Navigating the Canucks’ Path Back to Playoff Contention: An Ongoing Series This Week – The Canucks Precipitous Fall

Graph illustrating the Vancouver Canucks' regression performance forecast from 2023 to 2026, showing projected wins percentage and points per game ratings. Notable data points include a high of 109 points in the 2023-24 season and a critical regression forecast of 72 points in the 2025-26 season.

By Andrew Phillip Chernoff | CanucksBanter

June 14, 2026

We begin deconstructing the 2023-2026 regression with a brief look at how and why, setting up the “what” has happened to right the team in the right direction so far, and some ideas on the blueprint to get the Canucks back to contending for the Stanley Cup over the next few years, without derailing the Canucks “train” off the proverbial railroad track.

The Precipitous Fall: Deconstructing the 2023-2026 Regression

To understand the magnitude of the rebuilding task ahead, one must first analyse the trajectory that forced the Vancouver Canucks into this position.

The 2023-24 season was hailed as a renaissance. Under Head Coach Rick Tocchet, the Canucks achieved 50 wins, driven by elite goaltending from Thatcher Demko, a 103-point campaign from J.T. Miller, and a Norris Trophy-winning performance from newly minted captain Quinn Hughes. The team boasted a +56 goal differential, advanced to the second round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs, and appeared poised for sustained success.

However, the underlying metrics suggested vulnerability, and the 2024-25 season confirmed those statistical regressions.

The Canucks fell to 38-30-14, managing only 90 points and dropping to fifth in the Pacific Division. The goal differential swung drastically to -17, and the team surrendered 253 goals. The most pivotal moment in the franchise’s modern history occurred midway through this disappointing campaign.

On 12 December 2025, recognising an impending contractual impasse and a fractured locker room dynamic, the Canucks executed a blockbuster trade, sending Quinn Hughes to the Minnesota Wild in exchange for defenceman Zeev Buium, forwards Marco Rossi and Liam Ohgren, and a 2026 first-round draft pick.

This transaction effectively closed the previous competitive window and initiated a hard rebuild.

The subsequent 2025-26 season laid bare the talent deficit. Under Adam Foote, who replaced Tocchet, the Canucks finished last in the NHL. The team’s 9-27-5 home record established a new franchise low for futility at Rogers Arena, and their -100 goal differential narrowly avoided eclipsing the all-time franchise worst of -117 set during the 1984-85 season.

The collapse was systemic. It wasn’t just goaltending or a scoring drought. Management, coaching, and the veteran core all failed during the downward spiral.

  • Offensively, the Canucks were anaemic, averaging a mere 2.52 goals per game.
  • Defensively, they surrendered a league-worst 316 goals.
  • Goaltending instability further compounded the issue. With Thatcher Demko limited by severe hip and knee injuries that required surgery, the crease was surrendered to Kevin Lankinen and Nikita Tolopilo. Lankinen managed only 11 wins in 39 appearances with an .876 save percentage, while Tolopilo struggled to adapt to the heavy workload, underscoring the franchise’s critical lack of depth.

This Canucks failure necessitated the dismissal of Patrik Allvin and Adam Foote, shifting the burden of reconstruction to new GM Ryan Johnson and promotion of Manny Malhotra to Head Coach of the NHL team. And of course, the announcement of co-Presidents Daniel and Henrik Sedin.

Biometric Tracking and the Speed Deficit

The integration of artificial intelligence and player tracking has introduced an entirely new tier of performance indicators. Infrared microchips embedded in pucks and jerseys, tracked by league partners such as SportsMedia Technology, produce millions of data points per match. Companies like Sony-owned Hawk-Eye Innovations have further advanced this by collecting skeletal data, tracking twenty-nine specific points on a player’s body to evaluate agility, posture, kinetic efficiency, and hockey sense.

Applying these metrics to the 2025-26 Vancouver Canucks reveals profound athletic and tactical deficiencies that the new coaching staff must urgently address.

  • NHL Edge data indicates a severe lack of team speed. Centre Max Sasson recorded the fastest skating burst for the Canucks at 38.13 kilometres per hour—a speed that ranked a mediocre eighteenth among individual team leaders across the NHL.
  • The aggregate data is even more concerning.
    • The Edmonton Oilers led the league with 268 bursts exceeding 35 km/h, while the Canucks ranked eighteenth with a mere 68. In the highly competitive 32-35 km/h tier, the Colorado Avalanche recorded 2,468 bursts compared to Vancouver’s 1,475, which placed them twenty-seventh in the NHL.

