Canucks Weekly Recap: Struggles and Highlights from Nov 24-30, 2025

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

By Andrew Phillip Chernoff and Zachary Oliver Burnham | CanucksBanter

November 30, 2025

Record: 1-1-1 (3 Points)

Season Record: 10-13-3 (7th in Pacific Division)

While the Canucks managed to salvage three of a possible six points on the California road trip, the team is still searching for consistency. The loss of goaltender Kevin Lankinen to personal reasons mid-week forced the team to scramble in net, putting immense pressure on the defense, but he was back in net by the end of the week starting against the Los Angeles Kings, and did his best in his return, but Vancouver fell short in overtime.

Game Results

Wednesday, November 26: Canucks 5, Ducks 4

The Canucks snapped a three-game losing streak with a tight victory in Anaheim, largely thanks to a strong performance from goaltender Nikita Tolopilo in his first NHL appearance of the season. The game was a back-and-forth offensive battle, but Vancouver managed to pull ahead late in the third period.

With the game tied 3–3 late in the third, rookie Max Sasson tipped in a Filip Hronek shot with just 4:02 remaining to give Vancouver the lead.

Tom Willander recorded a pair of assists, showing his growing comfort on the blue line.

Drew O’Connor scored an empty-netter with under two minutes left, which proved crucial as Anaheim scored one final goal with seconds remaining.

Nikita Tolopilo was the star, making 37 saves to secure the win.

Linus Karlsson, Evander Kane, and Conor Garland also scored for Vancouver.

​Friday, November 28: Canucks 2, Sharks 3

The Canucks headed to San Jose but fell short in a close, hard-fought game, only to start another losing streak.

Despite a strong push in the third period, the Canucks couldn’t overcome a sluggish start. They couldn’t solve Sharks goaltender Yaroslav Askarov often enough to secure the win. The offense dried up against a Sharks team they were expected to beat, despite outshooting San Jose.

Brock Boeser opened the scoring early in the first period. This goal marked his 450th career NHL point, moving him past Todd Bertuzzi for 10th on the Canucks’ all-time scoring list.

Elias Pettersson scored a spectacular goal in the second period, batting the puck out of mid-air to himself before sweeping it into the net to briefly give Vancouver a 2–1 lead.

The Sharks rallied with power-play goals from Will Smith and William Eklund. Former Canuck Adam Gaudette scored the game-winner late in the second period on a wraparound that was confirmed by video review.

Nikita Tolopilo started his second straight game, stopping 21 of 24 shots.

Saturday, November 29: Canucks , Kings

The Vancouver Canucks (10–13–3) salvaged a single point in a tight, chaotic defensive battle against the Los Angeles Kings, falling 2–1 in overtime. In a game defined by video reviews and defensive structure, the Canucks couldn’t find the extra gear offensively without Conor Garland (out with an upper-body injury).

The opening five minutes were among the strangest of the season, featuring three disallowed goals that prevented the game from finding any early rhythm. Just 36 seconds in, Elias Pettersson appeared to tuck a puck past Anton Forsberg. The on-ice call was “No Goal,” and video review confirmed the puck did not fully cross the line.

Trevor Moore scored on a rush, but Head Coach Adam Foote challenged for offside. The goal was overturned. Moments later, Aatu Raty tipped a Quinn Hughes point shot for an apparent goal. This time, the Kings challenged for offside (Jonathan Lekkerimaki was the culprit), and it was also overturned.

Anze Kopitar finally opened the scoring for real late in the first period, snapping a wrist shot past Kevin Lankinen from the slot.

The Canucks tied it early in the second period thanks to Evander Kane. Fresh out of the penalty box, Kane accepted a stretch pass from Drew O’Connor, broke in alone, and beat Forsberg stick-side for his 5th goal of the season.

Kevin Lankinen, returning from personal leave, was the Canucks’ best player. He stopped 21 of 23 shots and looked calm despite the heavy defensive workload. He was particularly sharp in the third period as the Kings pressed for a regulation winner.

