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The Stanchies: Canucks give fans something to smile about in loss to Devils

There is always talk about what constitutes a perfect tank game when watching a season like the one the Vancouver Canucks are currently embroiled in. And no matter what ingredients you throw in there, the two you always need are one, a loss, because let’s face it, that’s the star of this dish. And two, you want hope in there as well. Need it, in fact. It’s vital you have hope in there for this recipe to work.

And a loss on its own? That always comes with a bit of hope — the hope of drafting high, the hope of selecting a foundational piece of the future. The entire process of a tank season is predicated on maintaining a good spot in the draft.

But you also want to believe in what you’re watching on the ice in front of you. Because as much pedigree as the Canucks first selection will have in the 2026 draft, you want pieces to build around them. Nobody is coming over that hill to save the day on their own; there is no Gavin the Grey riding on his Basant Motors-supplied horse coming over the viaduct to turn things around next season. We all know this process might take several years before it even hints at a proper turnaround. Which is why you want to believe that something you’re watching now kind of matters.

And for a lot of the veterans, the odds of them being a part of the turnaround are probably pretty slim. Which is why you look to the young players, you try to see which of them might be a part of the solution in Vancouver. It’s why Liam Öhgren has impressed in his time with Vancouver. He’s not piling up the points, but you see him putting in the effort. You see him being an effective big body on the ice, and you can see that being part of the solution.

It’s why when you watch Zeev Buium struggle during the season, enduring a healthy scratch along the way, only to score a highlight reel goal as he did on Friday, you find yourself remembering why he was such a highly touted prospect. Quinn Hughes surely spoiled this city on what a defensive prospect’s timeline should be, and Zeev’s goal tonight was a nice reminder of why he was the central component of the trade that made Vancouver choose to make the deal with Minnesota.

And another small part of the recipe they don’t tell you about is a small one, but a good one. Pride.

Pride from the team playing on the ice in front of you. And pride from the fans wearing the jerseys in the crowd. In a self-deprecating town like Vancouver, it’s easy to lose sight of what it feels like to enjoy things. “Expect the worst, never be disappointed” has been a mental shield in this city for a very long time. It’s the kind of thing you lean into when the team is on a long losing streak, looks dead inside, and has no answers for anything. It’s hard to believe in a team when they openly don’t seem to believe in themselves.

But when you see an effort like the one the Canucks put up in their 5-4 loss to the Devils on Friday night, and not to overblow this game, but it reminded you of what it felt like to enjoy hockey for the sake of hockey again, even if for a brief moment. The empty net sequence at the end of the third period was one of the most entertaining series of events this team has executed in over a year, and it was based purely on a team that simply did not want to lose. You watched the end of this game play out, and it just reminded you of the passion these fans have for the team; it’s not dead, it’s just been buried under poor leadership.

Obviously, bringing Teddy Blueger and Filip Chytil back into the lineup helps. Not only do they up the skill in the lineup, but they bring some of that veteran leadership Adam Foote alluded to about wanting around, so the young players don’t get mired in a depression over the losses and/or banging bench doors too loudly.

One of the main reasons for the turnaround, though? Fil Hronek. I have watched this team look dead inside for well over a year, with all of the off-ice drama following the team around like a black cloud. Some nights it’s been downright unwatchable hockey being put forth by the Canucks, the kind of hockey where if you were caught watching it on your laptop, you’d slam the lid shut and claim you weren’t watching the Canucks, you were watching an adult film. It just felt like the culture of this team had eroded into something they couldn’t come back from until they cut off all of the rot.

But somewhere during this last stretch, Hronek started stepping up. He’s always been the most consistent player for the team this season, but somewhere during the last handful of games, you just saw him battling his ass off on the ice, refusing to give up even during what looked to be an obvious loss. Hell, he even willingly did a media scrum at one point, and if that isn’t a sign that things have changed, I don’t know what is.

And I have to believe that resonates with a lot of the players on this team. We talk about the vacuum that gets created when star players leave, and right now, it feels like Hronek is evolving and stepping up his game across the board.

Now, I don’t know how long it will last. Maybe the team will spiral, and we will see some more low points as we go. But if the team wants to keep fan investment and keep ticket sales going, these are the types of games that do it. Keep building for the future, keep shipping out veterans with the wrong attitudes, and keep building up the culture. Build up a team that hates losing and doesn’t accept it. One that doesn’t derail when things don’t go their way. Continue to build up the talent of the team as you build towards a playoff-contending team in the future.

A lot of out-of-touch media made some snarky remarks a few weeks ago about how the dumb dumb fans in this city wanted a tank but were now bitching about the losses. Those media members were either willfully ignorant or willfully misinformed, but either way, a game like tonight shows you what fans want out of this season.

Fans want to see long-term planning. And fans want to see growth. That’s it.

It’s not a complicated system, but I guess when you half-ass your coverage of this team and its fanbase, you don’t quite understand it all.

The point is, a game like the one on Friday night? That’s all the people want. Give them more of that, and you’ll be surprised how much support this team gets.

Let’s dive into this one.

Best traditional values
Add another first career goal scored against the #canucks

— Homie El Guacamole (@Nabatron) January 24, 2026

Lenni Hameenaho hadn’t scored a goal in his NHL career, which is why, of course, he scored his first goal of his career against Vancouver:

The good news is, at least he’s only played three NHL games to date, so it’s not like some guy coming in with 500 games under his belt and scoring against Vancouver. In fact, it was quite gentlemanly of Lenni to get it out of the way quickly.

It’s a bit of a blooper goal with a shot going wide that Tom Willander kind of gets boned on, to be honest. He ties up Lenni’s stick, keeps him outside of the crease, and everything is going well. He’s probably thinking, “hell yeah, I am the king of body position!” or whatever it is young defencemen praise themselves with. Maybe he’s picturing emojis in his head, I don’t know. But the puck bounces back hard off the boards, and now Hameenaho is giggling as he banks the puck in off of Kevin Lankinen.

I also don’t think Kevin Lankinen was ready for the puck to shoot off the end boards like that, so he’s a bit slow to try and recover on the play as well, which lets the puck bank in off of him.

But Lenni scoring was written in the stars, making it hard to blame much of anything on anyone. 500 career goals? Vancouver has you covered. Any Wayne Gretzky record? Vancouver is ready for it. First career goal? Just the price of doing business in Vancouver.

Best Chytil time
Filip Chytil's first zone entry through the middle is going to give the entire fanbase a heart attack tonight.

Wishing him the best.

— Sapsterr – Edward (@Sapsterr_) January 23, 2026

We are firmly in Tua Tagovailoa time with Filip Chytil, where we’re all “please don’t get hurt, please think of your health” and he’s all “I haven’t even been concussed as much as you think, I won’t give you a number, but it’s not that bad, relax” and we’re all “ok, sure, but like, try and be careful?” and he’s all “yeah yeah, I’m fine, geezus” and so we wait and pray everything works out.

And one of the things that Chytil excels at? Zone entries. It’s sort of his deal. The dude can dance and make moves and gain the zone, but that’s also where people like to try and murder you for having the audacity to enter their zone. Scott Stevens would be put in jail if he tried to do some of the things he used to do to prevent zone entries. And while that era is long gone, you still find yourself holding your breath a little bit every time Chytil does a little razzle-dazzle to gain the offensive blue line.

As we are but observers in how this plays out, all you can do is watch and at least enjoy the skill Filip brings to the lineup. Pairing him with your best forward in Drew O’Connor was a smart choice for Vancouver, as they almost tied the game up on a zone entry started from a no-look pass from Chytil to DOC:

Drew O’Connor can sometimes be too fast for his own good, which is sort of the deal with players of his ilk. They can skate like the wind, but when it comes to matching their hands to their feet, that’s when things can fall apart. But I will say that DOC has evolved his game this season and has been the creator of some very slick plays, such as the one above, where he cuts back to give himself a passing lane and feeds Chytil, who fires the puck just high and wide.

Best makes you think
Filip Hronek serving as the #Canucks representative for tonight's ceremonial faceoff

— Adam Kierszenblat (@Adamkblat) January 24, 2026

Hronek took the ceremonial faceoff, you say? Allan Walsh will be so excited.

I will say, there is something pleasant about a player wanting to stay with the team? Vancouver Canucks fans are hitting some serious abandonment issues the last few seasons, and part of that “pride” we talked about earlier, some of that comes from, well, players actually wanting to gut it out with the team and be part of the solution. And while I think ownership gave some of the former players plenty of reasons to quit, you can’t help but enjoy Hronek kind of going into a Fast and Furious mode with the team and refusing to entertain a trade of any sort. If there IS a turnaround and this team DOES get better, and Hronek is still around and still leading things from the back end? That’s how you end up becoming a legend around these parts.

Let’s not get ahead of ourselves, though.

Speaking of veterans, Conor Garland was put on a line with Teddy Blueger and Liam Öhgren, and I feel what they’re putting down. Garland/Blueger/Joshua was an elite third line for Vancouver at one point, so putting big boy Liam with that duo hits a lot of the same notes, which feels like a promising situation for the team.

And while I have no idea if Blueger or Garland will be here in a year, I will enjoy watching them try to recreate the magic of 2023 as they play with the new kid. They didn’t score on the night, but you could see some flashes of chemistry, as their strong work along the boards led to a nice quick pass from Liam to Garland, who then tapped the puck back to Hronek for a wrist shot that almost found the back of the net:

Later in the period, Garland would then almost tip home a Blueger shot, who was set up with a cross ice pass from young master Liam:

We still have a lot of time to go before we can even call this trio a thing yet, but, as I said earlier, I understand the process behind it, and I agree it deserves a look.

Best back and forth
We're ten minutes in, and the #Canucks have one shot on net. 😬

— Dragon Was Slayed (@522IntoOvertime) January 24, 2026

The Canucks looked like they might have tied things up when a good forecheck from Drew O’Connor led to Jonas Siegenthaler turning the puck over right in the slot, giving Brock Boeser a glorious, delicious pizza to feast on:

Brock almost had too much time to plan his shot, and even dropped dramatically to one knee to unleash it, but he fired wide of Jacob Markstrom because he thinks you don’t deserve to be happy.