Offensively, the tracking data underscores a systemic failure to penetrate high-value ice.

  • The Canucks finished twenty-fourth in high-danger shots, twenty-seventh in mid-range shots, and twenty-seventh in overall offensive zone time during the 2025-26 campaign.
  • Furthermore, their shot velocity was sub-standard.
    • While Elias Pettersson registered a 157.99 km/h shot and Brock Boeser hit 155.14 km/h, the supporting cast lacked raw power, evidenced by departed depth forward Kiefer Sherwood retaining top-five shot metrics despite leaving the team mid-season.

Manny Malhotra and his new coaching staff must improve on the biometric tracking and the speed deficit, implementing systems that actively reverse these tracking metrics.

Malhotra, renowned for his structural discipline and communication, must prioritise transition speed and inner-slot chance generation over perimeter possession. If the team’s 35 km/h burst frequency and high-danger chance generation increase during the 2026-27 season, the front office will possess empirical evidence that the rebuild is moving in the correct direction, regardless of the final standings.

Roster Architecture: The Cohort Theory of Contendership

In NHL hockey analytics—specifically within teambuilding frameworks popularized by sites like Puck Luck Analytics—a Contention Cohort is a core group of players intentionally drafted or acquired so that they hit their athletic primes at the exact same time.

Instead of having a scattered mix of aging veterans and undeveloped prospects, a front office builds a contention cohort to synchronize peak performance and maximize a franchise’s Stanley Cup window.

Key Characteristics of a Contention Cohort

  • Age and Prime Alignment: Players in this cohort are usually within a few years of each other in age. Because NHL players generally hit their statistical peak between the ages of 25 and 30, synchronizing their development gives a franchise a roughly five-year window where its most impactful players are all performing at their absolute best simultaneously.
  • Roster Density: The cohort is expected to fill the majority of the crucial positions in the top half to two-thirds of the active NHL roster once the team fully enters its contention phase.
  • Draft-Built Foundations: An initial contention cohort is most frequently built during a full rebuild. The team tears down the current roster to acquire high draft picks over a few consecutive years. Notable examples of successful contention cohorts include the Tampa Bay Lightning core (Steven Stamkos, Victor Hedman, Andrei Vasilevskiy, Nikita Kucherov) and the Colorado Avalanche core (Gabriel Landeskog, Nathan MacKinnon, Mikko Rantanen).
  • Secondary Cohorts: A primary contention cohort is rarely enough on its own to win a championship. Successful franchises typically supplement them a few years later with a “secondary cohort”—a subsequent wave of drafted prospects playing on entry-level contracts that provide high value, cap relief, and necessary depth.

In summary, a contention cohort isn’t just the players currently on the ice; it is a calculated timeline strategy. It represents a unified wave of talent moving through a franchise’s system together to create a sustainable, peak-performance championship window.

Historical analysis of the past five Stanley Cup champions reveals a distinct pattern in roster construction. Successful rebuilds do not merely draft high for a few years, sign a cluster of free agents, and immediately pivot to contention. Instead, they meticulously construct layered developmental cohorts.

The Contention Cohort

The first phase of a successful rebuild involves acquiring the primary “Contention Cohort.” This requires a complete teardown of the NHL roster to secure elite draft capital over successive seasons.

  • The Colorado Avalanche (selecting Nathan MacKinnon first overall in 2013 and Cale Makar fourth overall in 2017) and the Florida Panthers (selecting Aleksander Barkov second overall in 2013 and Aaron Ekblad first overall in 2014) exemplify this strategy.
  • This core group establishes the primary statistical baseline. Crucially, statistical modelling indicates that it requires approximately eight to ten years from these primary draft dates for a roster to reach its ultimate championship apex.

For Vancouver, the acquisition of this cohort is underway. Defenceman Zeev Buium, acquired in the Hughes trade, represents a foundational piece.

  • Despite lacking elite shot velocity (topping out at 135.02 km/h), Buium ranked in the 88th percentile for offensive zone possession time, demonstrating elite play-driving capability at just twenty years of age.
  • Alongside Tom Willander and Liam Ohgren, this group forms the bedrock of Vancouver’s future.

The Secondary Cohort

The difference between successful rebuilds and perpetual stagnation lies in the “Secondary Cohort.” Approximately four years before a championship window opens, front offices must aggressively hoard draft picks, frequently exceeding their allotted seven selections per year. This secondary wave provides vital depth on highly valuable, cost-controlled Entry-Level Contracts. This internal salary cap efficiency allows the franchise to retain its expensive primary stars without sacrificing roster depth.