In overtime, after Quinton Byfield whiffed on a chance, the puck scrambled to Adrian Kempe, who buried the winner into an open net while Lankinen was down in the crease. The Canucks challenged for goaltender interference, but the goal stood.

    Injury Updates/Roster Moves

    Goaltender Shuffle

    The biggest news of the week was the sudden departure and subsequent return of goaltender Kevin Lankinen, which triggered a series of emergency roster moves.

    • Kevin Lankinen (G):
      • Status: Left the team on Nov 25 for personal reasons.
      • Update: As of Nov 29, rejoined the team, and was starting goalie against Los Angeles Kings.
    • Jiří Patera (G):
      • Nov 25: Recalled from AHL Abbotsford on an emergency basis to cover for Lankinen.
      • Nov 29: Reassigned to AHL Abbotsford (started for Abbotsford in their win over Tucson that same night).
    • Nikita Tolopilo (G):
      • Nov 24: Recalled from AHL Abbotsford. He remained with the big club throughout the week to handle duties in net alongside Patera and Lankinen as the emergency recall.

    Roster Moves

    • Jonathan Lekkerimäki (RW): Recalled from AHL Abbotsford on Nov 29. After recovering from an upper-body injury earlier in the season and a brief conditioning stint in the AHL (where he posted 5 points in 5 games), the sharpshooting rookie is back with the big club. He is expected to provide an offensive spark to the middle six.
    • MacKenzie MacEachern (LW): Reassigned to AHL Abbotsford on Nov 24.

    ​Injury Update

    NameStatusInjuryNotes
    Thatcher Demko (G)IRLower BodyProgress: Reportedly back on the ice twice this week. Although he was “week-to-week” and did not play on the road trip, reports suggest he is nearing a return, potentially in early December.
    Filip Chytil (C)IRUpper BodyTimeline: Out until at least Dec 16. Dealing with lingering issues from a hit on Oct 19.
    Teddy Blueger (C)IRLower BodyTimeline: Out until at least Dec 8. Missed the California road trip.
    Nils Höglander (LW)LTIRLower BodyTimeline: Out until at least Dec 14. Continuing rehab from surgery.
    Derek Forbort (D)LTIRUndisclosedNo new updates; remains out indefinitely.

    Roster Speculation

    • Lukas Reichel Trade Speculation: The Canucks continue to look at moving forward Lukas Reichel after acquiring him at the end of October. He has struggled with only one point in 14 games and has a Plus/Minus of -5.
      • The short-lived experiment at second-line center appears to be over, due to underperformance and the impending return of other injured forwards.
    • Search for Second-Line Center: The ongoing need for a reliable second-line center remains a hot topic, with the Reichel experiment failing.
    • Quinn Hughes Future: While purely speculative, there’s always noise around the core players during periods of team struggles. Hughes’ name has surfaced in general “Canucks News & Rumours” discussions.

    Canucks Statistical Snapshot (As of November 24th 2025, 8 am)

    Key Concern: The Penalty Kill is still a critical weakness, ranking 2nd to last in the league. The high number of goals against is also a major concern.

    MetricWeekly StatRecordNotes
    Record1–1–1 (3 Points)10–13–3 (23 Points)7th in Pacific Division; 23 points puts them outside playoff structure.
    Goals For8 (2.67 GF/GP)79 (Rank: ~12th)Scored 5 vs. ANA, but offense dried up vs. SJS (2) and LAK (1).
    Goals Against9 (3.00 GA/GP)95 (Rank: 31st)Improved from season average (3.65 GA/GP), but late lapses cost points vs. SJS & LAK.
    Power Play1/15 (6.7%)21.6% (Rank: 14th)Struggled: 1/3 vs. ANA; 0/9 vs. SJS; 0/3 vs. LAK.
    Penalty Kill10/13 (76.9%)70.5% (Rank: 31st)Mixed: Allowed 1 PPG vs. ANA and 2 PPG vs. SJS (inc. 5-on-3). Perfect 4/4 vs. LAK.