Best dialed in

The period ended with a couple of good shots from the much beleaguered Marcus Pettersson, along with Drew O’Connor, aka the star forward of the team, but Markstrom had the answers every time:

I just think it’s wild that Drew O’Connor is in like every highlight package I do now. I literally wrote him off a month into the season, and that bastard has been ramming my words down my throat ever since.

He’s 28 and on a cheap contract, so he’s also very much one of those “will he be around for the good times?” veteran players who have decent trade value, and I will give him a glowing review for being one of the most consistent forwards on this team during the low points of this season. Guy never quits on a shift, and if he sticks around, I think he’s a very good “lead by example” type of player.

Best Devil is in the details
Based on the last game, the #Canucks have the Devils right where they want them

— Lachlan Irvine (@LachInTheCrease) January 24, 2026

With New Jersey on the power play, they would make it 2-0 when Jack Hughes found Nico Hischier in the bumper spot:

The Canucks have run into trouble letting players slide into a soft part of the ice where nobody covers it, which is what happens here when Nico just sort of moonwalks into position for the one-timer. He walks in, flashes a fake ID, and before you know it, it’s 2-0.

I don’t know if Tyler Myers was even aware Nico was on the ice at any point during that shift, as he gets fully entranced by the puck and sort of just follows Jack Hughes, perhaps out of instinct of having followed Hughes for many seasons.

Best man on what
the sweet smell of a new losing streak record, warms the heart #canucks

— demko’s smelling salts (@hogsbighog) January 24, 2026

Jim Benning’s revenge game began in earnest when Cody Glass made it 3-0, this time tipping home a puck after everyone once again seemingly completely forgot about a player on the ice:

Now, initially, I saw Chytil leave Arseny Gritsyuk just before the point shot, which led to defensive Elias Pettersson moving over to cover him. Tyler Myers, at this point, is somewhere in Burnaby, possibly at Brentwood Mall, which allows Cody Glass to do some sort of Van Halen homage as he tips the puck by Lankinen.

I wonder to myself, “What is Chaos Giraffe doing??” and Daniel Wagner was like, “Well, hey, that’s technically man-on-man coverage” because I guess with nothing to do in front of the net, Tyler went looking for a man. Heated Rivarly is closer to on ice hockey strategy than you think. Which means Chytil is the main culprit on the goal because he releases his guy, which has the domino effect of taking D Petey away from Cody Glass.

So the question is, is the Adam Foote system bad, or is the team just not doing it very well?

I would argue that man-on-man coverage is a really tough system in today’s NHL because the skill level is so high. If one guy beats you, it feels like the coverage can fall apart in an instance. I also don’t think the Canucks have the speed or hockey IQ needed for such a system, as making on-the-fly adjustments hasn’t worked for this team all year, save for Fil Hronek, who seems to be the only guy who gets it.

I promise Allan Walsh didn’t pay me to praise Hronek this much; I just have really enjoyed his game this season.

I would also question a system that has a tall defenceman in front of his net decide he has to leave to find someone to cover, as Tyler Myers (and Marcus Pettersson for that matter) really do seem better suited at setting up in zones and swinging their large sticks at first-year students in a prestigious magic school.

All of which is to say that I do not enjoy how this team plays defence.

Best fat dog
Sick toe drag from Nils Höglander to change the angle of the shot and get it through the defender on net. Karlsson’s there to clean up the rebound for his 11th of the game. #Canucks

— Tyson Cole (@tyson_cole) January 24, 2026

However, with nary a bench door being slammed shut in sight, the Canucks began to bear down for midterms. It started slowly with a Brock Boeser seeing-eye shot that hit the post, reminding us that Jacob Markstrom is mortal and can let in really bad goals at times:

And continued when Jake DeBrusk and Elias Pettersson busted out a two-on-one that at least looked like it attempted a shot on net:

Before Linus Karlsson finally broke the shutout when he slammed home the rebound on a Nils Höglander curl drag shot:

Linus has been quiet as of late, but the guy has a good net-front game, which he displayed proudly on the Canucks’ first goal of the game. It’s also nice to see Nils pick up an assist, as he has gone from “scores on every shot he takes in 2023, and even on some shots he doesn’t take” to “Legally I am not even sure if he’s allowed to score a goal, much less a point” of 2025.

Also, we see you, Johnathan Kovacevic, that was terrible defence on that goal. We see you stop skating. We all see it.

Best you cannot stop Drew O’Connor you can only hope to contain him
Well that’s a surprise. Blueger gets a shorty! Goes under the arm. 3-2 devils. 🚨🚨 #canucks

— just a guy. 🇨🇦 (@jaycee24_) January 24, 2026

With the Canucks having some momentum, Conor Garland made Hischier bleed his own blood, giving the Devils a four-minute power play.

Now, normally, this would shut the game down for Vancouver. They’d give up a goal. Jake would slam his stick or something, making one of the young kids cry. Adam Foote would glower in his general direction as he tried to remember what it felt like to play with Joe Sakic. And everything would fall apart.

On this night, Vancouver pushed back and pushed back hard right away on the penalty kill. And who else but Drew O’Connor, utilizing his speed to set up an odd man rush that ended with a Blues Clues goal:

Teddy Blueger is a bona fide asset on the penalty kill; we all knew that, but we also knew Drew O’Connor can be lethal on it as well. So it’s kind of like having two of your favourite collaborators come together to drop a hot new track, and it’s everything you had hoped it would be, or at least until one of their political stances led to a dissolution of the band, leaving you pining for the good times.

The point is, Drew O’Connor has a mix tape that, should the Canucks explore a trade, have some decent value.

Also, I really enjoy Tyler Myers just sort of peacing out the second DOC passed it to Teddy Blueger, either because he knew Teddy was going to score, or because he was sad he didn’t get the pass. He almost does the Jake Gyllenhaal walking-into-smoke goodbye.

Best soft spot
How about start defending the bumper spot on the PK? Two PP goals, both too easy. #Canucks

— Vincent Chan (@mrvchan) January 24, 2026

The Devils would get that goal back, however, when once again they’d utilize the bumper spot, this time finding Connor Brown:

Tyler Myers is straight up out on his feet at this point. Dude goes down to block a shot, and he just never recovers from that point. Eventually, the Devils move the puck around until once again the defensive structure just sort of parts and lets Brown slide into a dangerous spot, as is tradition.

Best what you all came for
Credit where credit is due…that was a pro goal by Buium. #Canucks

— Brock Jackson (@BrockTalk) January 24, 2026

The best play of the night? Well that belonged to Zeev Buium. And while I could describe the goal, I will simply let you watch it instead:

Kid just took the bull by the horns and took off. Drove to the net, did his dekes, followed up on his own rebound, that’s the kind of goal that gives a franchise hope for the progress of your 20-year-old offensive d-man.

Again, Quinn Hughes was unfair. He was too good, too fast. We have to get used to a more normal development path.

And while losing and tanking is for the greater good, there is something to be said about worrying about stunting the development of a young player if he is mired in sad losses. These are the moments you want to see, where you can see their confidence grow as they have big moments. Look at his goal celebration, which has the energy of a young Conor Garland. That’s the kind of goal celebration that belongs in a big game during the playoffs one day, damn it.

Best almost able
Entertaining game #Canucks

— K.Nyyce 🍳🔥🎯 (@ApparentlyKelly) January 24, 2026

Hot off the momentum from the Zeev goal, Evander Kane almost tied it up to end the second period, were it not for those damn kids/posts:

All of which to say, it was entertaining to watch a Canucks team have a bit of swagger in a game. They fought hard to crawl back into the game, and we didn’t have to read about a 4-0 loss; that’s called a win in my books.

Best grinding out the loss
Zeev sighting on PP1 👀#Canucks

— Dragon Was Slayed (@522IntoOvertime) January 24, 2026

Who else but Drew O’Connor to work his ass off and draw a penalty from a guy who has had enough of his fast skating bullshit:

The Canucks didn’t score with the man advantage, but Zeev Buium got his promotion to the top unit, replacing Tom Willander, and got this beauty of a shot on net:

Nice spin pass from EP40 to boot.

Just an all-around good effort, you know?

Best of course they did
Devils score against the flow of play. That’s where you need your goalie to make a big save. Fuck sakes. 5-3 them. #canucks

— just a guy. 🇨🇦 (@jaycee24_) January 24, 2026

With the Canucks really pushing the pace in the third period, the Devils made them pay for their aggressive play with a counterattack.

Tyler Myers pinches up and gets his zone entry denied, and then Brock Boeser, who is coming in cold off a line change, is slow to turn and get into position to cover for it.

The end result? Cody Glass wants Jim Benning to be right so bad:

There is obviously an element of luck to this, as New Jersey is just sort of chipping the puck around the ice and hoping it works, but it is aided by a pinch and poor coverage.

Which, to be honest, I’d rather that happen because the team is making a hard push to tie the game up. Go out on your shield and all that.

Best all vibes all the time
If you had to name our defensive structure what wound you call it? #Canucks

— R Yap (@Kaotikz3000) January 24, 2026

Unfortunately, that Adam Foote system had another breakdown, as this time Nils Höglander went to cover for a Fil Hronek rush before he realized he’s a forward and all forwards are liars, and they can never be trusted to cover the point:

DPetey also has to be aware that Nils is covering beside him, as I think he needs to be more passive on that, knowing that a dirty lying forward is his defensive partner in that scenario.

But that being said, giving a breakaway up for Kevin Lankinen might be the safest play in the league at this point, so maybe the risk/reward balance is fine.

Best ending on a high note
what the fuck is this empty net sequence LMAO canucks might suck but this is awesome #canucks

— demko’s smelling salts (@hogsbighog) January 24, 2026

With the goalie pulled, Vancouver then defended the net like its life depended upon it. Like George RR Martin himself had written out a glorious battle scene that hadn’t been ruined by HBO yet.