  • The Tampa Bay Lightning utilised this secondary cohort masterfully, drafting and developing players like Anthony Cirelli and Ross Colton to insulate their superstars.
  • The Avalanche supplemented their core with Bowen Byram and Alex Newhook, while the Vegas Golden Knights integrated Paul Cotter and Peyton Krebs to facilitate major trades.

Conversely, the Toronto Maple Leafs represent a glaring cautionary tale regarding failed cohort management.

  • Armed with a formidable primary cohort featuring Auston Matthews, Mitch Marner, and William Nylander, Toronto opted to go “all-in” prematurely.
  • They repeatedly traded away future draft capital to acquire veteran rentals.
  • By failing to cultivate a secondary drafted cohort on entry-level deals, they severely restricted their salary cap flexibility. This forced them to rely on minimum-wage veterans to fill out their roster, resulting in repeated postseason failures and organisational paralysis.

For the Vancouver Canucks, the 2026-27 and 2027-28 seasons represent the critical accumulation phase for the secondary cohort.

  • Following years of aggressive asset management, the Canucks possess an unprecedented ten draft picks in 2026, including two in the first round, alongside nine picks in both the 2027 and 2028 drafts.
  • General Manager Ryan Johnson must resist any temptation to trade these assets for immediate NHL assistance, instead focusing entirely on saturating the Abbotsford Canucks with elite prospect depth.

Next time

The next post in this series will go into Cap Management and the upcoming 2026 NHL Draft.

  • The Canucks are projected to enter the off-season with approximately $23.9 million in cap space, a figure that provides Ryan Johnson with immense strategic flexibility. Understanding how to leverage daily cap space is a vital tool for rebuilding because cap space is calculated daily, so maintaining a roster well below the ceiling early in the season allows a franchise to accrue significant financial flexibility closer to the trade deadline.
  • Despite dropping in the order at the Draft Lottery, the third overall selection provides the Canucks with a premium foundational asset in a draft class marked by diverse, high-end talent. The top of the board features elite wingers like Gavin McKenna and Ivar Stenberg, center Caleb Malhotra, alongside a formidable crop of defencemen including Chase Reid, Keaton Verhoeff, Carson Carels, and Alberts Smits.

Until next time, hockey fans

Canucks Weekly Recap: Young Stars Shine Amid Struggles – December 01 -07,2025

Logo of the Vancouver Canucks featuring the team name, season year, and 'Weekly Recap' text.

By Andrew Phillip Chernoff | CanucksBanter

December 07, 2025

The Canucks endured a difficult start to December, dropping two games and extending a losing streak that caused concern among the fanbase. However, the week ended on a high note Saturday night, driven entirely by the team’s young talent stepping up in the absence of key stars.

The Canucks (10-14-3) faced a potential crisis point this week. After dropping consecutive games to Colorado and Utah, extending a losing skid to four games, the team rallied on Saturday night. With top center Elias Pettersson a surprise late scratch, the team’s youngest players—Aatu Raty and Tom Willander—stepped up to engineer a gutsy win over the Minnesota Wild.

Game Results

DateOpponentScoreGoalieNotes
Dec 2@ Colorado1–3LankinenNathan MacKinnon proved too much for the defense (2 goals). Linus Karlsson scored the lone Canucks goal. The offense looked disjointed without sustained zone time.
Dec 5vs. Utah1–4LankinenA flat performance at Rogers Arena. The Mammoth stifled Vancouver’s rush. Evander Kane missed this game (illness/injury), further depleting the top six.
Dec 6vs. Minnesota4–2TolopiloThe “Kids’ Game.” Aatu Raty (2G, 1A) and Tom Willander (1G, 1A) led the way. Nikita Tolopilo was steady with 28 saves for his 2nd win of the season.

​Injury Update

This week was defined by the training room door revolving as much as the on-ice play.

  • Elias Pettersson (Center):Status: Day-to-Day (Upper Body).
    • The News: A massive blow. Pettersson was scratched just prior to warmups on Saturday, missing what would have been his 500th career NHL game. Head Coach Adam Foote confirmed he will undergo an MRI on Sunday/Monday.
  • Thatcher Demko (G):Status: IR (Lower Body).
    • Update: Reports indicate he is practicing and “nearing a return,” possibly as early as next week, though the team is being cautious given his history.
  • Evander Kane (LW):Status: Doubtful (Illness/Skate Cut).
    • Update: Missed the Utah and Minnesota games. Initially suffered a skate cut vs. Colorado, then fell ill.
  • Nils Hoglander:Status: IR (Ankle).
    • Update: Skating on his own. Progressing, but no definitive timeline for game action.

