Daren Hermiston: The Canucks’ New Front Office Visionary

Man in suit speaking at Vancouver Canucks podium during press conference

By Andrew Phillip Chernoff | CanucksBanter

June 9, 2026

On June 5, 2026, the Vancouver Canucks formally announced the hire of Daren Hermiston to the dual role of Director of Player Personnel and Player Development.

His hiring represents a critical juncture in the franchise’s operational history, occurring during one of the most comprehensive front-office and coaching restructuring efforts recorded in the modern NHL.

Hermiston’s selection, occurring a mere four days after Malhotra’s appointment, is significant to the total restructuring of the Canucks management staff.

He is explicitly tasked with managing the influx of youth acquired via the Hughes trade and the forthcoming 2026 NHL Draft, where the Canucks hold the third overall selection alongside Minnesota’s first-round pick, with internal discussions already identifying targets such as Caleb Malhotra, Ilia Morozov, and Mathis Preston.

It is a forward-thinking manoeuvre that underscores, and continues the franchise’s commitment to a holistic, modernised rebuild.

Hermiston’s Resume

Daren Hermiston’s ascension to an NHL front office is a product of a highly untraditional, multi-disciplinary pathway.

  • He played as a goaltender for the Vernon Vipers (BCHL) in 2005–06, then the Tucson Tilt (WSHL) in 2006–07.
  • From 2009 to 2011, he played as a forward for Thompson Rivers University (TRU) in the British Columbia Intercollegiate Hockey League (BCIHL), registering eight goals and seven assists for a total of fifteen points across twenty-six games before permanently retiring from competitive play.

After completing his studies (Business Administration at TRU), he launched a career as an NHLPA-certified player agent in 2009.

  • He joined Points West Sports & Entertainment (Vancouver) in 2009, staying through that agency’s transitions:
    • In 2021 Points West was acquired by Wasserman Hockey, and by 2023 Wasserman rebranded its hockey division as THE·TEAM.

Hermiston remained a certified agent throughout, representing players across NHL and junior leagues. 

Hermiston Short Listed

Following a disastrous 2025–26 campaign that culminated in a league-worst finish and the liquidation of cornerstone assets, the Canucks’ newly minted executive triumvirate—comprising Co-Presidents of Hockey Operations Henrik and Daniel Sedin, alongside General Manager Ryan Johnson—embarked on an aggressive mandate to fundamentally rewrite the organisation’s internal culture, tactical structure, and developmental strategy.

GM Ryan Johnson recognized that traditional, linear hockey developmental models were insufficient for the modern NHL landscape when it came to the dual role of Director of Player Personnel and Player Development.

He and the Sedins took their time and due diligence to make sure Hermiston had exactly what they were looking for after they short-listed him.

Hermiston’s Track Record Secures Job

Hermiston impressed Canucks management, and the team secured an executive whose profile defies convention.