With just under three minutes left, Elias Pettersson stared down death and won when he went into a goalie stance to make a save on the empty net:

If that wasn’t good enough, the Devils had another chance to end the game, but were thwarted by Marcus Pettersson and Elias Pettersson teaming up to steal the puck at the blueline:

And just when you thought they couldn’t possibly keep getting away with it, Marcus Pettersson then chopped down a pass on another zone entry, and denied the Devils access to their net:

And if that didn’t get the crowd excited, Brock Boeser made sure to send the crowd into a fever when he scored with just over a minute left:

It’s been a long time since I have seen Vancouver fans just enjoy a moment for the moment. No thinking of the draft, no thinking of the implications, you just saw people get caught up watching a team bust its ass trying to tie the game up. It was about as pure a hockey moment as we have seen this season from Vancouver.

And while ultimately the team losing the game is better for the future, part of you couldn’t help but wish that Drew O’Connor tied the game up on the last shot of the game, just for the theatrics of it all:

You get your best forward in a position to tie the game up? What more can you ask for, really?

It was truly a chaotic end to a game, but an enjoyable one.

Again, if you’re going to lose, that’s the kind of way you want to go out.

Good game from a team that hasn’t given fans many reasons to smile. Enjoy these moments when they come, as the road ahead is still a long one.

See you Sunday.

Sponsored by bet365

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/stanch...-something-smile-about-loss-new-jersey-devils
 
Scenes from Canucks practice: Willander absent with illness; maintenance days for Kane and Lankinen

Following Friday night’s 5-4 loss to the New Jersey Devils, the Vancouver Canucks were back on the ice at UBC for practice.

What we saw​


Evander Kane and Tom Willander were absent from practice. Kevin Lankinen was on the ice briefly before the on-ice drills started, but later came off. Assistant Coach Scott Young confirmed that both Kane and Lankinen were held out due to maintenance. Emergency goaltender and mortgage broker, Alex Kotai, and Nikita Tolopilo, who was recently called up earlier on Saturday, served as the two goaltenders for today’s session. Kane was later seen in the UBC parking lot by fans. Willander missed today’s practice due to illness. His status for tomorrow’s matinee game against the Pittsburgh Penguins could be in question.

The Canucks did not participate in traditional line rushes. However, based on 5v5 zone drills, here is how the Canucks forward group lined up:

No Kane or Willander at #Canucks practice. Lankinen was here but looks to be given the rest of practice off.

Small change to Friday’s lines:

Räty (Kane) – Pettersson – DeBrusk
O’Connor – Chytil – Boeser
Öhgren – Blueger – Garland
Höglander – Sasson – Karlsson

Kämpf extra.

— Tyson Cole (@tyson_cole) January 24, 2026

With there likely being no morning skate tomorrow, given a 3:00 PM start against the Pittsburgh Penguins, these are the lines we can expect for tomorrow’s contest.

Aatu Räty, who served as a healthy scratch in Friday night’s contest, skated as a placeholder for the absent Kane. We saw a slight change to the fourth line, with Max Sasson now in between Nils Höglander and Linus Karlsson.

The majority of Canucks practice was spent working with one another off the rush. One player would enter the zone with speed, stop up, and find the trailer for a one-on-one chance with the goaltender.

Later in the session, the Canucks focused on in-zone work. Working as a five-man unit, cycling the play in the offensive zone. And before the final shoot-around, the Canucks played a mini three-on-three in tight areas, playing with two nets between the faceoff dots in the zone to conclude practice.

There was no work on special teams, despite the club going 0/2 on the power play and allowing two power play goals on three power play opportunities last night.

What we heard​


Assistant Coach Scott Young on the Canucks’ slow start and the way they fight back against the Devils: “We loved the resilience that we had in the game, but we can’t come out and start like that. We’ve got to start when the puck drops, and we were a little sluggish out of the gate, and it showed. But I really liked the way we fought back. It’s a lesson to be learned that we have to be ready from the drop of the puck.”

Young on Linus Karlsson’s growth this season: “He is a very detailed guy. He’s a true pro’s pro. He works on his game constantly. He’s very dedicated and committed to working on it every day. I do a lot of stuff with him after practice; on game days, a lot of net work. He’s always looking at video, he wants to learn more, and he’s a sponge, and that’s what you want, especially out of the young guys. And it’s obviously paid off for him.”

Karlsson on how it feels to be rewarded for his good season with some special teams time: “Of course, that’s gives me some confidence to play with those good players out there. I just try to do the best every time I’m on the ice. It’s an honour to be on that unit for sure.”

Sponsored by bet365

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/scenes...absent-illness-maintenance-days-kane-lankinen
 
Wright or Wrong?: Should the Canucks trade for the Kraken’s Shane Wright?

It would be fair to wonder if this is a case of “good headline, bad idea.” But on this occasion, this idea about a trade between two Pacific Northwest rivals might actually have some sand to it.

There has been plenty of chatter about Seattle Kraken’s centre Shane Wright of late, and about whether or not he’s quietly requested a trade behind the scenes. The word on the street is that Wright is unhappy with his ice-time and the lack of opportunity as a top-six centre for the Kraken, and Elliotte Friedman more or less confirmed this speculation.

Speaking on an episode of his 32 Thoughts podcast, Friedman said, “The Shane Wright stuff, that he’s available and out there and the Kraken are considering moving him — that’s real… Initially, you kind of wonder, OK, is the agent rattling cages here, or something like that. And I was told no, like this is real.”

And if the interest in trading Wright is real, then the Vancouver Canucks should be really interested in making a bid. After all, he’s a young centre looking for a top-six opportunity, and the Canucks are still very much on the lookout for a centre with long-term top-six potential. There’s a match to be made here.

For a player who has only played 145 NHL games as of this writing, spread across four seasons, and only achieved 69 points in those games thus far, Wright is a bit of a surprisingly household name. This is largely because he spent the bulk of his pre-draft seasons as the presumed first overall selection before falling to fourth overall in the 2022 NHL Entry Draft. Wright made headlines for the glare he supposedly shot at the Montreal Canadiens, who picked Juraj Slafkovsky with the first pick, though it’s debatable whether that actually happened or not. The point is that, even though he’s struggled a bit since arriving in the NHL, everyone already knew who he was when he got there.

Wright, who turned 22 a couple of weeks ago, has had a very up-and-down career so far. He was clearly not ready for NHL action as of 2022, but at 18, he had only that or a return to the OHL as options. The Kraken kept him up at first, then used a conditioning stint loophole to send him to the AHL for a while, before finally relenting and reassigning him to the Windsor Spitfires for the remainder of the regular season. Then, it was back to the Coachella Valley Firebirds for a run to the Calder Cup Finals.

The Kraken got permission to assign the 19-year-old Wright to the AHL for his second season, and he wound up breaking out at that level with 49 points in 57 games, along with five points in eight games across various NHL call-ups. The Firebirds once again reached the Calder Cup Finals, and although Wright suffered an injury along the way, he still managed 13 points in 12 postseason games. He seemed ready for his proper NHL arrival.

With eight games each in his previous two seasons, Wright had lost his Calder Trophy eligibility, but 2024-25 was still his rookie season for all intents and purposes. And, that said, it was a fairly successful one. Wright stayed in the big leagues all year and put up 44 points in 79 games. Had he been an actual rookie, those 44 points would have tied him with Cutter Gauthier for fifth place in rookie scoring.

But two things also happened in 2024-25 that got in the way of Wright’s ability to sustain that momentum. One was the Kraken signing Chandler Stephenson to an outsized UFA contract that almost obligated them to play him as a top-six centre moving forward. The other was the simultaneous breakout of Matty Beniers, the centre drafted at second overall the year before Wright.

As the 2024-25 season turned into the current 2025-26 campaign, it became clear which centre the Kraken preferred. Wright became the consistent third centre in the rotation. In 2024-25, Wright averaged 14:04 to Beniers’ 18:41 and Stephenson’s 19:31. And through 50 games of this current season, Wright has somehow managed to lose ground. He’s playing an average of just 13:46 this year, to Beniers’ 19:42 and Stephenson’s 19:45.

In fact, Wright’s ice time has dwindled continually downward, with him playing a season-low 9:47 against the Pittsburgh Penguins this past Monday.

Conveniently enough, that rundown of Wright’s career to date also neatly sets up exactly why the Canucks would be interested in him, and it’s all about that untapped 1C potential.

Heading into his draft year, Wright was always assumed to have top-line upside. You don’t get talked about as a potential first overall selection without that. Now, Wright was never hyped to the level of a Sidney Crosby or a Macklin Celebrini, but the assumption was that Wright profiled as a 1C type, at the very least, and had some potential to be a franchise player.

Some of that shine has obviously worn off in the interim. But not all of it, and there’s an argument to be made that the circumstances of his place on the Kraken depth chart have conspired to slow his progress. That Wright managed to produce so well last season after being yo-yoed around the previous years, mostly from the third line, and at the age of 20, speaks volumes to his considerable offensive skills.

It is true that Wright has struggled on the defensive side of the game. Even in 2025-26, with his minutes decidedly sheltered, Wright is in the mid-40s on stats like Corsi, Expected Goals, and control of shots and scoring chances. That, more than anything, is why Beniers has skyrocketed past Wright in the Kraken’s estimation.

But, to be blunt, that’s less important than one might think. The Canucks’ interest in Wright should be all about the top-end, and that top-end is all about scoring.

A team needs a top-line centre, and a good one, in order to be competitive. There’s ample debate about whether or not Elias Pettersson still qualifies, and even if he does, he may not any longer by the time the Canucks are aiming to contend again.

There are plenty of 2C candidates kicking around, like Marco Rossi and Braeden Cootes or even a healthy Filip Chytil. But if there’s an obvious missing piece in the Canucks’ rebuild plans, it’s top-line scoring talent, and a future 1C in particular.

Typically, those sorts of players mostly come from the draft and are mostly obtained by teams with high draft picks. The Canucks will achieve a high pick in 2026, but the top offensive players in this draft are wingers.

The opportunity to pick such a player up via trade should not be overlooked. Yes, it’s true that Wright is no longer a ‘sure thing,’ and may not end up as a 1C at the end of the day. But, then again, no ‘sure thing’ 22-year-old future 1C is ever going to be available via trade.

For the Canucks, a true future 1C is either going to come from a future draft or is going to come from taking a risk on the former potential of someone who hasn’t quite realized it yet. And on that front, Wright is the only name we know to definitively be on the market.