Roster Moves/Speculation

Roster Moves

Roster Move (Recalls):

  • Elias Pettersson (Defenseman) was briefly assigned to Abbotsford (AHL) on Dec 3 but was back in the lineup Saturday, scoring his first goal of the season.

Trade Talk & Roster Speculation

The “Quinn Hughes to NJ” Rumor:

  • Despite Hughes’ camp denying a request, speculation intensified early in the week linking the Captain to the New Jersey Devils to unite with brothers Jack and Luke. Hughes addressed the media post-game Saturday, reaffirming his commitment to turning the Canucks’ season around.

The Search for a 2C:

  • With the team under .500, President Jim Rutherford’s desire to upgrade center depth is urgent. However, Aatu Raty’s 3-point performance on Saturday may have bought management some patience. If Raty can stabilize the middle-six, the team may prioritize a winger or defensive depth instead.

Seller Status?

  • With a 11-15-3 record, industry whispers suggest that if the Canucks don’t climb back to .500 by Christmas, they could pivot to selling pending UFAs.

Canucks Statistical Snapshot (As of December 7, 2025, 8 am)

Key Concern: The Penalty Kill is a critical weakness, ranking near to last in the league. The high number of goals against is also a major concern.

CategoryStatisticNHL Rank
Games Played29
Overall Record11–15–325th
Points2525th
Point Percentage.43124th
Home Record6–7–2
Road Record5–8–1
Last 10 Games3–6–1
Current StreakWon 1
Goals For (Total)8324th
Goals For (Per Game)2.8624th
Goals Against (Total)10228th
Goals Against (Per Game)3.5228th
Goal Differential-1927th
Shots For (Per Game)30.218th
Shots Against (Per Game)31.422nd
Power Play %20.0%19th
Penalty Kill %76.4%26th
Faceoff Win %48.9%21st
PIM / Game9.414th

Advanced Analytic 5×5

MetricValueAnalysis
Corsi For % (CF%)49.2%The team controls just under half of all shot attempts at 5v5.
Expected Goals % (xGF%)51.4%Based on shot quality, they “should” be scoring more than their opponents.
PDO (S% + SV%)0.982A value below 1.000 suggests the team is currently unlucky.
Shooting % (5v5)8.1%Below league average; likely to regress positively.
Save % (5v5).901Goaltending has been below average at even strength.

Zone Performance Report

MetricStatLeague RankAnalysis
High Danger Chances Against (HDCA/60)12.418thAverage. They aren’t bleeding Grade-A chances, but they aren’t suppressing them well either.
D-Zone Giveaways (Per Game)8.226thCritical Weakness. The team struggles to execute clean breakouts, often turning pucks over near their own blue line.
Successful Breakout %58%22ndWhen pressured, the defensemen (outside of Hughes) are struggling to clear the zone with possession.
Slot Shots Allowed (Per Game)14.523rdToo many shots are coming from the “home plate” area, making life difficult for Lankinen and Tolopilo.

Neutral Zone

MetricStatLeague RankAnalysis
Controlled Zone Entries %52%12thStrength. When they have the puck, they carry it in well. They rarely resort to “dump and chase” compared to other teams.
Neutral Zone Turnovers6.520thAverage. They aren’t getting killed here, but sloppy passes in the middle have led to odd-man rushes against.
Rush Chances For (Per Game)6.810thThe team is dangerous off the rush. They generate speed through the middle effectively.
Neutral Zone Faceoff %51.5%14thThey hold their own in the middle of the ice on draws.

Offensive Zone

MetricStatLeague RankAnalysis
High Danger Chances For (HDCF/60)13.19thPositive Sign. They are getting to the net. The process is good; the finish is lacking.
Cycle Time (Avg per Shift)0:4211thThey sustain pressure well, particularly the top line (when healthy).
O-Zone Recovery Rate33%15thThey are average at retrieving loose pucks after a shot (rebounds/missed nets).
Shooting % (High Danger)10.2%28thThe Problem. They are missing open nets and failing to elevate the puck on quality chances.

