NHL Preview: Canucks Aim to Spoil Ducks’ Playoff Hopes

Colorful graphic featuring the text 'Canucks Game 411' with hockey players on the ice, representing NHL pre-game storylines and insights.

By Andrew Phillip Chernoff | CanucksBanter

March 24, 2026

The Vancouver Canucks (21-40-8) look to play the role of spoiler tonight as they host the Pacific Division-leading Anaheim Ducks (39-27-4) at Rogers Arena. While Vancouver has been officially eliminated from playoff contention, they’ve had the Ducks’ number this season, winning both previous meetings.

Top Players to Watch

Anaheim Ducks

  • Cutter Gauthier (LW): The Ducks’ breakout star leads the team with 36 goals and 62 points. He is currently tied with Connor McDavid for second in the league in shots on net (257), averaging nearly 4 per game.+1
  • Leo Carlsson (C): A cornerstone of the Ducks’ offense, Carlsson has 57 points this season and has been lethal in clutch moments, including several late-game heroics.
  • Lukas Dostal (G): With Petr Mrazek out, Dostal has shouldered the load, posting a 28-15-3 record. He ranks 6th in the league for starts this season.+1

Vancouver Canucks

  • Marco Rossi (C): The hottest hand in Vancouver right now, Rossi has exploded for 10 points (3G, 7A) over his last five games.
  • Elias Pettersson (C): Despite a down year for the team, “Petey” leads the Canucks with 41 points and is closing in on the 200-career-goal milestone. He has historically dominated the Ducks with 21 points in 22 career games.+1
  • Filip Hronek (D): The defensive anchor has been a bright spot on the blue line, tallying 39 points and leading the team in ice time.

Head-to-Head & Season Stats

The Canucks have surprisingly dominated the season series 2-0-0, including a 2-0 shutout in their last meeting where Nikita Tolopilo was spectacular.

StatAnaheim DucksVancouver Canucks
Record39-27-4 (1st in Pacific)21-40-8 (8th in Pacific)
Goals For/GP3.24 (11th)2.52 (31st)
Goals Against/GP3.46 (29th)3.70 (32nd)
Power Play %17.9% (24th)18.7% (21st)
Penalty Kill %78.6% (20th)71.5% (32nd)

Injury Report

  • Anaheim: Petr Mrazek (G) is out for the season following hip surgery. Ross Johnston (LW) is out for approximately 3 more weeks with a lower-body injury.
  • Vancouver: Thatcher Demko (G) remains out for the season with a hip injury. Filip Chytil (C) is sidelined with a facial injury, and Derek Forbort (D) remains on LTIR.

Coach & Player Comments

Adam Foote (Canucks Head Coach): “The Ducks are a high-speed rush team. They create a lot of offense moving north. Our focus tonight is the forecheck—if we can stay aggressive and use our ‘quick-ups’ to beat their pinching defensemen, we can create our own odd-man rushes.”

Joel Quenneville (Ducks Head Coach): “We’re not looking at their place in the standings. We’ve struggled against this group this year, and we need to find a way to dictate the pace early. It’s about building momentum as we head toward the postseason.”

Elias Pettersson (Canucks Forward): “It’s been a tough year, but we still have pride in this room. We want to finish this homestand strong and show that we can compete with the top teams in our division.”

Key Matchup to Watch

The “Rossi Line” vs. Carlsson’s Top Unit: Marco Rossi and Brock Boeser have combined for 13 points in their last five games. They will likely see heavy minutes against Leo Carlsson and veteran Chris Kreider. If Vancouver’s second line can continue its scoring streak, they may force the Ducks into a high-event game that favors the home team’s recent “spoiler” mentality.

Projected Starting Goalies

TeamProjected StarterStatusSeason Stats
Anaheim DucksLukas DostalProbable28-15-3, 3.01 GAA, .893 SV%
Vancouver CanucksKevin LankinenProjected8-23-5, 3.62 GAA, .876 SV%

Anaheim Ducks: Lukas Dostal is the expected starter. Dostal has been a workhorse for the Ducks, ranking 6th in the league for starts this season. Ville Husso is slated to be the backup.

Vancouver Canucks: Kevin Lankinen is the projected starter, though Nikita Tolopilo remains a possibility as the two have been rotating frequently during the final stretch of the season with Thatcher Demko out for the year.

Until next time, hockey fans

Rebuilding the Canucks: The Need for Veteran Trade- Part 1 of 2

A mural featuring a hockey stick, a yellow hard hat, and the logo of a hockey team on a brick wall.

By Andrew Phillip Chernoff | CanucksBanter

February 7, 2026

“If the #canucks  don’t trade a veteran with term before the deadline, there is no way they can look the fanbase in the eye and say they are going about this rebuild properly” a recent comment attributed to Jeff Paterson, on the Sekeres and Price podcast on February 4, 2026.

The podcast video:

With more than 25 years covering the Vancouver Canucks. And a  Senior writer for Canucks Army and host of Rink Wide Vancouver postgame livestream, Paterson has reasons behind his views.

How correct could Paterson be based on the Canucks actions prior to the Winter Olympics break in the 2025-26 season? Let’s find out.

The institutional credibility of a National Hockey League franchise is predicated upon the alignment of its stated strategic objectives with its contributing  behavior.

In the case of the Vancouver Canucks during the 2025-26 season, the plan, the team objectives at the start of the season, has reached a point of critical failure.

As the organization entered the mid-February Olympic break occupying the lowest tier of the league standings, the commentary provided by veteran analyst Jeff Paterson emerged not merely as a critique, but as a definitive metric for organizational integrity.