To steal such a player from a divisional rival would be the icing on the cake. But that’s also a reason why the asking price may not be to Vancouver’s liking.

Friedman mentioned that the Kraken are similarly looking for top-line talent in a deal. “That’s one thing Seattle has always looked at, is trying to find a dynamic offensive player. That’s kind of one of the things that they’ve never really had,” Friedman exposited, “They have Beniers, who’s a talented guy, but they’ve never had that kind of young dynamic scorer. I think what they’re hoping is that maybe Wright can get them that and see where it goes.”

Which sounds like a tough start to any Vancouver/Seattle negotiations. The Canucks are notoriously short on dynamic offence right now, and what they have, they can’t really afford to give up, especially given that Friedman specifies a “young” talent.

With the Kraken only two points back of a playoff spot as of this writing, one wonders whether they could be enticed to take an older player, were that player good enough. On that front, we’re thinking something around a Conor Garland-for-Wright deal, although that might feel awkward, as Garland has made it his personal mission to fight as many Kraken as possible these past few seasons.

If the Kraken insist on someone young and dynamic, however, the Canucks are probably Georgia Strait out of luck. Vancouver could offer up Jonathan Lekkerimäki, who is young and dynamic, sure, but they’d be adding a bunch on top of him to even get Seattle to pick up the phone.

In the end, Seattle probably aims to trade Wright’s potential as far away as possible, meaning to the East. Friedman speculated about a Wright-for-Alexis Lafrenière trade, and if something like that is on the table, the Canucks will probably not be able to put together a competitive bid.

Wright is, in other words, an excellent trade target for the Canucks, but he might not be a very realistic one, unless Friedman is way off on the Kraken’s trading intentions.

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/wright-wrong-should-vancouver-canucks-trade-seattle-kraken-shane-wright
 
Instant Reaction: Coquitlam’s Ben Kindel scores twice as Canucks fall 3-2 to Penguins

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. @penguins

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

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

🥅Lankinen🥅

3pm on @Sportsnet650 https://t.co/J6DNM1E8Qt pic.twitter.com/9xbSfsKs5C

— Brendan Batchelor (@BatchHockey) January 25, 2026

First Period​


The game got started with a bang as the Penguins applied some early pressure on the Canucks. Kevin Lankinen had to be sharp right away, as Evgeni Malkin found himself on the doorstep with a grade-A scoring chance after a cross-crease pass.

Kevin Lankinen makes a back-door stop on Evgeni Malkin early in the first.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/Vo9DNFvUD6

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) January 25, 2026

There was a scary moment later in the first, as Zeev Buium took a shot off the face. He went down to the ice and headed to the Canucks’ locker room shortly after. In all the chaos, it was hard to notice that the puck had trickled over the Canucks’ goal line, though it did. The Canucks challenged that the play was offside, and won that challenge. Still scoreless eight minutes into the game.

Jake DeBrusk had a great chance to score right in front of Stuart Skinner, but the Penguins’ netminder flashed his left pad out to make the save. DeBrusk had another great chance to score after Evander Kane worked to win the puck along the wall, and Elias Pettersson snapped a pass to the front of the net. Unfortunately, Skinner was there to make the save once again.

Conor Garland looked to have open the scoring with 55 seconds left in the first, but it was determined that Teddy Blueger interfered with Stuart Skinner. No goals after 20 minutes of play.

Some takeaways from the first:
-Loud cheer from the Rogers Arena faithful for the “Welcome back Arturs Silovs” message.
-Shoutout Liam Ohgren, who had the puck stolen from him by Sidney Crosby, but immediately stole the puck back from Crosby.
-It’s actually amazing that Sidney Crosby is still doing this at his age.

Second Period​


Good to see Zeev Buium back out for the start of the second, sporting a fishbowl visor.

Anthony Mantha was called for elbowing less than two minutes into the second, giving the Canucks the game’s first power play.

While the first unit didn’t do much, the second unit looked very dangerous, and nearly scored after Zeev Buium dished a cross-crease feed to Filip Chytil, whose chance was denied by Skinner. Not a bad power play by any means.

The Penguins opened the scoring moments later after Zeev Buium pinched, which led to an odd-man rush the other way, and Jake DeBrusk couldn’t get back in time to break up the cross-ice feed.

Finally, a goal counts as the Penguins take a 1-0 lead.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/mc9nA3TZiW

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) January 26, 2026

1-0 Penguins.

Ben Kindel managed to accomplish every kid’s dream when he scored a goal in his hometown debut. The Coquitlam-born forward fought with Elias Junior Pettersson for position at the front of the net, and managed to deflect a hard pass from Ryan Shea past Kevin Lankinen to put the Penguins up by two.

Ben Kindel scores in his hometown to put the Penguins up 2-0.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/gJZyJDmW65

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) January 26, 2026

2-0 Penguins.

It got LOUD in Rogers Arena again, as Ben Kindel blasted home a one-timer off the rush five-hole on Kevin Lankinen to put Pittsburgh up by three.

Ben Kindel gets another, and it’s 3-0 Penguins.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/BLbNQlr6J0

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) January 26, 2026

3-0.

Some takeaways from the second:
-Ben Kindel is a great reminder of why it’s so important for this team to load up on (and use) draft picks.
-I think I like Zeev Buium on PP1 over Tom Willander.
-Teddy Blueger is sure making a lot happen since returning. If I’m an NHL GM, I’m giving up at least a second round pick for Blueger at the deadline, personally.
-Hey, how did the Penguins get Ben Kindel? Oh… oh no.

Third Period​


The Canucks got on the board in the third. Elias Junior Pettersson stepped up and made a great play to Elias Pettersson senior, who made an even greater play to Evander Kane, who dropped his shoulder down and went to the net. Jake DeBrusk was ready to strike on the rebound chance, getting the puck past Stuart Skinner for the first time on the night.

🚨CANUCKS GOAL🚨

Jake DeBrusk gets the Canucks on the board to make it a 3-1 game.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/vVI0J7HjCX

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) January 26, 2026

3-1.

The Canucks made things interesting when Filip Hronek blasted a one-timer that appeared to deflect off of Teddy Blueger and find the back of the net.

🚨CANUCKS GOAL🚨

The Canucks come within one of the Penguins late in the third period.

🎥: Sportsnet | #Canucks pic.twitter.com/M0b3Z4lzUV

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) January 26, 2026

3-2 with six minutes to go.

With just under two minutes left, the Canucks pulled Kevin Lankinen. They did not score.

3-2 final.

I think Bryan Rust might be getting a call from Player Safety for that late hit on Brock Boeser.

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

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/instan...ice-vancouver-canucks-3-2-pittsburgh-penguins
 
‘Vicious hit to the head’: Foote and DeBrusk react after Canucks’ Boeser takes late hit from Bryan Rust

Vancouver Canucks forward Brock Boeser went down after a hit to the head late in the third period against the Pittsburgh Penguins.

The Canucks trailed the Penguins 3-2 late, and were looking for the equalizing goal when Penguins forward Bryant Rust came flying into the scrum in front of the Penguins’ net in the dying seconds of the third and seemingly got his shoulder up on Boeser, who was helped off the ice by teammates. No penalty was called on the play as time expired.

Bryan Rust get the elbow up on Brock Boeser late in the third.

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

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) January 26, 2026

Canucks Head Coach Adam Foote was asked about the hit post game and called it a headshot.

“It was a headshot. It was shoulder and his head. I’m sure the league will look at it because it was, even though he may have been desperate to get Boes down because it was a scrum at the net, I still think it was something that you got to be in control of your body. I thought it was a little bit of a vicious, vicious hit to the head.”

Teammate Jake DeBrusk said that he and his teammates didn’t see the hit in the moment, but after getting a look at it post game, said “I think it’s a pretty dirty play to be honest with you.”

The reaction from Canucks fans on social media has had a similar sentiment, with many fans immediately following the play, calling it a dirty play. At this time, Foote said he does not have an update on Boeser’s condition.

Boeser missed time last season after taking a similar hit to the head from Tanner Jeannot against the Los Angeles Kings on November 7, 2024, which led to a three-game suspension for Jeannot.

Boeser would go on to miss seven games following that play last season.

The Canucks, who have been riddled with injuries this season, could be facing yet another big loss to their lineup if Boeser indeed misses time.

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An underrated part of the Canucks rebuild involves finding the next Kiefer Sherwood(s)

The rebuilding of the Vancouver Canucks continues, and as it does, it slowly but surely begins to take shape.

We’ve already experienced the big trade involving Quinn Hughes and the expected trade involving Kiefer Sherwood. We’ve been told that the team is now committed to a long-term approach with no shortcuts. And it has been strongly hinted that more trades are coming, and maybe a lot of them.

The main discussion around the team, then, has centred around who should stay and who should go. The idea being that, as Jim Rutherford put it himself, the team has to decide which veterans are best shipped out for future currency, and which should be kept around to mentor and insulate the next generation.

If there’s one thing that everyone seems to agree the Canucks should not be doing, it’s adding veterans. But what if there’s a ‘have your cake and eat it, too’ approach available? There’s another thing the Canucks could and probably should be doing here, and it might be an underrated and understated component of the steps to a successful rebuild.

It’s all about finding the next Kiefer Sherwood. Or, ideally, the next Kiefer Sherwoods.

The Canucks ultimately paid very little for Sherwood and got a whole lot out of him. Heck, forget the one-and-a-half seasons of exciting on-ice memories and NHL records. Sherwood was acquired at the cost of no assets and a mere two-year, $1.5 million AAV free agent contract, and in the end, he was shipped out for two second-round picks and a long-shot prospect.

That’s an excellent return on investment. That’s great asset management.

Unfortunately, there are precious few remaining opportunities to cash in to the same degree left on the Vancouver roster. The remaining collection of UFAs, including Evander Kane, Teddy Blueger, and David Kämpf, will return mid-to-late round picks. Most of the veterans on longer-term contracts, like Jake DeBrusk and Drew O’Connor, would be lucky to return a single second.

Some of the bigger-ticket veterans, like Conor Garland, Filip Hronek, or even Elias Pettersson, might return something larger, or even a fair bit larger, but the Canucks seem reticent to trade such players. Maybe the likes of Marcus Pettersson or Tyler Myers return the equivalent of a first, but even they appear to be only tangentially ‘on the block.’

