NHL Draft 2026 Review– Canucks Day 2 Picks: Lucian Bernat Tappara U20 (U20 SM-sarja, Finland)

Close-up of a Vancouver Canucks hockey puck on the ice with the text 'RD' on the left and 'SIX' on the right in bold letters.

By Andrew Phillip Chernoff | CanucksBanter

July 3, 2026

Why Lucian Bernat Could be the Canucks’ Next Power Forward

Lucian Bernat (RW, shoots right) is a 6’4″ (193 cm), 198–201 lb (91 kg) Slovakian prospect born June 8, 2008, in Bratislava.

The Vancouver Canucks selected him 176th overall (6th round) in the 2026 NHL Entry Draft out of Tappara U20 (Finland U20 SM-sarja / Liiga juniors).

He is a rare combination of size, skill, and two-way elements for his age. He stayed in Finland’s structured development system for his draft year instead of reporting to the OHL’s Owen Sound Attack (who selected him 75th overall in the 2025 CHL Import Draft). He is now expected to join Owen Sound for the 2026-27 season.

Portrait of a young male hockey player wearing a red, white, and blue jersey with a neutral expression, set against a gray background.

Profile

  • Drafted: 2026 NHL Draft, 6th Round (176th Overall) by the Vancouver Canucks
  • Position: Right Wing
  • Shoots: Right Height / Weight: 6’4″ / 201 lbs
  • Nationality: Slovakia (Bratislava)
  • 2025–26 Team: Tappara U20 (U20 SM-sarja, Finland)
  • 2026–27 Team: Owen Sound Attack (OHL)

Skills, Talents, Evaluation

Lucian Bernat is a massive, highly intriguing prospect who represents exactly the type of high-upside swing teams look for in the later rounds of the draft. Spending his draft year in Finland’s U20 SM-sarja rather than crossing the pond early, he posted a solid 15 goals and 16 assists (31 points) in 37 games against older competition.

  • Player Type (per Elite Prospects): Cerebral Tactician • Sniper • Two-Way Forward.
  • Bernat is often described by scouts as a rare blend of size, skill, and hockey sense.
  • Size & Physical Tools: 6’4″ frame with projectable strength. Uses reach, body positioning, and net-front presence effectively. Wins board battles, controls play down low, and is difficult to play against when engaged. Shows power-forward flashes (especially internationally). canucksarmy.com
  • Skating: Fluid and advanced for his size. Good first-three-stride acceleration, long powerful stride in transition, and sharp edgework in tight spaces (influenced by Finnish development).
  • Shot & Scoring: High-end tool with a quick, deceptive release. Versatile (wrister, one-timer, mid-range). Mature shot selection and positioning in scoring areas. Off-wing scoring feel.
  • Puck Skills & Protection: Strong in traffic. Shields the puck well, manipulates it into his hip, executes give-and-gos at pace, and protects along the right half-wall on the power play.
  • Hockey Sense & Two-Way Play: Cerebral player who reads structures quickly. Mature defensive habits — purposeful backchecking, stick-on-puck disruption, reliable 200-foot game. Good off-puck positioning and lane awareness. Reliable on both special teams.

Key Scouting Notes:

  • The Hockey Writers highlighted his “rare combination of size and skill,” advanced edgework, and mature defensive habits from the Finnish system. thehockeywriters.com
  • Neutral Zone gave him a B+ at the 2025 Hlinka Gretzky Cup for his big-bodied power-forward play, net-front presence, board work, and poise on the power play (led tournament in PP ice time).
  • Canucks Army / Steven Ellis: Likes the shot and transition game; solid power-forward tendencies; difficult to play against but needs more consistent checking engagement.

Analytical / Metrics Context

Public advanced metrics (e.g., expected goals, Corsi) are limited at the Finnish U20 level. Evaluation relies heavily on scouting observation and basic production.

  • Rankings (pre-draft): NHL Central Scouting — #39 European skaters (final); Midterm ~#35 EU. McKeen’s ~#77 overall; other mid-round projections (3rd–5th round in some mocks). He climbed rankings through the season.
  • Production: 0.84 PPG in U20 as a 17-year-old is respectable against older competition. Scored consistently enough to be a top contributor on his team.
  • Scouting Grades: Draft Prospects Hockey — C+ overall, middle-six projection. Elite Prospects scouting notes emphasize shoot-first winger with physical tools and power-forward potential (some variability in consistency noted). draftprospectshockey.com

Upside

Bernat has legitimate middle-six NHL upside as a secondary scorer with size, a good shot, and two-way reliability. His frame is projectable — adding strength and consistency between ages 18–21 could turn him into a difficult power forward who contributes on the power play and penalty kill.