  • His unparalleled transition from competitive goaltender to collegiate forward gives him a 360-degree tactical perspective of the ice, enhancing his scouting evaluations.
    • When analysing a junior player’s scoring touch, Hermiston can evaluate the play simultaneously through the lens of the attacker exploiting space and the goaltender tracking the release.
  • His academic background in Business Administration ensures logistical and financial competency in managing a sprawling department.
    • The modern NHL operates under a hard salary cap with intricate collective bargaining rules; a foundational understanding of corporate finance and business administration is not only an advantage but a prerequisite for the elite executive position.
  • Hermiston’s appointment is emblematic of a broader, league-wide paradigm shift favouring executives with diverse, multi-disciplinary backgrounds over traditional, linear hockey management ascensions (analyzing player growth).
  • He has served as a guest lecturer in Sports and Entertainment Marketing at Simon Fraser University.
    • The ability to structure complex information, articulate market theories to an audience, and educate young adults translates directly into the modern requirements of player development. Contemporary player development relies heavily on clear communication, mentorship, and the creation of structured learning environments.
  • As an NHLPA-certified player agent, Hermiston brings a unique amalgamation of contract negotiation expertise, collegiate academic grounding, and grassroots player relations to the Canucks.
  • Most importantly, his seventeen-year tenure as an elite player agent equips him with masterclass recruitment skills, deep empathy for player psychology, and an intrinsic understanding of how to navigate young athletes through the perilous transition from amateur to professional hockey.
    • Hermiston cultivated his own distinct roster of clients, primarily focusing on identifying and nurturing emerging talent across the NHL, AHL, and major junior circuits.
    • At the time of his transition to the Canucks front office, Hermiston managed an active client list of eight players.
      • His clients included, among others:
        Arshdeep Bains (Forward, Vancouver Canucks);
        Christian Fitzgerald (Forward, Dallas Stars);
        Tyler Thorpe (Forward, Montreal Canadiens);
        TJ Hughes (Forward, Colorado Avalanche);
        Abram Wiebe (Defenceman, Calgary Flames);
        Harrison Brunicke (Defenceman, Pittsburgh Penguins – selected in the second round of the 2024 NHL Draft);
        Connor Ungar (Goaltender, Edmonton Oilers)
  • Hermiston’s tenure as an agent highlights a sustained track record of talent identification and meticulous career management.
    • Acting on behalf of Bains, Hermiston successfully negotiated a complex two-year, $812,500 Average Annual Value (AAV) extension the day before NHL free agency commenced.
      • Hermiston skilfully structured the deal to protect his client’s financial downside, securing a two-way structure in year one that guaranteed a $290,000 minor-league salary, but enforcing a one-way structure in year two, ensuring Bains would receive his full $812,500 NHL salary regardless of his demotion status.
  • Hermiston’s deep understanding of the NHL’s Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA), minor-league salary structures, and his ability to leverage player performance into tangible financial security—are now administrative skills that will now serve the Vancouver Canucks’ long-term salary cap management and asset retention strategies.

The Dual Role: Director of Player Personnel and Player Development

As Director of Player Personnel, Hermiston will act as the principal filter between the amateur and professional scouting departments and General Manager Ryan Johnson. He inherits a personnel department that must immediately execute the highly consequential 2026 NHL Entry Draft.

From the Co-Presidents of Hockey Operations, to the General Manager, Assistant General Manager’s, Head Coach and Director of Hockey Analytics, it is an all-in coordinated effort to fulfill the mandate of the Canucks Rebuild, and Hermiston will be the common denominator in all those key relationships.

The two former NHLPA player agents, will be working together: Hermiston and Assistant General Manager Émilie Castonguay. Castonguay and Hermiston creates an unprecedented “Agent-Executive” relationship.

Castonguay, who previously represented top-tier talent like Alexis Lafrenière before joining the Canucks, has overseen contract negotiations and salary cap management alongside fellow AGM Cammi Granato, whose tenure was recently extended by the organization.

Hermiston’s mandate includes ensuring that the prospects graduating from Abbotsford or the junior ranks are physically and psychologically prepared to execute Manny Malhotra’s demanding system. If Hermiston drafts and develops players who clash with Malhotra’s ethos, the rebuild will stall; therefore, constant, transparent communication between the development staff and the coaching staff will be paramount.

In the modern NHL, qualitative scouting must be rigorously stress-tested by quantitative analytics. Director of Hockey Analytics Aiden Fox has been tasked by the new General Manager to improve the Hockey Analytics department to meet the new needs of the Canucks rebuild efforts.

Hermiston will be required to fuse his relational, scout-driven insights with Fox’s data models. When Hermiston identifies a player whose underlying potential he believes in, he will need to collaborate with Fox to see if the micro-stats validate or contradict the eye test. This collaborative tension between traditional evaluation and advanced analytics is the hallmark of a healthy, modernized front office.

Hermiston’s background as an agent provides a distinct competitive advantage to this rebuild:

  • Agents are in constant communication with scouts, general managers, and development coaches from all 32 franchises, they act as centralized hubs of league-wide intelligence. Hermiston has an intimate understanding of how other organizations evaluate talent, how they structure their development systems, and how they internally value specific asset classes.
  • Furthermore, his deep WHL roots will prove vital in scouting localized talent, ensuring the Canucks maintain a close watch on those players.

On the Player Development side of his portfolio, Hermiston assumes control of a prospect pool that features critical, high-ceiling assets. The Canucks’ system currently houses highly touted defencemen like Tom Willander and Zeev Buium (the latter being a former client of Hermiston’s agency), as well as promising forwards such as Aatu Räty, Max Sasson, Linus Karlsson, and Elias Pettersson (the defenceman).

Hermiston’s unique role will involve assisting players in making tailored, individualized decisions regarding their developmental pathways—factoring in levels of competition, coaching styles, and ice-time opportunities.