The Canucks are, point blank, going to need more future-based assets than they currently have on hand. More picks and prospects. That’s a fairly natural consequence of avoiding the call of a rebuild for so long, and for having made so many of those short-term compromises in the past. But where are those future assets going to come from?

This is where we get into the idea of the ‘next Sherwood.’

In all this talk of which veterans to keep, and which to deal away, there’s been surprisingly little talk of a third approach – trading veterans away, replacing them with free agents on short-term deals (a la Sherwood), and then also trading those veterans away when the time comes. It’s a way to double-dip on the whole selling process, and there’s really not much reason not to do it.

Everyone agrees that the Canucks need some vets on hand to prevent icing a lineup completely comprised of rookies and sophomores. But there’s no saying that the veterans need to come from the current crop.

The Canucks, under GM Patrik Allvin and POHO Jim Rutherford, have actually had some decent luck at signing these sorts of players. We realize that the odds of another UFA turning out as well as Sherwood are long. But someone doesn’t need to play that well to be a success.

The Canucks could have, and probably should have, cashed in similarly on Pius Suter. And Dakota Joshua. And Andrei Kuzmenko. And Derek Forbort. And Kevin Lankinen, if we’re being honest.

All are players that the Canucks picked up as free agents at a relatively low cost. All outperformed those contracts. But instead of cashing out, the Canucks doubled down. They attempted to retain and re-sign all of these players, and none of those decisions really worked out in their favour.

Sherwood is the first of the bunch to be traded anywhere near his peak value. But he should not be the last.

We can use a couple of examples to really illustrate the approach we are advocating here. We’ll use Garland first. Some want Garland to be traded because he’s one of the few players remaining on the roster who might return a good haul. Others want him retained for leadership purposes and because the team needs at least a veteran or two capable of playing in the top six.

But why not both? The Canucks could sell Garland off to the highest bidder, and then use some of the cap space gleaned from the trade to shop for a replacement this summer. All they need to do is find a UFA who has some top six potential and offer them increased ice time in lieu of a longer-term commitment.

The team won’t hit on every free agent bet it makes in this way, but it doesn’t have to. For the cap space Garland represented, the Canucks could probably sign at least two replacement candidates. When one doesn’t work out, trade them for a song. Let the other one build up value, then flip them, too, when the time is right. All they really need to fill in is another Sherwood, Suter, or Joshua type.

Keeping Garland on the roster prevents the team from recouping any future assets. Trading Garland without finding a replacement leaves the rebuild uninsulated. But trading Garland now, replacing him, and then eventually trading that replacement yields two different sets of future assets, and includes some insulation along the way.

It really is a ‘best of both worlds’ approach.

It doesn’t have to be Garland. The same thinking can be applied all over the depth chart. Want to cash in on Marcus Pettersson, but don’t want to leave the younger Elias Pettersson and Zeev Buium alone on the left side? Find another Forbort on the free agency market, sign him to replace Marcus, and then flip that player a year or two down the road.

Doing this a couple of times over should result in a buildup of the exact sort of assets the Canucks are short on.

The hard part, of course, is picking out which players to sign. No one knew Sherwood would turn out like this; otherwise, it would have cost a lot more than $1.5 million to sign him. But on this front, the Canucks have a good track record. They’ve either employed pro scouting to find players on the cusp of a breakout (like Sherwood and Joshua) or employed patience to sign a player for cheap later in the offseason (like Suter). A few more hits like that could be what it takes to really stock the prospect cupboards moving forward – and there’s really not much reason we can see for the Canucks to not at least try this approach.

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/underr...rebuild-involves-finding-next-kiefer-sherwood
 
Canucks give Evander Kane’s agent permission to help facilitate a trade: report

It appears we are getting closer and closer to Evander Kane being dealt from the Vancouver Canucks, as the team has given the forward’s agent, Dan Milstein of Gold Star Hockey, permission to facilitate a trade for his client. This courtesy of Rick Dhaliwal of Donnie and Dhali — The Team.

Evander Kane's agent Dan Milstein has been given permission to help facilitate a trade for his client.#Canucks

— Rick Dhaliwal (@DhaliwalSports) January 27, 2026

With the team’s permission, Milstein can now talk to other teams to find a fit for Kane, maybe even in the long term with an extension. Kane’s current contract has a modified 16-team no-trade clause, so Milstein will likely work within the 16 approved teams, but it’s possible that an unapproved team may be able to offer Kane a better situation, and that he’d agree to waive in order to go there.

Kane is in the final year of his four-year contract with a $5.125 million cap hit, and is set to become an unrestricted free agent after the conclusion of his contract. According to AFP Analytics, Kane is projected to get a one-year contract at a salary just below $3 million for his next deal.

The Canucks are currently sitting in last place in the NHL by a wide margin, as their 39 points from a 17-30-5 record put them eight points behind the next-closest team. With them so far behind the rest of the league, selling at the trade deadline is their only option, which is why they’re looking to move on from Kane. They’ve already dealt captain Quinn Hughes and power forward Kiefer Sherwood, with Kane, Elias Pettersson, Conor Garland, Jake DeBrusk, Teddy Blueger, and Lukas Reichel all rumoured to be on the trading block, or at least players whom the Canucks are open to hearing offers about.

Kane has struggled with the Canucks this season, as his nine goals and 15 assists for 24 points in 51 games is his lowest point-per-game pace since his rookie season in 2009-10. Vancouver acquired Kane from the Edmonton Oilers in the offseason, with a 2025 fourth-round pick going to the Oilers, which they used to draft David Lewandowski.

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/vancou...milstein-permission-facilitate-trade-deadline
 
Once upon a time, Macklin Celebrini wanted the Canucks to rebuild

What Macklin Celebrini is doing in his sophomore NHL season is downright ridiculous.

After a rookie campaign in which he put up 63 points in 70 games as an 18-year-old, the North Vancouver native’s 26 goals and 48 assists through 50 games this season have him on pace to finish 2025-26 with 43 goals and 122 total points. Absurd. Ridiculous.

Somehow, despite the points, Celebrini’s defensive game and hockey IQ are arguably what stand out most in his game. His reads are top-notch, he anticipates plays well, and he uses his skill to quickly turn the play the other way for his team in the rare case that the puck isn’t already in the offensive zone when he’s on the ice. His 74 points give him a 40-point cushion on the Sharks’ next leading scorers, Tyler Toffoli and Alex Wennberg. Ridiculous.

As the Sharks roll into Rogers Arena on Tuesday night, they do so in the thick of the Western Conference playoff hunt. Currently, the Sharks sit in a three-way tie for the second Wild Card spot in the West with the Seattle Kraken and Los Angeles Kings hot on their heels. Make no mistake about it: the Sharks are where they are largely because of what Celebrini has managed to do this season.

“He is very close to being a superstar in this league,” Sharks head coach Ryan Warsofsky told NBC Sports Bay Area in December. “I know where he is in the points and how many points he has within the league, top league leaders. And what I love about him is he plays with winning habits. He plays a 200-foot game. He’s physical, which is unheard of for a 19-year-old center to play on both sides of the puck with the intensity that he does and obviously scoring at a high rate, creating at a high rate.

“I think it’s going to just continue to rise, our culture. Whether that’s practice, whether that’s an optional skate, whether that’s a day in the gym, he sets the pace. He’s the first guy in the gym. He’s the first guy working on his body. He takes his nutrition as seriously as it comes. That’s when you really start growing your organization. You look at the great athletes — they carry themselves with leadership capabilities on and off the field or the court or the ice. He’s well on his way to that.”

As Celebrini returns to his hometown once again, one thing is clear: the 19-year-old — who will represent Team Canada at the Olympics next month — has fully arrived as one of the game’s elite players.

Once upon a time, the budding superstar, who was seen on national television chanting “Go Canucks Go” in the stands at Rogers Arena during the 2023-24 playoff run, just a couple of months before he’d be drafted by the Sharks, wanted his favourite team to rebuild.

“I took my opportunity during that game to get one last Canucks chant going… I heard about it at the [NHL Draft] combine, yeah,” Celebrini said with a smile as Sportsnet’s Kevin Bieksa asked him about the moment.

And before that viral moment, Celebrini gave his thoughts on the Canucks’ direction at the IIHF World U18 Championships in Switzerland. In a conversation with Elite Prospect’s JD Burke, Celebrini said:

“Oh yeah, I’m a big Canucks fan … Well, I think they should be in a rebuild phase. I love the team.”

Top 2024 NHL Draft prospect Macklin Celebrini on the Canucks “Oh, yeah. I’m a big Canucks fan.”

I brought up that the Canucks aren’t rebuilding and won’t likely be in the range to draft him, and he replied “Well, I think they should be in a rebuild phase. I love the team.”

— J.D. Burke (on bsky) (@JDylanBurke) April 29, 2023

The quote from the 16-year-old Celebrini — who had yet to play his draft season at Boston University — came on the heels of yet another late-season push from the Canucks, this time thanks to Rick Tocchet replacing Bruce Boudreau in January. The Canucks won plenty of games down the stretch and lowered their odds of drafting another North Vancouver superstar who wanted to play for his hometown team: Connor Bedard.

With the need for a rebuild having finally become downright undeniable, the Canucks now sit in the basement of the NHL standings, while Celebrini drags his team into the fight each and every night as they chase down a playoff spot. And of course, the Sharks still have plenty of pieces along the way, and are being cautious not to accelerate out of their rebuild too quickly, even with the addition of Kiefer Sherwood earlier this month.

Sherwood won’t face the Canucks tonight, but once he returns, he could easily find himself on San Jose’s top line with Celebrini.

Perhaps in another timeline, those two could have been linemates in Vancouver.

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The Stanchies: Return of the Mack ends with a Sharks 5-2 victory over Canucks

When you watch the San Jose Sharks, you’re just reminded of how far the Vancouver Canucks have to go in their rebuild. The 5-2 victory from San Jose? Not surprising. Expected, really. But the ease with which they did it, and with the amount of young talent on their roster not even entering their prime yet, that 2-3 year turnaround for Vancouver feels a bit ambitious, to put it kindly. We’re out here happily discussing 21-year-old Jonathan Lekkerimaki having some real zip on his shot while 19-year-old Macklin Celebrini is putting up a four-point night, 20-year-old Will Smith just behind him with three points, and 19-year-old d-man Scott Dickinson adding two points of his own

It’s even more sobering when you realize San Jose is currently battling to even get into a playoff spot to begin with. Suddenly, that road back to relevancy feels like it might take a few more years than ownership would like.