    Offensive, Defensive and Neutral Zone Play

    ZoneSeason AverageGame-by-Game
    Offensive Zone40.9%vs. SJS: High volume but low danger. Generated significant zone time on 9 power plays but failed to convert.
    vs. LAK: Lowest of the week. Struggled to penetrate the Kings’ neutral zone trap, resulting in dump-ins and limited cycle time.
    Defensive Zone42.2%vs. ANA: High. Surrendered 41 shots and spent significant shifts hemmed in, relying on Tolopilo (37 saves).
    vs. LAK: Managed well at 5v5 but conceded the OT winner after a defensive zone breakdown.
    Neutral Zone16.9%vs. ANA: Open, high-speed transition game suited the Canucks’ rush offense.
    vs. LAK: Clogged. The Kings forced play into the neutral zone, denying Vancouver clean entries (high turnover rate at lines).

    Players Stats Totals For Week of November 24-30, 2025

    PlayerPosGPGoalsAssistsPoints+/-
    Evander KaneLW3213+1
    Tom WillanderD3033+2
    Filip HronekD30330
    Max SassonC3112+1
    Elias PetterssonC3112-1
    Brock BoeserRW3112-1
    Conor GarlandRW21120
    Drew O’ConnorLW3112+1
    Linus KarlssonRW31010
    Quinn HughesD3011-1
    Jake DeBruskLW3000-1
    Tyler MyersD3000-3
    Carson SoucyD3000-2
    Pius SuterC30000

    Goaltender Records (November 24–30, 2025)

    DateTeamGoalieW-L-OTLSASavesGASV%
    Nov 26 DucksTolopiloW 5–441374.902
    Nov 28SharksTolopiloL 2–324213.875
    Nov 29KingsLankinenOTL 1–223212.913

    Pacific Division Standings (as of November 30, 8 am)

    The Canucks are 10-13-3, placing them 7th in the Pacific Division and 14th in the Western Conference.

    2025-26 NHL PACIFIC DIVISION STANDINGS

    RKTeamGPWLOT/SOTLPtsDiff
    1Ducks22147129+11
    2Kraken22115628-2
    3Vegas21104727+7
    4LA22106626-3
    5SJ23119325-4
    6Oilers24109525-13
    7Canucks231013323-15
    8Flames24813319-14

    Week’s Highest Value Canucks Performers

    1. Evander Kane (LW)

    His breakaway goal against Los Angeles (exiting the penalty box) was the team’s only source of offense in a tight defensive battle. He also scored a crucial power-play goal against Anaheim.

    Weekly Stats: 3 GP | 2 Goals | 1 Assist | 3 Points | +1

    In a week where the offense struggled for consistency (only 8 goals total), Kane was involved in 37.5% of the team’s scoring.

    2. Tom Willander (D)

    Weekly Stats: 3 GP | 0 Goals | 3 Assists | 3 Points | +2

    With the defensive corps struggling mightily (9 goals allowed), the rookie stepped up as the most composed puck-mover on the blueline.

    Recorded his first career multi-point game (2 Assists) in the win vs. Anaheim. His ability to skate the puck out of danger directly led to transition offense, bypassing the neutral zone clutter that stifled veterans like Myers.

    3. Nikita Tolopilo (G)

    Weekly Stats: 2 GP | 1 Win | 37 Saves (vs ANA) | .902 SV% (vs ANA)

    The win against Anaheim was almost entirely attributable to Tolopilo. He faced a season-high 41 shots and held the fort during a chaotic second period where the Canucks were outshot heavily.

    As a third-string option forced into a starting role, securing 2 points on the road is immense value.

    4. Max Sasson (C)

    Weekly Stats: 3 GP | 1 Goal | 1 Assist | 2 Points | +1

    Sasson continues to solidify the 3rd line center role on an Entry-Level Contract (ELC).

    Scored the Game-Winning Goal vs. Anaheim with just 4:02 remaining in the 3rd period, tipping a point shot to break a 3-3 deadlock.