Paterson asserted that a failure to move a veteran player with remaining contract term before the March 6 trade deadline would render management’s “rebuild” narrative fundamentally dishonest to its fanbase.

At the core of this tension is the distinction between transactional maintenance—selling expiring assets—and the structural dismantling of a core that has proven incapable of contention.

The urgency behind Paterson’s demand for a “term” trade is rooted in the unprecedented on-ice failure of the 2025-26 Canucks.

By February 5, 2026, the team possessed a record of 18-33-6, totaling 42 points through 57 games.

The  failure of the roster is most apparent in its defensive deficiencies.

  • The team’s 70.4% penalty kill is the least efficient in the NHL, contributing to a goals-against average that has rendered even moderate offensive contributions irrelevant. This statistical environment serves as the primary catalyst for the “rebuild” declaration.
  • When a team operates at nearly maximum cap capacity—projected at $94.162 million for the 2025-26 season—and achieves the worst results in the league, the institutional imperative for a teardown becomes an economic necessity.
TeamGPWLOTLPtsGFGAGDPK%
Vegas Golden Knights5626161466188178+1081.2
Edmonton Oilers582822864198194+879.5
Seattle Kraken562720963162165-382.1
Anaheim Ducks563023363185195-1078.4
Los Angeles Kings5523181460145157-1280.9
San Jose Sharks552724458171193-2277.2
Calgary Flames562327652142169-2776.8
Vancouver Canucks571833642149210-6170.4

The crux of the controversy Paterson outlines, lies in the definition of a “rebuild.

  • Management, led by Jim Rutherford and Patrik Allvin, officially embraced the term in January 2026, yet their subsequent actions have suggested a lingering attachment to the previous core.
  • Paterson’s commentary highlights a systemic flaw in this approach: the tendency to overvalue veteran assets despite clear evidence of their diminishing returns.

A “proper” rebuild, requires the liquidation of players with “term”—those signed for multiple seasons who represent the failed architecture of the current roster. Paterson specifically identifies Thatcher Demko, Conor Garland, and Brock Boeser as the primary subjects of this requirement.

The irony of the Canucks’ situation is that management “doubled down” on these veterans as recently as the 2025 off-season, re-signing Boeser and extending Garland.

  • This decision-making has led to a scenario where the team is paying elite prices for bottom-tier results.

Paterson argues that for management to regain credibility, they must acknowledge the error of these extensions by moving at least one of these pieces before the deadline.

The trade of Captain Quinn Hughes to the Minnesota Wild left a leadership vacuum filled by veterans who are no longer viewed as part of the long-term solution,.

And while the “youth movement” has seen an high upside, it is currently being asked to develop within a dysfunctional environment.

  • If management keeps the remaining veterans with term, they risk a “delayed developmental curve” where the new arrivals are hampered by the losing culture established by the outgoing core.

Adding to the problem,  is it’s symbolic of wanting to keep your cake and eat it too.

The inclusion of Tyler Myers (35 years old) and Kevin Lankinen (30 years old) on an untouchable list suggests that management is still attempting to maintain a competitive floor rather than maximizing asset value.

Lankinen, signed to a five-year, $22.5 million contract in February 2025, has performed admirably as a 1B starter, but his long-term presence on a rebuilding team is difficult to justify when Thatcher Demko’s health remains the primary goaltending concern.

The refusal to move Boeser and Hronek—both 28 and signed to massive term—indicates a belief that the “next core” can be built around the same pieces that failed the “previous core.”

  • Paterson’s skepticism is rooted in the fact that this approach has been tried repeatedly in Vancouver without success.

The fans, having witnessed several “retools” that failed to yield playoff success, are unlikely to accept a “rebuild” that preserves the very players most associated with the current failure.

Elias Pettersson represents the most complex variable in the Canucks’ rebuild equation.

  • With an $11.6 million cap hit and six years remaining on his contract, he is the highest-paid player in franchise history.

However, as the 2025-26 season progressed, reports surfaced that management had made him available for trade.

Pettersson’s offensive production—34 points in 49 games—is significantly below the expectations of his contract.

The difficulty in moving him lies in three factors: his salary, his declining production, and his full No-Movement Clause (NMC).

  • For a trade to occur, Pettersson must not only agree to the destination but the Canucks must also likely retain a portion of his salary, which would create “dead cap” for the next half-decade.

The Chicago Blackhawks have emerged as the most logical suitor. They possess the cap space to absorb Pettersson’s entire contract and a deep prospect pool that could help the Canucks “kickstart” their rebuild.

If management were to move Pettersson, it would be the most significant “term” trade in NHL history, immediately validating the rebuild in the eyes of the fanbase and satisfying Paterson’s requirement in the most dramatic fashion possible.

The acquisition of the players from the Quinn Hughes trade are doing their best but struggling to do more than their experience can match.

Marco Rossi and Zeev Buium, both critical components of the Minnesota Wild trade, suffered injuries in January 2026, sidelining them until after the Olympic break. Liam Ohgren, however, has showcased early chemistry with top prospect Jonathan Lekkerimäki, providing a rare highlight in the season’s second half.

That highlight is tempered by the the feeling that the Canucks are demanding too much of them while hesitating to pull the trigger on moving core players and demonstrating with action a true rebuild by pulling the trigger.

Up next Part 2 of 2: Pulling The Trigger, Making Believers Of The Fans tomorrow February 8, 2026

Until next time, hockey fans