In the meantime, all we can do as outside observers is see if the Canucks lose with enough fight to make watching the games palatable, and try to ignore that voice in the back of your head that worries Adam Foote will destroy any young player on the team with whatever he calls this system of hockey he keeps presenting us with. Being a Tank Commander means losing, but sometimes Adam Foote is almost too good at it that you do kind of worry if it will impact the development curve of some of the younger guys on the team. There were points during the game against San Jose when it looked like Vancouver didn’t even belong in the same league as the Sharks, and that’s when you wonder if maybe we were so busy wondering if we could that we didn’t stop to think if we should.

Ultimately, I think you have to ride this out and go with a new coach next year, because bringing someone like Manny Malhotra mid-season would probably give you the dreaded new coach bump, which, coupled with a defensive system that probably takes it into account that stopping the puck from entering your net is a good thing, might hurt your draft position. You have to assume that if the Canucks finish last, they will drop to the third pick overall because that’s how the NHL prefers it, so locking up at least a top-three pick feels like a nice consolation prize of having to watch Adam Foote hockey for an entire season.

I wish I had better news for you about Tuesday night’s game. Again, I don’t think it’s effort that was lacking from the team so much as it was just a case of being severely outmatched by the speed of the Sharks, which paired nicely with the seasonal depression that has settled in on the team. The Canucks lost, which is the ultimate goal as always, but unfortunately, they couldn’t make it a fun loss.

If getting to watch the birth of a monster in the form of Macklin Celebrini sounds enjoyable, who will no doubt haunt this team for the next decade plus, then this might be the game for you. His fingerprints were all over this one to the point where all the broadcast team could do was gush about him, and they weren’t wrong for doing so. The “stop, he’s already dead” meme can only carry you so far on a night like this, so you might as well lean into the apocalypse and embrace it.

Let’s drag ourselves closer to the Olympic break, shall we?

Best catching up

OK, so here was the roster news heading into the game, just so we’re all caught up:

  • Marco Rossi was doing good with injury rehab but then had a setback, a tale as old as time in Vancouver. If you ever end up as “day to day” in this town, I assume we won’t see you for another season or so. In my head, some guy named Dr. Bobby Bobby runs the head of the medical department in Vancouver and has an endless supply of t-shirts that all read “Good vibes only!” as he talks to you excitedly about this mango puree diet that is going to absolutely change your life.
  • Speaking of “see you down the line”, Thatcher Demko was shut down for the season and will undergo surgery in about a week so he can be ready for next September. The Canucks want to assure you it is not related to any of his previous injuries, to which you can take that with as many grains of salt as needed.
  • Zeev Buium, last seen taking a puck to the face against the Penguins, was found to have a broken bone near his cheek, and he, too, will be out of the lineup until at least after the Olympic break. No word on if Dr. Bobby Bobby is going to recommend the mango puree to Zeev.
  • And lastly, word has come out that the Canucks have tagged in Evander Kane’s agent to help facilitate a trade for the forward, because both sides kind of want it done asap and trading is hard and stuff, how can one GM be expected to make so many phone calls. It’s a bit of an odd situation in that Evander Kane was never a good fit for this team, and he somehow ended up not being a good fit for this team, leaving many to wonder how could anyone possibly have seen this coming aside from EVERYONE.
Best sip of glory
Holy Tom Willander have my babies. #Canucks

— Dudly (@DudlyDips) January 28, 2026

The game actually started off with a moment where you thought to yourself, “Hey, maybe Macklin Celebrini WON’T get four points tonight!” when Tom Willander opened the scoring after engaging in some solid board work and then skating hard to the net to fire home an Elias Pettersson pass high in the slot:

Jake DeBrusk and Elias Pettersson both take turns drawing in multiple Sharks, who then do this odd thing of cycling off and covering the guy with the puck properly (is that allowed? That’s illegal, right?) but Willander is still able to get the shot off into a screen set up by Jake, blinding Yaroslav Askarov and probably making him feeling a bit miffed about the whole thing.

Please note that I have maybe five total clips that paint the Canucks in a positive light in this game, so you’re going to want to hold onto this moment for as long as possible. Really drink in that “Oh man a Canucks first rounder just scored a goal, the future is bright, the possibilities are endless” energy and hold onto it tightly for the next 10 minutes.

Best and it’s gone
THE HOMETOWN BOY, MACKLIN CELEBRINI, TIES IT WITHIN SECONDS!!#Sharks: 1#Canucks: 1

— William Petty (@WilliamP80326) January 28, 2026

It took Macklin Celebrini just over 30 seconds to big brother the Canucks, metaphorically ruffling their hair and telling them to get to bed, squirt, making it 1-1 off of a Will Smith pass:

I included the initial shot from Macklin Celebrini for two reasons:

  • One, to showcase Filip Chytil leaving to go back to his home planet after he tried checking Celebrini. Macklin walked through him like he was a malfunctioning Skytrain gate, and part of me would have understood if Chytil had just skated to the bench and gone home. It’s the kind of thing Quinn Hughes would routinely do to opponents when he played for Vancouver, and it really has that Nelson-Muntz-laughing-at-himself-in-the-mirror-only-to-find-out-it-doesn’t-feel-so-good-when-it-happens-to-you energy. And the thing is, it wasn’t like this was just a one-off, and Macklin did this one amazing deke on the night; he did it like every other shift. Multiple souls were lost to Celebrini walking around dudes and leaving them wondering if hockey just wasn’t for them anymore. The kid is 19, and meanwhile, we’re all like “sure hope JT Miller didn’t bully our former wonderkid into never playing at a high level again,” and it just feels sort of unfair.
  • Two, the Canucks defensive “system” has never been great under Adam Foote, but Monday night was the first time I was like, “Ok, yeah, this is on purpose, right? This is not a serious team.” The defensive coverage was awful for most of the game. I know the speed of the Sharks really hampers the Canucks, but it just felt like it was on another level in this one. And as you can see on the goal, after Chytil gets sent into the void, everyone just sort of overloads the right side of the ice. It was four on four at this point, and all four Canucks just follow the puck and forget all about Macklin, who slides into empty space to unload the one timer.
Best pushback I guess?
This is going to be a barn burner isn’t it? #Canucks

— Adam S (@CanucksFanWI) January 28, 2026

With the game tied at one, it technically meant the Canucks could still win this game.

I will show proof that perhaps, mayhaps, they might have scored a goal on this aggressive forecheck from Nils Höglander that resulted in a shot on net from both Nils and Planet Ice:

With the Kiefer Sherwood trade completed, we will see fewer and fewer of these type of hits into turnovers, so I do appreciate the effort from Nils, even if deep in my soul I know he needs a fresh start somewhere else as I resist the urge to White Fang him.

Then you had Jonathan Lekkerimäki cutting off an outlet pass and unloading a strong wrist shot on net, with Filip Chytil following up on the rebound with a shot of his own:

And you know what, that is a good shot from Jonathan Lekkerimäki. It has pace. It has speed. It feels like it could beat an NHL goalie. It is definitely one of the few good moments to come out of this game, even if it got overshadowed by the Island of Lost Boys they have going on over in San Jose.

Best more of the same
Can’t blame Lank, just poor D coverage #Canucks

— ANDY (@DjAnganu) January 28, 2026

The Sharks would get their second goal of the night off of a Fil Hronek turnover of all things, who failed to clear the puck out of the zone and then had to watch as former Canuck Adam Gaudette once again scored against his former club:

It looks like the puck flubs off of his stick a little bit, and that’s all it takes for that little pissant Celebrini to jump all over it and ruin your night. Macklin keeps the puck in the zone, feeds it over to William Eklund, who then finds Adam Gaudette, while Chtyil politely watches from afar. I will give some grace to Chytil because he was still coming to terms with Celebrini draining his life force on the first goal, but it was not a good look defensively from the Canucks second line centre. Fair to say his defensive effort lacked some urgency.

Best fast and furious
Only got home and it’s 3-1

Yeah no. Goodnight #Canucks

— Connor (paid my dues) 🇨🇱 (@cknnr17) January 28, 2026

Next up, it was Vittorio Mancini’s turn to fail to clear the zone, as his turnover would lead to Dickinson finding Alex Wennberg down low, who would turn and find former Canuck Tyler Toffoli for the goal:

Aatu Räty also took his turn at being the guy late to the scene, as he fails to get the stick of Tyler under control, in what is pretty much a mirror image of the Sharks second goal. This would signal the end of Kevin Lankinen’s night, which felt like both an act of mercy and an indictment.

It just felt like life for San Jose was really easy on this night. Too many good looks on net, too much time to place their shots, the Canucks didn’t really make anything too difficult for the Sharks if we’re being honest with each other.

Unless you’ve been laundering money. Then don’t be honest with me. Let me believe you made your money in smart investments, don’t ruin that illusion for me.

Best we’re talking about shots??
Is Lekkerimaki the only player that showed up today? Adam Foote has without a doubt lost this locker room, as much as you want to tank a coach like this bum is TERRIBLE for youth development #canucks

— Dani (@DJD0727) January 28, 2026

OK, let’s get back to the Lekkerimäki wrist shot for a palate cleanser, or as my dumb brain tried to type it, a pallet cleanser:

Look, I get it, the bar isn’t high. But this is all we have right now. And a young player shooting a hard shot on net is about as good as it gets on some nights, so you will damn well eat it, and you will damn well enjoy it.

Best nearly Nils
If there is a positive for the #Canucks , it’s Hoglander looking solid.

— CeeJay (@CeeAux) January 28, 2026

Run Höglander. Run and be free:

That shot isn’t going in unless the goalie makes an egregious error, but damn it, much like the earlier damn it, sometimes you just take what you can get. And an end-to-end rush with a shot on net felt downright life-changing compared to watching the team struggle to get out of their own zone so they could complete a line change.