    2026 NHL Playoffs Chances

    The team’s current record and poor 4-7-3 record in November, compounded by significant injuries and the league-worst penalty kill, puts their current playoff chances in serious jeopardy and 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 November 30, 2025 @ 8 am)

    1ColoradoCEN2518–1–642103+48
    2DallasCEN2516–5–43687+17
    3WildCEN2614–7–53377+5
    4DucksPAC2415–8–13189+11
    5KingsPAC2512–6–73168-2
    6VegasPAC2511–6–830760
    7SeattlePAC2411–7–62859-7
    8UtahCEN2612–11–327770
    9SharksPAC2612–11–32774-10
    10OilersPAC2611–10–52781-14
    11JetsCEN2413–11–02676+6
    12ChicagoCEN2410–9–52575+5
    13BluesCEN269–10–72568-23
    14CanucksPAC2610–13–32379-16
    15CalgaryPAC269–14–32165-16
    16NashvilleCEN258–13–42064-28

    Key Notes

    • The Logjam: There is a three-way tie at 27 points between Utah, San Jose, and Edmonton for the final Wild Card spot. Utah currently holds the edge (likely due to Regulation Wins or goal differential), but they have lost 3 straight.
    • Vancouver’s Position: Despite being 14th in the conference, the Canucks are only 4 points out of a playoff spot because the teams immediately ahead of them (Utah, Seattle, San Jose) are also struggling.
    • Games in Hand: Winnipeg (11th) and Chicago (12th) have played two fewer games than Vancouver, meaning the gap could widen if those teams win their makeup games.

    What’s Up?

    Status Check: The Canucks enter this week at 10–13–3 (23 Points), sitting 4 points out of a playoff spot. With Thatcher Demko still sidelined, the margin for error is razor-thin.

    To salvage this week and climb back into the Wild Card race, the Canucks must execute on three specific strategic fronts against three distinct opponents.

    1. Tuesday, December 2nd @ Colorado Avalanche: “Survival & Discipline”

    • The Opponent: The Avalanche are the hottest team in the league (recently on an 8+ game win streak) and are scoring at will (4.1 Goals/Game).
    • The Strategic Key: Holster the Sticks:
      • Why: Colorado possesses a lethal Power Play operating at elite efficiency. The Canucks have the 31st-ranked Penalty Kill (70.5%) and lead the league in stick infractions (tripping/hooking).
      • The Trap: If Vancouver gets into a special teams battle, they will lose. They cannot afford the “lazy” penalties (e.g., reaching in the neutral zone) that plagued them against San Jose.
      • Tactical Adjustment: Collapse the slot. Colorado feasts on cross-seam passes to Nathan MacKinnon in the left circle. The defense must prioritize blocking passing lanes over chasing the puck carrier in the corners.

    2. Friday, December 5th vs. Utah Mammoth: “The 4-Point Swing”

    • The Opponent: Utah (WC2) holds the playoff spot Vancouver is chasing. They have lost 3 straight games, all by a single goal (3–4, 3–4, 3–4). They are fragile but dangerous offensively.
    • The Strategic Key:Break Their Spirit Early.
      • Why: Utah is playing competitive but losing hockey. A fast start by Vancouver (scoring first) will psychologically damage a team that is struggling to close out games.
      • Target: Olli Maatta and the Utah defense are dealing with injuries. Vancouver’s forecheck (Sherwood, Joshua, Garland) must punish their defenders on retrieval to force turnovers.
      • Must-Do: This is effectively a “Must Win” in regulation. Giving Utah a “loser point” (OT loss) would be a strategic failure.

    3. Saturday, December 6th vs. Minnesota Wild: “Patience Over Pace”

    • The Opponent: Minnesota is one of the league’s best defensive teams (Top 5 in Goals Against). They play a structured, low-event style that frustrates opponents into making mistakes.
    • The Strategic Key:Safe Puck Management (No “Hope” Plays).
      • Why: The Wild thrive on turnovers in the neutral zone. If Vancouver tries to force stretch passes to create offense, Minnesota will intercept and counter-attack.
      • Goaltending: This is the second half of a back-to-back. Nikita Tolopilo will likely start. The team must defend the “Grade A” area in front of him relentlessly, as he has shown he can make the first save but struggles with lateral movement on rebounds.

