Canucks Rebuild: Key Changes and 2026 NHL Draft Insights

Interior view of Rogers Arena showcasing empty seating with white rally towels, a hockey rink in the center, and a large overhead scoreboard.

By Andrew Phillip Chernoff | CanucksBanter

June 8th, 2026

The Vancouver Canucks are in a significant rebuild phase following a poor 2025-26 season that landed them near the bottom of the NHL standings.

Key recent organizational changes and updates (as of early June 2026):

  • Coaching and Front Office Overhaul: Manny Malhotra was named the 23rd head coach in franchise history on June 1, 2026, succeeding Adam Foote. Malhotra, a former Canucks player and assistant, previously led the AHL Abbotsford Canucks to a Calder Cup. He has strong ties to the organization and is viewed as a strong developmental coach for a young roster. GM Ryan Johnson (promoted internally) introduced him, with the Sedin twins (Henrik and Daniel) now serving as co-presidents of hockey operations.
  • Additional Front Office Moves: Daren Hermiston was named Director of Player Personnel and Player Development. The team has also shown interest in hiring former Seattle Kraken assistant Jessica Campbell.
  • Signings: Forward Ilya Safonov (25, ex-Blackhawks rights) signed to a one-year, two-way contract ($850K NHL cap hit). He had a solid KHL season and is expected to push for an NHL roster spot.

Trades and Rumours

  • Elias Pettersson: Ongoing speculation about his future due to his large cap hit and team performance. Reports (including from Brian Burke) suggest a trade is likely at some point, but it’s complicated. The team is in rebuild mode, so major moves involving high-value players are possible.
  • Other Potential Moves: Rumours involve players like Jake DeBrusk, Nils Höglander, Filip Hronek, and veterans. Brendan Gallagher (Canadiens) has been granted permission to seek a trade; his BC ties and experience make him a logical fit/rumour target for Vancouver.
  • General chatter around roster turnover, with the Canucks exploring options to acquire assets and middle-six help while shedding salary where possible.

2026 NHL Draft (June 26-27)

The Canucks have a strong haul: 10 picks, including the 3rd overall, plus others in the first round (e.g., via trades, around 24th) and four in the top 41. This is a key opportunity to stock the prospect pool.

  • Strong interest in top centres like Caleb Malhotra (Manny’s son—consensus top prospect, though family ties add intrigue) and others such as Ivar Stenberg, Gavin McKenna (dinner meetings reported), Mathis Preston, etc.
  • Later picks target players like Jaxon Cover, Nikita Klepov, and various BC-tied or high-upside prospects. Scouts have been active at the combine.

Highlights/Notes

  • Focus on culture shift, player development, attitude/energy under Malhotra, and building through the draft.
  • Prospects like Aatu Räty and others had strong international/showings.
  • The organization is leaning into youth, internal promotions and speculation of a tough season.

Until next time, hockey fans

Canucks Head Coach Manny Malhotra’s Strategic Vision for Canucks’ Rebuild: Part 2 of 2

Headshot of a bald man smiling, wearing a suit and tie against a neutral background.

By Andrew Phillip Chernoff | CanucksBanter

June 7, 2026


Manny Malhotra’s Vision for the Canucks: A New Era Begins

This article is Part 2 of 2 of the hiring of Manny Malhotra as the 23rd Head Coach of the Vancouver Canucks, and what he desires to bring to the club in his elevated position as an NHL coach in the most reveried professional hockey league in the world.

It is based on his media availability and introduction as the Canucks new coach, dealing with questions, topics of questions by the media, and answers provided by Head Coach Manny Malhotra. And my evaluation of those answers.

Here goes, Part 2 of 2:

RECLAIM ELITE ASSETS: REIGNITE, RESTORE, UNLEASH

The media asked Malhotra how he plans to rehabilitate the franchise’s most vital, yet dormant, offensive engine.

The most urgent tactical and developmental crisis facing the Vancouver Canucks is the statistical regression of their highest-paid forward, Elias Pettersson. “I have not spoken with him yet,” Malhotra admitted during the press conference. “[But] as with every player, my goal is to help him find his game, and we all know what he is capable of doing, the talent he possesses, and the ability he has on the ice”.

Malhotra chose not to publicly analyze Pettersson’s systemic failures, avoiding critiques of his physical engagement, defensive liabilities, or confidence levels. Instead, the phrasing “help him find his game” signals using a collaborative, non-invasive coaching style..

Malhotra’s strategy, respects that the hockey high-IQ of players like Pettersson do not require rigid, paint-by-numbers tactical restrictions. Rather, they require an environment that nurtures their foundational skill set, allowing their offensive instincts to operate free from being over burdened.

The rehabilitative process is collaborative between the coaching staff and the player, Malhotra will be attempting to restore Pettersson’s confidence incrementally, stripping away the immense external pressure associated with his lucrative contract and recent underperformance.

MALHOTRA’S HIGH ENERGY, HIGH TEMPO STYLE OF PLAY

When asked directly about the style of play the Canucks will adopt under his guidance, Malhotra was unambiguous regarding his preferred tempo.

“It’s going to be a very up tempo style of game. High energy. High tempo,” he declared.

In the contemporary NHL, “up-tempo” is a fast; highly coordinated, aggressive approach to puck possession and zone transitions.