Best back to the pain

Hey, look, we haven’t even talked about the Sharks’ second overall draft pick, Michael Misa, playing against the Canucks. He didn’t score any points, which is a victory of sorts, I guess, but he probably also made Marcus Pettersson wish he was back in the Eastern Conference after Misa danced right around him:

MP3 basically gets to star in a scene from the next “Now You See Me” sequel, as one minute he’s guarding the kid and the next thing he knows, he’s spinning in circles, praying no one saw what just happened. But we all saw it. We all did.

And since it’s been a minute since Celebrini juked someone out of their hockey pants, here is Macklin walking right around Liam Öhgren simply because he can:

If it feels unfair, it’s because it is unfair. We were told teams weren’t allowed to load up on talent like this; you need to trade for Elias Lindholm the second you think you can make the playoffs. Why didn’t the Sharks have to trade for Lindholm? I don’t understand how the system works anymore.

It should have then been 4-1 off a Celebrini shot on a wicked feed from Will Smith, but apparently Macklin is allowed to miss the net?

Again, I am just trying to catch up on the new rules of the NHL. It’s all very confusing. The last I heard, you could email the officials and tell them to lay off your son and call more penalties on the teams that played against your son, so it’s just taking me a while to adjust to it all.

Best summary
Local kids versus the Vancouver #Canucks pic.twitter.com/MIj2DNJR6e

— Dave Hall (@davehall1289) January 28, 2026

Best locking it down
ASKAROV AND YOU SHALL RECEIVE

— rena🦋 (@hollandovs) January 28, 2026

The Canucks started the second period on the power play and once again, we will lean on Lekkerimäki’s shot as the one thing you can try and suckle some joy out of:

I mean, I still screamed when Elias Pettersson passed out of a shot from the slot as it’s starting to feel weirdly personal at this point, but I appreciate getting to see Lekkerimäki try and one-timer a special teams goal.

Filip Chytil would then get his turn at cranking his hog from the slot, but Askarov was up to the task, making a brilliant pad save off of the one-timer attempt:

But for every limited Canucks pushback, it just felt like it was a matter of time until the Sharks would find a way to score again.

Best four doors down
#canucks Marcus petterson can’t get a puck out of his own zone if his life depended on it

— MW (@Mlapw84) January 28, 2026

With Fil Hronek executing a perfect defensive play to end an odd man rush, good, Teddy Blueger was fingered for hooking Celebrini, because that little malapert is so God damn fast:

And so, apparently giving even more time and space to this Sharks team seems like a bad idea, as Will Smith would score to make it 4-1 after yet another failure to clear the zone, this time at the hands of Marcus Pettersson:

Fail to clear the zone, die at the hands of the children of the future. This is what Homer warned us about. We should have stopped the kids when we had a chance.

Also, please note Macklin Celebrini once again juking a dude into White Rock, as this time Conor Garland, Conor freaking Garland of all people, gets put on ice when trying to close distance on him.

Best you had one shot
A 5-on-3 Van PP for 1:56 of second period yields zip. #Canucks

— Ben Kuzma 🇨🇦🇺🇦 (@benkuzma) January 28, 2026

The Canucks best chance at any sort of comeback in this game was clearly the extended five-on-three man advantage, in which they looked pretty cool with the puck, had some good looks on net, but ultimately failed to score a goal:

This is the “Oh, you got 90% on your test? Why not 100%?” except it isn’t mean-spirited, it’s just someone asking the right questions.

Askarov never really seemed to be in too much trouble on the power play, which I think just speaks to the Canucks being a bit slow with moving the puck and telegraphing their plays a little too much. The closest they got to scoring was shooting into traffic with Jake in his Tim Hortons office, but again, it speaks to their lack of finishing skill, even with a two-man advantage.

Best correct assessment
So, the Sharks now get their 5 on 3, I bet I know how theirs goes….#Canucks

— Dragon Was Slayed (@522IntoOvertime) January 28, 2026

Evander Kane got into what I would charitably call a “hand selected opponent” as he began throwing down with noted pugilist Timothy Liljgren, he of zero career fights:

Timothy Liljegren would have probably happily finished his entire career without getting into a fight, but if Evander Kane wants to raise his trade value by dropping gloves, then that’s how it has to be.

Of course, Evander got an extra two minutes for doing this, and when coupled with a Marcus Pettersson high-sticking penalty shortly thereafter, it led to the Sharks scoring on their two-man advantage:

Nikita Tolopilo, who had taken over for Kevin Lankinen in the first period, basically knows a puck went past him; he just has no idea how it happened. Or where. Or by whom? Some real season two Dept. Q energy on this one.

In this case, it was John Klingberg sending a perfect shot into multiple screens, leaving Tolopilo wondering whether Eddie Lack had the right idea all along: leaving hockey behind and getting into real estate in Arizona instead.

Best last gasp
We also need to change the goal song immediately #Canucks

— bavel_puree (@bavel_puree) January 28, 2026

With the game essentially over at this point, the Canucks managed to score a late power play goal when Captain Hronek walked into an absolute piss missile of a shot:

I also have to agree. Please change the goal song once you’ve traded two more veterans. Give the team a fresh new look. New goal song. New power play song. New penalty song. You’ve been using the same set list for like five years now, for the love of God, give us something new to listen to.

Let Simple Minds rest in peace with the Quinn Hughes era. It will forever be tied to that second-round playoff run, which was both magical and a reminder of how absolutely sh!t everything turned out. Move past it, don’t be lazy, give us new energy.

Best last dash
It’s okay #Canucks fans, we’ll have the Olympics soon

— Caesar (@Caesar_Saladus) January 28, 2026

And as a bonus clip, here is Liam Öhgren making a nice takeaway and almost turning it into a goal:

The only thing better than that is a firm wrist shot from Lekkerimäki, let me tell you.

And that was the game. The Sharks are a much better hockey club than Vancouver. To quote a former friend, it is what it is, for now. I don’t think we need to dive deeper than that.

See you Thursday.

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/stanch...san-jose-sharks-5-2-victory-vancouver-canucks
 
Canucks: A look at Conor Garland’s current scoring slump

The last time the Vancouver Canucks faced the Anaheim Ducks on November 26th in Southern California, Conor Garland took a pass from Brock Boeser midway through the second period, deftly stickhandled around defenceman Drew Helleson, and then deked netminder Petr Mrazek to the ice before slipping a backhand into the unguarded net. It gave the Canucks a 3-1 lead in a game they went on to win 5-4. The goal was a thing of beauty – a dazzling display of skill and artistry – and months later, it stands as one of the Canucks’ prettiest goals of the season.

🚨Canucks Goal🚨

Connor Garland with a filthy move to put home his sixth of the year!

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

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) November 27, 2025

Somehow, inexplicably, though it’s also the last time Conor Garland has scored on a National Hockey League goaltender.

Yes, in 22 games and more than two months since that highlight-reel marker, Garland has scored only once. It was an empty net goal that sealed a 3-0 victory over the New York Rangers on December 14th at Madison Square Garden.

At the moment, Garland finds himself mired in a 15-game goal drought. But more than that, the veteran winger has gone 11 games without a point of any kind. He last made a dent on an NHL scoresheet with a pair of assists in a December 27th game against the San Jose Sharks.

In a forgettable month of January for the team and for the 29-year-old Sciatute, MA native, the Canucks have been outscored 8-1 in all situations with Garland on the ice. At 5-on-5, that figure is 6-1 and his expected goals for percentage is just 39.9% – lowest among all forwards on the roster.

It’s hard to reconcile the startling lack of output with a player who has made a name for himself through hard work, hustle and a will to rise above. But even those qualities have been in short supply in recent weeks.

This is the same player who drew rave reviews from fans and teammates alike for dropping the gloves and engaging in a spirited scrap with Seattle’s Jared McCann on December 29th. The Canucks scored seconds after the fight and went on to one of only two wins since Christmas.

McCann and Garland throw fists after an elbow from Garland earlier in the game. 5in and 30lb difference between the two pic.twitter.com/nD40eNgJys

— Rabbet – P2P Sports Picks (@RabbetApp) December 30, 2025

However, after being injured the following night in a home loss to the Philadelphia Flyers, Garland missed two weeks of game action and simply hasn’t been himself since. He has played nine games since returning to the lineup on January 12th in Montreal and hasn’t found a way to make his presence known. Remarkably, in those nine games, Garland leads all Canucks forwards in 5-on-5 ice time and yet has managed only 11 shots on goal over that span.

In that time, 12 other forwards have found their way onto the scoresheet, but not Garland.

It really makes no sense.

Some have theorized that the trade of good friend and longtime teammate Quinn Hughes was a blow from which he has yet to recover. And it very well may be part of the problem. Certainly, the constant losing has to be eating at a competitor like Garland, too. And now there is clearly trade uncertainty for just about everyone on the 32nd-place team’s roster, and the management is signalling the rebuild is underway. Tack on a couple of injuries this season, and it has all amounted to very little in the way of production for a player that shared the team-lead in scoring among forwards last season with 50 points – the second highest total of his NHL career. It also earned him a six-year $36M contract extension that kicks in this summer.

Through the 42 games he’s played this season, Garland has seven goals and 22 points and sits ninth on the team in overall scoring. He’s lost his spot on the top unit power play, and in Tuesday’s 5-2 loss to San Jose, he saw just 11:31 of 5-on-5 ice time, lower than the likes of Jonathan Lekkerimaki, Drew O’Connor, Linus Karlsson, Teddy Blueger and Filip Chytil. He barely played more than Evander Kane, who sat out seven minutes in the penalty box.

Call it a slump, a funk or a run of poor performances, Conor Garland is a better player than he has shown of late. But he needs to find a way to reignite his competitive fire. He’s at his best when he’s buzzing in the offensive zone, shaking off checks and working his way to the front of the net.

Garland thought he had scored on a first period slap shot against Pittsburgh on Sunday afternoon, but the goal was waved off after it was deemed Teddy Blueger had brushed Penguins netminder Stuart Skinner at the top of the blue paint. Garland needed that goal. Garland needs something good to go his way. But like the team he plays for, nothing is coming easy these days.

