back from a head injury, both physically and mentally. Playing Chytil on the fourth line to start would make sense. Maybe he plays his way up the lineup throughout the game, but at least starting him off there allows him to play a bit more stress-free. Höglander and Karlsson are aggressive on the forecheck, and Höglander has some of that puck-carrying ability to ease that pressure off Chytil as well.

Having Chytil back in the lineup is a huge win for this team. It certainly hasn’t been the season fans hoped for, but getting him back in the lineup is nothing but positive for this group. The biggest thing is, in his return, there shouldn’t be any expectations. Let Chytil take a bit of time to find his game. There’s no rush for him to start putting up points and producing offensively; this team’s not in any kind of playoff hunt.

The most important thing for Chytil, in both the short and long term, is staying healthy and regaining his confidence to be the player Canucks fans know he can be.

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/what-should-vancouver-canucks-forward-lines-chytil-returns
 
Stars and Avalanche ‘among likely trade destinations’ for Canucks’ Evander Kane: report

The Dallas Stars and Colorado Avalanche are among the likely trade destinations for Vancouver Canucks forward Evander Kane, according to a report from NHL Network’s Kevin Weekes. Weekes posted the following to X.com on Friday afternoon:

“Per multiple sources, I’m told the @DallasStars and @Avalanche are among the likely destinations for @Canucks F Kane via potential trade.”

Like most Canucks, Kane, 34, has had a bit of a disappointing campaign to this point. Through 49 games, Kane has nine goals and 14 assists. The Canucks acquired Kane over the offseason in a trade with the Edmonton Oilers, sending a fourth-round pick back the Oilers’ way. Kane played some great hockey over his four seasons with the Oilers, though he missed the entire 2024-25 regular season due to injury. Through 161 regular season games with the Oilers, Kane amassed 62 goals and 49 assists. He added 26 goals and 16 assists across 68 playoff games during his time in Edmonton.

It makes sense that a team would want Kane — who put up 12 points in 21 playoff games for the Oilers just last season — on their roster as they prepare for the gauntlet that is the Stanley Cup Playoffs. It also makes even more sense why the 32nd-ranked Canucks would want to continue to stockpile future assets as they navigate their current rebuild, and look to offload pending UFAs like Kane.

This season, the Canucks have already dealt captain Quinn Hughes to the Minnesota Wild, and more recently, shipped off forward Kiefer Sherwood to the San Jose Sharks for two second round picks. As a result of these trades, the Canucks currently have two picks in both the first and second rounds of the 2026 NHL Entry Draft. Could the Canucks convince a team to cough up a second round pick in a Kane trade, especially if they offer to retain on his $5.125 million cap hit? That remains to be seen, but we’ll now be keeping a close eye on the Avalanche and Stars as potential landing spots, along with the LA Kings, who were reported to be interested in Kane last week.

READ NEXT: What could the Canucks receive from the Kings in an Evander Kane trade?


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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/nhl-va...-stars-colorado-avalanche-evander-kane-report
 
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