
By Andrew Phillip Chernoff |CanucksBanter
November 07, 2025
The Vancouver Canucks have faced one of the NHL’s most challenging schedules so far this season and their upcoming games don’t get any easier, with their remaining strength of schedule for November ranked among the toughest in the Western Conference.
Despite a brutal early stretch marked by significant travel, little rest between games, and injured key players, Vancouver has managed to hover around .500 but has struggled to maintain consistency against stronger teams
Strength of Schedule & Performance to Date
- Through 15 games, the Canucks have already played a heavy, travel-intensive schedule with little time for practice and recovery, which has increased injury risk and prevented key lineup stability when compared to their recent seasons.
- Vancouver’s record is bolstered by overtime and shootout success, but they have only three regulation wins in their first 14 games, and their regulation goal differential is -9, indicating they’ve often been outscored at even-strength against tougher opposition.
- The metrics show improvement in five-on-five play over their recent road trip, but the sample suggests that underlying possession and scoring chance differentials still lag behind playoff-caliber teams.
Playoff Projections
- Current playoff odds for the Canucks are around 25–30%, with most models predicting a wild-card bubble finish, projecting them in the 92–98 point range—right on the cusp for a playoff spot in the West.
- Their schedule strength remains a concern—ranked as the 4th or 6th toughest remaining in the league.
- Upcoming opponents include several elite teams, so a hot streak is necessary to solidify postseason positioning.
What They Must Do to Reach or Stay in Playoff Position
- Improve five-on-five performance in regulation:
- The Canucks must win more games in regulation and develop stronger control of the shot and scoring chance metrics, which are currently too buoyed by goaltending and shooting percentage runs.
- Health and consistency:
- Returning and keeping key players (Hughes, Garland, Hronek) healthy is critical, as lineup disruptions have led to defensive lapses and a lack of offensive cohesion.
- Special teams:
- Continued strong penalty killing and power-play production are vital, ideally turning close games into regulation wins, especially during this midseason “make-or-break” stretch.
- Goaltending:
- Thatcher Demko must maintain his elite form against high-danger chances, as the team leans heavily on his ability to steal games while defensive coverage finds greater consistency
If Vancouver sharpens their five-on-five play, gets key players back to full strength, and carves out more regulation wins—even with their grueling schedule—they have a realistic path to remain in contention for a Western Conference playoff spot.
Until next time, hockey fans
Sources: powerrankingsguru, nytimes, thehockeynews, yahoo sports, canucksbanter, canucksarmy, money puck, espn, tankathon, nhl.com