An up-tempo system requires defensemen to rapidly lead the offensive rush, forwards to execute relentless, high-pressure forechecks (often deploying a 2-1-2 or 1-2-2 aggressive posture to strip pucks high in the offensive zone), and a collective commitment to execute rapid puck movement through the neutral zone to exploit opposition line changes.

Executing a high-tempo system requires peak physiological conditioning and extreme tactical synchronisation—attributes that a rebuilding, inexperienced roster often lacks.

To bridge the gap between the systems and practical execution, Malhotra stressed the necessity of resisting habituation and striving for consistency. Habituation referring to the reduction of a behavioral response to something after repeated occurrences of that particular action. The goal in Malhotra’s style of play is to have the response to those occurrences consistently high.

“We have to ride the wave and help them find their consistent game,” Malhotra said. “To me, that’s the most important part about being an everyday NHLer, finding the consistency in your game”.

This highlights a vital component of Malhotra’s developmental doctrine. The leap from the AHL to the NHL is rarely hindered by a lack of raw skill; rather, it is hindered by the inability to execute those skills and the need for a regular and consistent tempo consistency against elite competition over an exhausting 84-game schedule.

Malhotra’s focus is on elevating the operational floor of his young players, ensuring their foundational “B-game” is sufficient to survive at the NHL level when their elite attributes are fatigued.

Malhotra draws upon his own playing career, explicitly citing former coaches Ken Hitchcock and Todd McLellan as profound influences. In previous interviews, Malhotra noted that Hitchcock taught him to understand the game deeply, while McLellan was an “incredible communicator” where “there were no gray areas” and players “knew exactly what was expected”. Malhotra intends to replicate this absolute clarity in Vancouver, ensuring his up-tempo system is underpinned by unyielding communicational precision.

THE FATHER-SON DYNAMIC AND THE 2026 NHL DRAFT

A highly unique and heavily scrutinised subplot overshadowing the media availability was the impending 2026 NHL Entry Draft.

The Vancouver Canucks hold the number three overall selection, and one of the premier prospects available is Caleb Malhotra, Manny Malhotra’s son. The convergence of a newly hired head coach and his highly touted son being drafted into the very same organisation presents a labyrinth of ethical, developmental, and interpersonal complexities.

While attempting to defer the hypothetical scenario, the implications were too vast to ignore, compelling Malhotra to elaborate on how the power dynamics would be managed if Caleb were to join the franchise.

“If it happens, I would treat him just as any other player,” Malhotra stated firmly. “And I know people would say, ‘Well, you can’t because it’s your son,’ and I do understand the challenges there”

THE “DAD VS COACH” COMMUNICATION PROTOCOL

Malhotra detailed a strict communicational boundary that has been established within their household for years.

“We’ve had a very clear understanding in my household that first and foremost I am dad, who also happens to be a professional hockey coach,” Malhotra explained to the press. “So when we are talking about hockey, there’s a decision by my kids if they want to talk to dad or coach. We will continue to have that rule in my house, and it’s served us well as a family”.

By publicly declaring this operational boundary, Malhotra has invited the media and the front office to hold him accountable to this exact standard.

Furthermore, by framing the relationship through a professional, compartmentalised lens, he signals to the current roster that meritocracy will remain the sole currency for ice time in Vancouver, regardless of bloodlines, and according to merit.

HIRING SOCIOCULTURAL MILESTONE IN NORTH AMERICAN SPORTS

Manny Malhotra’s appointment represents a profound sociocultural milestone in North American sports. With his hiring, Malhotra officially became the first head coach of South Asian descent in the history of the National Hockey League.

Malhotra refuses to let his racial heritage define his professional identity, he prevents the narrative of his tenure from being consumed by identity politics, which can often distract from on-ice objectives.

He acknowledges “the implications and how special it is”, thereby validating the community’s pride, but firmly establishes that his primary metric of evaluation will be his efficacy as a hockey tactician and cultural architect.

His pragmatic approach reinforces his overarching coaching philosophy: the focus must remain obsessively on the process, the daily execution of professional duties, and the pursuit of excellence. By centring his identity purely on his coaching acumen, he ensures that his eventual success or failure will be judged exclusively on merit and demonstrated abilities, aligning perfectly with the accountable culture he seeks to instil in his locker room.

Malhotra further acknowledged the milestone by masterfully redirectiing the focus to his professional competencies, mirroring the pragmatic approach he took during his playing career.

“When I was here as a player, I gave the same answer,” Malhotra reflected when asked about his historic status. “My first thought and my foremost thought is that I just want to be the best coach I can be … not the best coach of South Asian descent. That continues to be my mindset”.

WELCOME TO THE “NHL” VANCOUVER CANUCKS…AGAIN, MR. MALHOTRA

Throughout the media availability Manny Malhotra continually reinforced his overarching coaching philosophy: the focus must remain obsessively on the process, wrapped up in the daily execution of professional duties, and the pursuit of excellence.

By centring his identity purely on his coaching acumen, he ensures that his eventual success or failure will be judged exclusively on merit, aligning perfectly with the accountable culture he seeks to instil in his locker room: “obsessively on the process, wrapped up in the daily execution of professional duties and the pursuit of excellence.” just like their coach.

Until next time, hockey fans