Possess genuine shooting talent and high hockey IQ which are premium commodities at the professional level.

Right-shot wingers with his combination of tools are valuable. If the skating, puck protection, and defensive habits translate (as Finnish development often helps), he could become a bottom-to-middle-six winger with physical presence. Late-round picks with this toolkit are high-variance “lottery tickets” with meaningful upside.

Downside & Risks

  • Inconsistency: Production and engagement can fluctuate (e.g., quieter stretches in league play).
  • Physical Development: Needs to add functional strength to sustain battles and dominate at higher levels (Liiga, AHL, NHL).
  • Untested Levels: Has not played Liiga (top Finnish pro league) or faced North American pace/ice surface consistently yet.
  • Adaptation: Transition from Finnish structured play to the smaller, faster NHL/NA game (and OHL) is an unknown.

Elite Prospects scouting notes some power-forward flashes but questions consistency and on-puck adjustments for sustained NHL impact (potential 4th-line or European middle-six floor in some evaluations).

Expectations for the Canucks

This is a classic developmental project with legitimate upside — exactly the type of pick teams hope hits in rounds 5–7. The Canucks get a big, skilled, right-shot winger with two-way elements and a translatable toolkit developed in a high-quality system.

Development Timeline:

  • 2026-27: OHL with Owen Sound Attack — focus on consistency, physical engagement, and adapting to NA game/ice.
  • Next 2–4 years: Junior → AHL seasoning. Monitor strength gains and special-teams contributions.
  • Ceiling Projection: Middle-six winger (secondary scoring + physical presence) by ~2029–2031, if development goes well.
  • Floor: Depth/AHL player or solid European pro.

Canucks Fit:

Adds size and right-shot depth to the prospect pool. Complements skillier or smaller forwards. Patient approach expected — Finnish prospects often benefit from time to mature physically and mentally.

Overall Verdict:

Solid value at 176th overall. Bernat brings a desirable package (size + shot + IQ + two-way play) that is harder to find late in the draft. High-upside swing with manageable risk for a 6th-rounder. The next 2–3 years in the OHL and AHL will be critical in determining how much of his tools translate. thehockeywriters.com

Already possessing the physical tools and structural discipline, his developmental trajectory could take a massive leap over the next three years. If he can increase his overall pace and successfully adapt his decision-making to the tighter checking of the OHL next season, the Canucks may have unearthed a legitimate steal who can eventually bring heavy, skilled minutes to their lineup.

NEXT TIME

Profile of Canucks Samuel Eriksson, LD, 6th round, 184th overall

Until next time, hockey fans

The Canucks 2025-26 Rebuild: Challenges and Progress

Infographic titled 'The Canucks 2025-26 Rebuild: Challenges and Progress.' It illustrates challenges such as salary cap management, defensive consistency, and developing young talent, along with progress indicators like the emergence of leaders, prospect development, and draft capital.

By Andrew Phillip Chernoff | CanucksBanter

March 16, 2026

Since the passing of the March 6 trade deadline, a new Canucks chapter has been unfolding in the history of the organization, as the franchise pivots to its “New Era.”

Sitting at the bottom of the standings with a 20-38-8 record after a recent 5-2 loss to the Seattle Kraken, the team is officially in the thick of a frustrating rebuild, orchestrated by the front office tandem of President of Hockey Operations Jim Rutherford and General Manager Patrik Allvin.

The locker room has undergone changes following the trade deadline housecleaning. Forward Brock Boeser has publicly committed to the organization, making it clear he intends to honor his long-term deal and act as a mentor for the incoming youth, rather than “jumping ship” in turbulent waters.

The transition into this rebuilding phase has been fraught with extreme growing pains before, and since, the 2026 NHL trade deadline:

  • Severe deficiencies in the team’s depth, defensive structure, and overall roster construction have been revealed
  • The Canucks have managed to secure victory in merely two of their last twelve outings
  • The team has struggled to remain competitive while fielding a depleted lineup decimated by a wave of injuries, systemic defensive zone lapses, and historically poor goaltending

The Canucks 2025-26 Season Simplified

A recent 5-2 defeat at the hands of the Pacific Division rival Seattle Kraken on Saturday, March 14, 2026, served as a stark microcosm of the entire 2025-26 campaign:

  • fleeting moments of individual offensive brilliance
  • prolonged defensive breakdowns
  • costly penalty trouble
  • inability to suppress high-danger scoring chances against desperate opponents.