Player development is no longer confined to hiring skating coaches and nutritional consultants, regarding management of high-ceiling assets, it is fundamentally about psychological management and career navigation, which is one of Hermiston’s strong suits.

The selection of Hermiston reflects a broader NHL trend of aggressively recruiting player agents into upper management. This trend is driven by the realization that agents possess skill sets that traditional scouts simply do not acquire: salary cap maximization, elite negotiation tactics, and the ability to “recruit” free agents through sophisticated relationship building.

Regarding the hire, General Manager Ryan Johnson specifically highlighted Hermiston’s background, stating: “Not only were we impressed by his recruiting skills from being a player agent, but also his ability and understanding of how to help develop players who have different skillsets and abilities”.

The Canucks are betting that Hermiston’s holistic evaluative framework will significantly decrease their “bust rate” at the draft table and in the free-agent market.

Hermiston and the Canucks Rebuild Philosophy

Under the Sedin and Johnson administration, the Canucks are attempting to build an environment where players are encouraged to improve, permitted to make mistakes, and granted access to elite resources. Johnson emphasized that he wishes to build a “safe space to fail” so that developmental lessons can take root organically.

Hermiston fits this cultural mandate perfectly. Having represented players who faced demotions, severe injuries, and contentious contract disputes, he inherently understands the vulnerability of professional athletes. He is equipped to implement a development program that is supportive rather than purely punitive, aligning seamlessly with the organizational pivot toward sustainable growth and continued success.

Conclusion

Hermiston’s mandate is not simply to evaluate talent, but most importantly, to curate a rigorous environment, that makes high-yield assets—such as those acquired in the franchise-altering Quinn Hughes trade and the premium 2026 draft picks—are shielded from developmental pitfalls and seamlessly integrated into Head Coach Manny Malhotra’s rigid tactical structure.

By positioning Hermiston as the ultimate liaison between management, players, and external representation, the Vancouver Canucks have proactively eliminated traditional friction points within the development pipeline.

If Hermiston’s historical success in identifying, recruiting, and nurturing talent as an agent translates well into his executive mandate, he and his assistants will serve as the architectural foundation and main pillars upon which the Vancouver Canucks’ next championship contention window is built.

Until next time, hockey fans

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Vancouver Canucks’ Organizational Overhaul: What It Means for the Future

A dynamic graphic representing a leadership transition, featuring glowing elements and the text 'Leadership Transition: Passing the Torch'. The imagery includes a stylized whale emblem, with arrows symbolizing 'Foundation' and 'Future Vision'. The background depicts an ice hockey rink.

By Andrew Phillip Chernoff | CanucksBanter

May 12, 2026

The Vancouver Canucks are currently navigating one of the most profound organisational transformations in the franchise’s modern history.

Following a catastrophic 2025-26 National Hockey League (NHL) campaign, the organisation has initiated a sweeping overhaul of its executive leadership, hockey operations, coaching staff, and subsidiary departments. The catalyst for this systemic reset was a season that ended with the club finishing dead last in the NHL standings, recording a dismal 25-49-8 record for a mere 58 points.

The statistical underpinnings of this collapse were historic, marked by a franchise-worst 314 goals against and a staggering -100 goal differential. This on-ice futility exposed deep-seated structural vulnerabilities, necessitating a complete deconstruction of the team’s operational architecture.

The immediate fallout of the season resulted in the dismissal of General Manager Patrik Allvin on April 17, 2026, ending a tenure characterised by frantic asset management and a failure to sustain a competitive window. Shortly thereafter, President of Hockey Operations Jim Rutherford announced his intention to step down from day-to-day operations following the June 2026 NHL Entry Draft, transitioning into an advisory and alternate governor role.

The emergence of Evan Gold as the reported front-runner underscores a highly calculated shift in ownership’s thinking. The Canucks have historically struggled with the nuances of the salary cap, frequently finding themselves trapped by inefficient veteran contracts and forced into disadvantageous trades to achieve compliance. Gold’s background in legal affairs and analytics offers a direct remedy to this institutional weakness.

Passing over Ryan Johnson—a loyalist who has survived multiple regime changes since joining the front office in 2013—risks alienating a respected internal figure who possesses the deepest understanding of the organisation’s young talent.