Summary of Zone Issues

  1. Defensive Zone: Too many turnovers attempting to leave the zone (8.2 per game) is the primary driver of the high Goals Against.
  2. Neutral Zone: Generally solid, effectively moving the puck from defense to offense.
  3. Offensive Zone: Excellent process (Ranked 9th in creating chances), but terrible execution (Ranked 28th in finishing them).

Players Stats Totals For Week of December 01-07, 2025

PlayerPosGPGAPts+/-
Aatu RatyC3235+2Involved in 5 of the team’s 6 goals this week.
Tom WillanderD3112+1Scored his 1st Career NHL Goal vs. MIN.
Arshdeep BainsLW3112EScored his 1st goal of the season vs. UTA.
Linus KarlssonC3101-1Scored the lone goal vs. COL.
Elias PetterssonD2101+1Recalled from AHL; Scored 1st goal of season vs. MIN.
Jonathan LekkerimäkiRW3011-2Primary assist on Bains’ goal vs. UTA.
Elias PetterssonC2000-2Missed Sat game (Upper Body Injury).
Quinn HughesD3000-3Held off scoresheet in all 3 games.
Brock BoeserRW3000-2
Jake DeBruskLW3000-2
Kiefer SherwoodLW3000ELed team in hits (9) vs. UTA.

Week Highlights & Impact

Offensive Leader: Aatu Raty was the engine of the offense, recording a point in every game this week (1A vs COL, 1A vs UTA, 2G 1A vs MIN).

Defensive Milestone: Tom Willander recorded his first NHL goal and a multi-point night against Minnesota.

Struggles: The top line of Pettersson (C), Boeser, and DeBrusk combined for 0 points this week, highlighting the team’s reliance on depth scoring to salvage the win on Saturday.

Goaltender Records (November 17–23, 2025)

GoalieGPWLOTLSAGASVSV%GAA
Nikita Tolopilo110029227.9312.00
Kevin Lankinen202049742.8573.53

Week Summary

Kevin Lankinen

Status: Starter (Demko Injured) Weekly Record: 0–2–0 Stats: 3.53 GAA | .857 SV% | 42 Saves on 49 Shots

  • Performance:
    • @ Colorado (Dec 2): Faced a barrage from the Avalanche. While he made several Grade-A saves early to keep it close, the sheer volume of high-danger chances eventually broke through.
    • vs. Utah (Dec 5): A tougher outing. He looked slightly fatigued and fought the puck on Utah’s rush chances. The 4–1 loss highlighted the team’s defensive lapses, but Lankinen wasn’t able to steal a game the team needed.

2. Nikita Tolopilo

Status: Backup / Spot Starter Weekly Record: 1–0–0 Stats: 2.00 GAA | .931 SV% | 27 Saves on 29 Shots

  • Performance:
    • vs. Minnesota (Dec 6): The surprise star of the week. Called upon for the second half of a back-to-back, Tolopilo was calm and technically sound. He made crucial saves in the second period when Minnesota pushed for the equalizer, earning his second win of the season and arguably the most important victory of the month so far.

Pacific Division Standings (as of November 23, 8 am)

The Canucks are 11-15-3, placing them 8th in the Pacific Division and 15th in the Western Conference.

2025-26 NHL PACIFIC DIVISION STANDINGS

RKTeamGPWLOTLPtsDIFFLast10Streak
1Anaheim281710135+66-4-0W1
2Vegas27136834+45-2-3W3
3Los Angeles28138733+14-3-3W1
4Edmonton291311531-65-4-1W2
5San Jose291313329-165-5-0L2
6Seattle26119628-134-5-1L5
7Calgary301115426-166-3-1W2
8Vancouver291115325-193-6-1W1

My Week’s Highest Value Canucks Performers

Aatu Raty (Center)

  • The Stat Line: 3 GP | 2 Goals | 3 Assists | 5 Points | +2 | 58% FOW%
  • The Value: Raty was, without question, the team’s MVP this week. With Elias Pettersson (C) injured and the top line of Boeser/DeBrusk struggling to produce at 5v5, Raty single-handedly drove the offense.
    • Signature Moment: His dominant 3-point night (2G, 1A) against the Minnesota Wild on Saturday, where he also won crucial defensive-zone faceoffs to protect the lead.