Through it all, the Vancouver Canucks are actively positioning themselves to open a sustained competitive championship window in the late 2020s, including continued infrastructural investments.

Historical Off-Icc Deficiencies and Organization, Team Culture

A successful, sustainable NHL rebuild is not merely the accumulation of assets and draft picks; it requires an elite, safe, positive environment conducive to world-class physiological and psychological development. Entering the spring of 2026, the Vancouver Canucks are finally, aggressively addressing critical historical deficiencies in their off-ice infrastructure and their internal leadership organization hierarchy and culture, including the NHL team as a whole.

Those developments are seemingly highlighted by the imminent development of a dedicated, state-of-the-art sanctioned practice facility at the Britannia Ice Rink, indicative of the apparent organizational need and commitment to a modernized, approach to player development that the franchise has historically lacked for over a decade, to become the final franchise of the existing 32 to finally concede to the good sense behind such a project for the health and wellbeing of the team and professional player development.

The reported, finalized framework agreement between the Canucks organization and the City of Vancouver to construct a massive, state-of-the-art practice facility located at the Britannia Ice Rink (within the Britannia Community Centre).

  • For the past 15 years, the Canucks have operated at a distinct, almost embarrassing competitive disadvantage compared to the rest of the league. Without a dedicated, team-sanctioned practice facility since 2010, the club has been forced to practice at the University of British Columbia (UBC).
  • Operating strictly as guests at the UBC facility meant the multi-million-dollar NHL franchise had absolutely zero control over daily ice scheduling, severely restricting coaching availability, hindering spontaneous instructional sessions, and limiting localized off-ice training routines.
  • Furthermore, agonizing logistical hurdles—such as players and staff constantly being forced to move their heavy gear between the primary locker room at Rogers Arena and the temporary confines of UBC—created a deeply sub-optimal, amateurish professional environment.
  • If left unresolved, Vancouver would have infamously become the sole remaining NHL franchise without a dedicated training facility once the Calgary Flames’ new arena and practice complex officially opens its doors in 2027.

Management is actively, intentionally investing in the psychological cohesion and mental health of the locker room.

The recent 2026 Dice & Ice Gala highlighted a concerted organizational effort to build genuine camaraderie, prominently featuring a highly entertaining, viral rookie lip-sync battle headlined by young defenseman Tom Willander and recently acquired forward Curtis Douglas.

While events like a lip-sync battle may seem incredibly trivial or entirely disconnected from the rigors of professional hockey, they serve a vital, calculated function in a rebuilding market.

  • They humanize the young core to an increasingly frustrated, apathetic fanbase
  • When professional athletes are subjected to the season grind, actively beinng in off-ice events and enjoying a brotherly connection helps maintain a high on-ice compete level through an 82 game season

The Canucks Team That Management Wants To Foster

Two days prior to the Seattle Kraken loss, on Thursday, March 12, the Canucks demonstrated the exact type of cultural resilience that management is desperately attempting to foster.

Facing a 3-1 deficit late in the third period against the Nashville Predators, the team refused to capitulate.

  • Heavily taxed defenseman Filip Hronek scored a dramatic game-tying goal with just over a minute remaining in regulation, and forward Jake DeBrusk subsequently converted in the shootout to seal an emotional 4-3 victory.
  • Marco Rossi was the definitive catalyst in this contest, registering a goal and two assists while driving play into high-danger areas on virtually every shift.

Games of this nature, where young players seize offensive responsibility and overcome late-game adversity against playoff-caliber competition, are viewed internally as monumental developmental milestones.

The Blue Line, The Goaltending, The Injuries

Vancouver’s offensive woes, its abysmal overall record can be directly attributed to a youthful blue line, devoid of at one time strong veteran leadership; a devastating crisis in the goaltending crease, with the loss of veteran goalie Thatcher Demko to a season ending injury; exacerbated by an unprecedented wave of injuries, since early in the season that prevented any positive momentum to the season start, which resulted in the Canucks falling further behind as the season continued and led to significant, altering changes, identified as an organizational “rebuild”.

The Canucks Future and the Canucks Ascendance To Contention

Vancouver’s existing prospect pool is actively being evaluated by the front office. This evaluation period reaches its apex now in the month of March, particularly as the NCAA collegiate hockey season transitions into the ruthless, single-elimination phases of conference playoffs and the Canadian Hockey League (CHL) pushes toward the Memorial Cup.

To successfully supplement the anticipated massive influx of premium 2026 draft assets, a series of critical asset management decisions regarding the allocation of entry-level contracts (ELCs) and the timing of their professional transitions have to be discussed and decisions reached.