If Gold is ultimately selected, the retention of Johnson in his current Assistant General Manager capacity becomes a critical secondary objective to prevent a complete loss of internal developmental intelligence.

Alternatively, the inclusion of Shane Doan in a senior advisory role could inject immense locker-room credibility, serving as a stabilising voice alongside a heavily analytical General Manager like Gold.

Perhaps the most universally praised development within the internal reorganisation is the impending promotion of Henrik and Daniel Sedin. Reports confirm that both brothers have been offered and have accepted expanded roles within the senior hockey operations department, marking a significant escalation in their executive authority.

The integration of the Sedins into the upper echelon of management represents the implementation of what industry insiders have dubbed the “Swedish Startup” model, drawing direct parallels to the Toronto Maple Leafs’ integration of Mats Sundin as a senior advisor.

In this structure, the Sedins will likely not hold final, unilateral decision-making power—thereby insulating them from the immediate administrative blowback of unpopular transactions—but they will wield massive influence over the organisation’s hockey philosophy, roster construction, prospect mentorship, and culture.

The Assistant General Manager tier is currently under intense scrutiny. Multiple reports indicate that Emilie Castonguay and Cammi Granato are firmly on the hot seat, with a complete overhaul of the AGM tier considered highly probable.

If the organisation pivots toward an Evan Gold-led analytical approach, the AGM tier must be populated by individuals who can bridge the gap between data science, salary cap projections, and on-ice evaluation. The inability of the previous AGM group to prevent the cascading failures of the 2025-26 season has fundamentally eroded ownership’s confidence in their collective decision-making, making their retention highly unlikely.

The amateur and professional scouting departments represent the most critical, yet vulnerable, sectors of the Vancouver Canucks’ current operations.

A new General Manager will almost certainly seek to completely overhaul the scouting department to install their own regional directors and implement a modernised grading scale. However, executing this purge mere weeks before the draft is impossible. The organisation must therefore navigate a temporary truce, relying on the outgoing scouts to execute the 2026 draft before initiating the mass personnel turnover in July.

For the Canucks to transition into a genuinely elite franchise, their investment in structural systems—specifically analytics—must become a non-negotiable pillar rather than a tertiary department. The new executive structure, particularly if led by Evan Gold, is expected to shifting the role from mere advisory to a required checkpoint in every transactional decision. The best organisations do not choose between data and the “eye test”; they combine both into a singular, cohesive decision-making process.

An often-overlooked yet critical element of the Canucks’ internal failures has been the inadequacy of their medical and recovery infrastructure.Public scrutiny intensified when it was revealed that the Canucks employed only five medical staff members (including only three physicians), a stark contrast to rival franchises such as the Minnesota Wild, who employ nine doctors (including five surgeons) and four dedicated dentists.

The lack of competitive medical salaries and private infrastructure investment has led to an environment where players like Demko have reportedly sought out-of-country treatment, and others like Forbort suffered season-ending complications following routine injections

Embracing cutting-edge sports science, biometric tracking, and superior rehabilitation infrastructure also is an integral part of 21st century sports medicine and is highly utilized—it is an intrinsic component of salary cap efficiency by professional sports clubs these days, except is lacking with the Canucks.

The dismissal of a General Manager almost universally foreshadows a coaching change, as new executives naturally desire to appoint their own bench boss to execute their specific tactical vision. It is highly irregular for an incoming General Manager to inherit a head coach who just presided over a last-place finish.

If Adam Foote is relieved of his duties, the most compelling candidate to assume the head coaching mantle resides internally: Manny Malhotra. Currently the head coach of the AHL affiliate Abbotsford Canucks, Malhotra represents the ideal modern NHL coach. He guided Abbotsford to a Calder Cup Championship in 2025, demonstrating a profound capacity to implement scalable tactical systems and manage high-stakes professional environments.

Promoting Malhotra is a strategic imperative in terms of asset protection. As a highly coveted coaching prospect, Malhotra is currently a prime target for rebuilding franchises across the NHL, such as Los Angeles or Calgary. The Canucks must view Malhotra as a future-based asset; if they leave him languishing in the AHL, they risk losing their most valuable developmental mind to a competitor.

If the incoming new leadership can successfully execute a long awaited 21st Century foundational blueprint, the 2025-26 season will not be remembered as a failure, but rather as the necessary investment that allowed a modern, championship-calibre organisation, to be constructed in its place.

Until next time, hockey fans