So maybe the sight of an Anaheim jersey on the other side Thursday night at Rogers Arena is what Conor Garland needs to remind him of the goal he scored against the Ducks a couple of months back.

That was a confident player at the top of his game. He seems so far from that player right now.

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/vancouver-canucks-conor-garland-current-scoring-slump
 
‘Just like old times’: Canucks’ Öhgren and Lekkerimäki eager to reunite as teammates

When acquired with Zeev Buium and Marco Rossi as part of the Quinn Hughes return, Liam Öhgren was viewed as more of a throw-in for the Vancouver Canucks, considering he was still searching for his first point of the year, 18 games into his season.

However, he’s proven through his first 22 games in a Canucks sweater that he was a valued piece of the trade. An element that may have been overlooked when Öhgren was brought in was the fact that he has a previous relationship with another promising young Canuck, Jonathan Lekkerimäki.

A quick look at their respective HockeyDB pages would show they were on the same team for much of their junior years, but Öhgren gave further details on exactly how their friendship began.

“We both came to Djurgårdens in U16 and played together, played on the same line, pretty much our whole junior levels,” Öhgren told CanucksArmy. “We played on the national team together, [on the] same line there. So yeah, we’ve been good friends ever since we were 16 years old and working our way up to the highest level, and it’s pretty cool and special to be on the same NHL team and playing together in the best league in hockey.”

The two shared that they hadn’t met prior to their time in Djurgårdens, but both knew of each other. However, once they reported to Djurgarden’s Jr., their chemistry began to develop.

Öhgren had 33 goals and 58 points in 30 games, while playing alongside Lekkerimäki, who had 20 goals and 35 points in 26 games in the 2021-22 Swedish Junior season. Their efforts earned them a shot with the big club in the SHL. Öhgren had one goal and two points in 25 games, whereas Lekkerimäki had more success, scoring seven goals and nine points.

“I think we have great chemistry,” Öhgren shared. “We’ve played really good together. [We played] with Noah Östlund in Buffalo; us three were on the line pretty much our whole Junior years. We played really good, put up a lot of points, and won a lot of games for our teams. I feel like we know where each other [are] on the ice, and because we’re good buddies outside the rink.”

“We think the game the same way,” Lekkerimäki told CanucksArmy. “He’s a smart player. So yeah, we’ve found the chemistry out there.”

After the two were drafted five picks apart – with Östlund selected between the two – Öhgren and Lekkerimäki went back to the SHL for their draft-plus-one seasons, where they played for Djurgårdens of the Swedish Division 1 (developmental league). However, as Öhgren was more developed, he began the season with the big club, while Lekkerimäki had a brief two-game stint (two goals and five points) with the Junior team, before re-joining his friend and linemate.

The duo was productive, but Öhgren had more success, scoring 11 goals and 20 points in 36 games, while Lekkerimäki had three goals and nine points in 29 games. Once the playoffs rolled around, the two stepped up their game, with Lekkerimäki finishing as a point-per-game (five goals and 15 points in 15 games), while Öhgren had eight goals and 13 points in 17 games.

But after three seasons and two World Junior Championships under their belt, the duo was finally split.

Now two years removed from their draft season, both Öhgren and Lekkerimäki moved on from Djurgårdens for one final SHL season before heading overseas to chase their NHL dream. Öhgren went on to join Farjestads, while Lekkerimäki joined Orebro. After solid starts to their seasons, Öhgren and Lekkerimäki reunited for one last hoorah at the World Junior Championships.

Donning the Tre Kronor, both skaters played pivotal roles for the Swedes. Öhgren had two assists in seven games, but was viewed more for his leadership on the team, as he was honoured with the captaincy. On the other hand, Lekkerimäki was Sweden’s main goal scorer, leading the tournament in goals (seven) and was awarded as the tournament’s most valuable player.

While both players have different play styles, the contrast in production at the World Juniors goes to show that the duo found ways to complement each other’s game, even though they are very different player types.

“I mean, we’re not really the same players, you know?” Öhgren questioned. “We’re different, very different. I bring a lot of speed, physicality, and win puck battles. He’s very skilled, has a great shot, and we both have a good eye to put a puck in the net. And in that way, we want to score every shift we get together, and that mentality has been keeping us going forward and playing good.”

“He’s a fast skater and a good passer. I just try to be open and find my shot,” Lekkerimäki shared.

As far as they knew at the time, that was the last opportunity they would have to play with each other for some time.

After their respective SHL seasons, both players made the trip overseas to join the organization that drafted them. Lekkerimäki played six games in the AHL, while Öhgren got a four-game stint in the NHL, where he scored one goal and two points.

While both players have had different paths and are still developing into everyday NHL players, the opportunity to play with each other again is not lost on either of them.

“Yeah, it’s very exciting,” Öhgren said. “I mean, we got one shift [on Tuesday vs. Sharks], and it was great, just like old times. So, if we get that opportunity [again], it would be really fun, but obviously, every guy here is really good. No matter who I play with, it’s going to be a great player. But yeah, it’s obviously fun that he’s here, and we’re here together.”

“Yeah, I would love to play with him,” Lekkerimäki mentioned. “We’ve grown up together, so we know each other pretty well, and we can talk about everything. So, if we get the chance [to play] here, it would be very fun.”

And now that Lekkerimäki has been summoned from the AHL, he and Öhgren will finally have another opportunity to play with each other again. They may not have started on the same line in their first game back sporting the same colours, but the duo got a brief taste of action together late against the Sharks. But according to brief line rushes from Wednesday’s practice, the duo flanked Teddy Blueger.

Öhgren and Lekkerimäki could officially be reunited as early as tonight against the Anaheim Ducks.

You could see that the two truly do have a close relationship, one that stems further back than your typical teammate. Following CanucksArmy’s chat with Öhgren, and while speaking with Lekkerimäki, there was an exchange between the two in Swedish that left both players chuckling. When asked what Öhgren said to him, Lekkerimäki replied, “you better say good things about me.”

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/just-l...ks-ohgren-lekkerimaki-eager-reunite-teammates
 
NHL trade rumours: Could the Canucks and Wild strike a deal for Conor Garland?

Business between the Vancouver Canucks and Minnesota Wild couldn’t be in a better place after the two struck the biggest deal of the season in December. With that in mind, could the two sides come together on another deal in the same season?

On Thursday’s episode of Donnie & Dhali — The Team, Rick Dhaliwal mentioned that he “wouldn’t be surprised” if the Minnesota Wild liked Conor Garland.

“Conor Garland’s stats, not great since Quinn Hughes – his good friend – left. But teams are still calling on Conor Garland. The Canucks don’t really want to move him, folks, but they are listening. Would not be surprised if the Minnesota Wild like Garland. The only problem with that is they might have issues absorbing Garland’s new contract.

“It would cost a lot. Canucks are not doing a Garland trade unless it’s an offer you can’t refuse.”

While this isn’t exactly a full-fledged report, it did get us thinking: would Garland be a fit for the Minnesota Wild? And what might a trade end up looking like?

Looking into the Wild’s depth chart, the right side of their forward group is fairly accounted for with Mats Zuccarello, Matt Boldy, and Vladimir Tarasenko as their top-nine right wingers.

Up front, Minnesota currently have a full bill of health; here is how the Wild’s forward group looks right now:

Kaprizov – Hartman – Zuccarello
Johansson – Eriksson Ek – Boldy
Foligno – Yurov – Tarasenko
Trenin – Sturm – Hinostroza

The clear, glaring need for Minnesota is down the middle. Specifically, a top-line centre to play between Zuccarello and Kirill Kaprizov. And those are rare to find and expensive to acquire. Does it really make sense for the Wild to part with top assets that they would need to go out and acquire that top-line centre for another right-winger, who they don’t even have room for in their lineup?

But even if they wanted to, it begs the question: what top assets do the Wild even have anymore?

Back in their December blockbuster, the Wild unloaded the clip on their most valuable assets, sending Zeev Buium, Marco Rossi, Liam Öhgren, and a 2026 first-round pick in exchange for Quinn Hughes. Those are four premium assets: a star-potential rookie defenceman, their top-line centre at the time, a former first-round pick, and a future first-round pick.

So, with four of their top trade chips no longer in their arsenal, what other assets do the Wild have left in the system that the Canucks would have interest in?

Prospects​


The cupboards are still fairly intact in terms of the Wild’s forward prospects.

Riley Heidt and Hunter Haight are former second-round picks who are playing in the American League this season, with the latter appearing in five NHL games this season. Charlie Stramel and Ryder Ritchie are having scoring success in the NCAA this season. Stramel is tied for 11th in NCAA scoring with 13 goals and 30 points. And in Ritchie’s first NCAA season, he has four goals and 13 points in 25 games with Boston University. Recent fourth-round pick Adam Benak is having a strong OHL campaign with 21 goals and 53 points with 2026 top prospect and Abbotsford Canucks Head Coach Manny Malhotra’s son, Caleb Malhotra, and the Brantford Bulldogs.

One piece the Wild have reportedly been dangling as a potential trade chip for a significant asset is 23-year-old netminder Jesper Wallstedt. However, goaltending just isn’t a position the Canucks would target given their current organizational depth and competitive timeline.

To read more about some of the prospects above, check out our piece from November, “Which young players might the Canucks target in a trade with the Wild?

Picks​


The Wild are without their first or second-round picks in 2026, but hold their selections in rounds three through seven, including an additional fifth (San Jose).

In 2027, Minnesota still has its first, but traded its second-round pick in the David Jiricek trade with the Columbus Blue Jackets last season. They retain all of their picks through rounds three to seven.

Would it be nice to reunite Conor Garland with Quinn Hughes in Minnesota? Probably. But quite honestly, it doesn’t appear to be a fit.

The Wild currently don’t have room for Garland to play his preferred position in the top nine. And even if they did, would the Wild be willing to offer the Canucks something they couldn’t refuse in order to pry a Garland off their hands? That offer likely includes their 2027 first-round pick and another B-level asset, like a Charlie Stramel.

It’s an interesting question to ponder, but Garland doesn’t seem like a player the Wild would ever get serious about targeting at this juncture.

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/nhl-tr...ucks-minnesota-wild-strike-deal-conor-garland
 
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