ProspectSchoolDraft 2025-26 Current News
Anthony RomaniMichigan State2024 6th Round35 GP, 14G, 13A (27 Pts)Eliminated in Big Ten Semifinals (3-2 OT vs Ohio State). Team is projected to secure an NCAA National Tournament bid as a No. 3 seed.
Matthew LansingQuinnipiacUndrafted Free Agent38 GP, 8G, 10A (18 Pts), +20Swept in ECAC Quarterfinals by Clarkson. Awaiting at-large National bid. Fully expected to return for his sophomore collegiate season.
Aiden CelebriniBoston University2023 6th Round102 Career GP, 21 Pts, +18Eliminated by UConn in Hockey East Quarterfinals. Now 21 years old, deciding between returning for senior year or turning professional (likely an AHL deal).
Matthew PerkinsNortheastern2024 4th Round29 GP, 4G, 3A (7 Pts)Eliminated by UMass (4-1) in conference tournament. Expected to return for his senior season; unlikely to factor into immediate NHL plans.
Wilson BjörckColorado College2025 5th Round31 GP, 5G, 10A (15 Pts)Eliminated in the 1st round via consecutive losses. Expected to return to school for his sophomore season to further physical development.
Daimon GardnerSt. Cloud State2022 4th Round26 GP, 4 PtsScratched in opening round playoff losses. Highly disappointing junior season; expected to return for his senior year to salvage professional stock.

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/vancouver-canucks-news-six-prospects-eliminated-ncaa-playoffs

  • Defenseman Aiden Celebrini.
    • Now 21 years old and possessing a highly physical, defensively responsible profile that directly addresses organizational weaknesses,
      • Celebrini must decide within the coming weeks whether to return to Boston University for his senior season or sign a professional contract.
    • Given Vancouver’s severely depleted defensive depth at the AHL level, aggressively recruiting Celebrini to join the Abbotsford Canucks’ system immediately on a professional tryout (PTO) or an AHL-specific deal would be a highly logical, proactive step to accelerate his physical and mental adaptation to the rigorous professional game.
  • Center Braeden Cootes
    • Splitting the 2025-26 season between the Seattle Thunderbirds and the Prince Albert Raiders in the highly competitive Western Hockey League (WHL), Cootes has amassed a staggering 22 goals and 57 points in just 42 games played.
    • His recent return to the ice in March following a brief injury layoff was punctuated by an utterly dominant one-goal, three-assist performance in a humiliating 11-0 rout of the Moose Jaw Warriors on a Friday night.
      • The center position has historically been a massive point of vulnerability and shallow depth in Vancouver’s prospect pool over the past decade.
    • Front office evaluations currently project the dynamic Cootes as a highly realistic candidate to aggressively challenge for a middle-six NHL roster spot in training camp next fall, completely bypassing the AHL if his physical metrics align with NHL standards.

The rapid internal development of Cootes, combined strategically with the post-deadline depth acquisition of defensive-minded, right-shot center Jayden Grubbe from the Edmonton Oilers (in exchange for winger Josh Bloom), and the blockbuster acquisition of Marco Rossi, points toward a highly competitive, robust Center depth chart emerging by the 2026-27 season.

Captain, Oh My Captain, Where Art Thou?

The abrupt, emotional departure of Quinn Hughes in December 2025 left the Vancouver Canucks entirely without a formal team captain.

The current on-ice leadership group consists solely of designated alternate captains: Brock Boeser, the newly extended Filip Hronek, and Elias Pettersson.

A vacant captaincy can often foster dangerous internal power struggles, media-driven controversies, or a general lack of daily accountability. However, within the specific context of Vancouver’s highly managed “New Era,” intentionally leaving the captaincy vacant is a calculated, psychological mechanism designed by management to organically assess emerging leadership qualities without artificially burdening a single player with the immense weight of a 32nd-place environment.

Final Thoughts

The 2025-26 season will historically be recorded as the beginning of the end of the 2020’s decade for the Vancouver franchise; however, the underlying structural realignment strongly indicates that the “New Era” will have the Canucks write a new chapter, with some optimism for welcome change, with a team on the ice that is finally being built upon a sound, sustainable, and highly analytical hockey operations philosophy.

Sounds good…right? But knowing how Canucks history has unfolded through the decades, nothing is ever easy for this team.

Stay tunned, were in for an interesting ride of the new flavor Vancouver Canucks. It will be awhile before the final dish has been prepared and has been served with resounding success to our wanting appetites. But when it is, how we will celebrate with intense emotion and relief that the long wait is over and the roller coaster ride has arrived at its destination.

I can dream, can’t I?

Until next time, hockey fans