Nikita Tolopilo (Goaltender)

  • The Stat Line: 1 GP | 1 Win | 2.00 GAA | .931 SV%
  • The Value: Value is often about timing. After Kevin Lankinen dropped two straight games and the team faced a potential 0-3-0 week, Tolopilo stepped into a high-pressure situation on Saturday night.
    • Signature Moment: A flurry of saves during a Minnesota power play in the 2nd period that preserved the tie and allowed the Canucks to counter-attack for the lead. He provided stability when the crease looked shaky.

Tom Willander (Defenseman)

  • The Stat Line: 3 GP | 1 Goal | 1 Assist | 2 Points | +1 | 21:05 ATOI
  • The Value: Willander didn’t just score his first NHL goal; he ate significant minutes against top competition. With the coaching staff leaning on him more in defensive situations, he showed poise beyond his years.
    • Signature Moment: His goal against Minnesota—a smart, low shot from the point that found its way through traffic—sparked the team’s rally.

Arshdeep Bains (LW):

  • Value: Scored a gritty goal against Utah and added an assist. In a week where “fancy” plays weren’t working, Bains’ willingness to go to the dirty areas provided a necessary spark.

Linus Karlsson (C/W):

  • Value: Scored the only goal in the loss to Colorado. He has quietly become a reliable bottom-six option who doesn’t hurt the team defensively.

2026 NHL Playoffs Chances

The team’s current record and poor 1-2-0 record in December, compounded by significant injuries and the bad penalty kill, goals allowed, puts their current playoff chances in serious jeopardy, which is the main reason they have fallen out of Wild Card contention. Improvement and health will be critical to climb back into a Wild Card spot.

2025-26 NHL Western Conference Wild Card Standings (as of December 07, 2025 @ 8 am)

RKTeamDivGPW-L-OTLPts
1ColoradoCEN2918-9-238
2AnaheimPAC2817-10-135
3DallasCEN2816-9-335
4MinnesotaCEN2915-10-434
5VegasPAC2713-6-834
6Los AngelesPAC2813-8-733
7EdmontonPAC2913-11-531
8UtahCEN3014-13-331
9ChicagoCEN2812-10-630
10San JosePAC2913-13-329
11WinnipegCEN2814-13-129
12SeattlePAC2611-9-628
13St. LouisCEN2910-12-727
14CalgaryPAC3011-15-426
15VancouverPAC2911-15-325
16Nashville PredatorsCEN2810-14-424

What’s Up?

This three-game week, a great opportunity to secure more points at home, especially as these last two home games are not top tier NHL clubs, while the Devils and the Hughes brothers will provide more than a challenge to begin a 5-game road trip back East against Eastern Conference teams including Rick Tocchet’s Philidelphia Flyers.

The schedule offers a mix of home cooking and a tough road test:

  • Monday, Dec 8: vs. Detroit Red Wings (Rogers Arena)
    • The Matchup: Detroit (Atlantic Div) brings a heavy offense.
  • Thursday, Dec 11: vs. Buffalo Sabres (Rogers Arena)
    • The Matchup: A must-win game against another struggling team. Buffalo sits near the bottom of the East.
  • Sunday, Dec 14: @ New Jersey Devils (Prudential Center)
    • The Matchup: The Hughes Bowl. All eyes will be on Quinn Hughes vs. Jack and Luke. The media noise surrounding the “Quinn to NJ” rumors will likely reach a fever pitch this weekend.

If the Canucks can sweep or take at least 4 of 6 possible points, they could significantly improve their playoff odds heading into the Xmas break, but that will also depend on the rest of their road trip the following week, as they play the Islanders, Rangers, Bruins and Flyers before their next home game on December 27.

Canucks Keys for a Successful Week

Survive the “Hughes Bowl” Distractions: The noise around Quinn Hughes potentially requesting a trade to New Jersey has been loud. Going into New Jersey on Sunday, the team needs to insulate their captain and focus on the two points, not the narrative.

Goaltending Clarity: With Thatcher Demko nearing a return, the crease is in flux. If Demko plays, he needs to be eased in. If he doesn’t, Nikita Tolopilo (coming off a win) might deserve the start over Kevin Lankinen against Detroit.

Power Play Revival: Vancouver’s PP is clicking at just 20.0% (19th in the league). Against Detroit and Buffalo, who both have bottom-tier penalty kills, the Canucks must capitalize on the man advantage to generate momentum.

Games This Week

DateOpponentTime (PST)Location
Dec 08vs Detroit7:00 PMRogers Arena
Dec 11vs Buffalo7:00 PMRogers Arena
Dec 14@ New Jersey7:00 PMPrudential Center

Until next time, hockey fans