    “Fix-It” List for the Week

    Regardless of the opponent, these two internal issues must be addressed in practice:

    1. The “Diamond” PK Structure:
      • Problem: The current penalty kill formation is too passive, allowing easy East-West passes that open up the net.
      • Fix: The forwards at the top of the diamond need to pressure the points more aggressively to disrupt the quarterbacking.
    2. Third Period Conditioning:
      • Problem: The Canucks have surrendered a league-high 38 goals in the 3rd period in 26 games played.
      • Fix: Shorten shift lengths in the final frame. The coaching staff needs to roll 4 lines early to keep the top defenders (Hughes/Hronek) fresh for the final 10 minutes.

    Until next time, hockey fans

    What’s Up?

    This three-game, four-day stretch presents a great opportunity, especially as the last two games are a challenging back-to-back.

    • Gain Divisional Ground: All three opponents are Pacific Division rivals. These are crucial “four-point” games where winning not only gives the Canucks two points but also denies two points to a divisional opponent.
    • The Back-to-Back Challenge: Playing in San Jose at 1:00 PM on Friday and then immediately traveling to face the Kings in Los Angeles on Saturday night will be a significant test of the team’s depth and conditioning. Goaltending management will be key for the Canucks’ coaching staff.
    • Consistency is Needed: The Canucks have struggled for consistency lately, dropping five of their last six games as of today (November 23rd). A strong road performance against these teams could be a turning point for their season.
    • Star Performance: Players like Quinn Hughes and Elias Pettersson will need to continue their high level of play to power the offense, especially in a road environment.

    If the Canucks can sweep or take at least 5 of 6 possible points, they could significantly improve their playoff hopes.

    Canucks Keys for a Successful Week

    Games This Week

    DateOpponentTime (PST)Location
    Tues, Dec 2@ Colorado6:00 PMBall Arena
    Fri, Dec 5vs Utah7:00 PMRogers Arena
    Sat, Dec 6vs Minnesota7:00 PMRogers Arena

    Until next time, hockey fans

    Canucks In Crisis Mode, Season In Peril: Living Post-Mortem

    A business meeting room with six individuals discussing the Vancouver Canucks' season performance, referencing a chart on a screen detailing team issues and decisions as of November 27, 2025.

    Current Canucks Predicament

    By Andrew Phillip Chernoff | CanucksBanter

    November 27, 2025

    A ” living post-mortem” on the decisions that led to the current issues facing the Vancouver Canucks and the lead up to their season record up to November 27, 2025 is the starting point for this excercise of what is left for the Canucks to possibly do to turn their season around, if it can be turned around; or at least put the team on a track for better success for the franhise in the 2026-27 NHL season.

    The operational failures of the 2025-26 season are not limited to on-ice performance; they are rooted in pro-scouting inefficiencies, asset mismanagement, roster depletion due to injuries, maintenance days, personal leave, and a growing disconnect between the coaching staff and the player personnel department.

    Lukas Reichel

    The acquisition of Lukas Reichel was a knee-jerk reaction to quiet the “noise” that was being received by the pro scouts, the general manager and the president of hockey operations.

    Something had to be done, so Reichel was the obvious choice to go after, and fit within the Vancouver cap space to do so.

    Acquired from the Chicago Blackhawks on October 24, 2025, in exchange for a 2027 fourth-round pick, Reichel was identified by the management group as a “distressed asset” with significant upside—a classic “second draft” bet.

    The Canucks, needing speed, skill in their top six, viewed the cost of a fourth-round pick as an acceptable risk for a player who had shown flashes of top-six potential in the AHL and previous NHL opportunities.

    Upon arrival, Reichel was initially deployed as the second-line center, a role that demands high-level two-way responsibility and engagement. He was given power-play time (6:49 PP TOI) to jumpstart his offense. 

    Reichel recorded just one assist in 13 games. Head Coach Adam Foote, known for demanding a heavy, physical style of play, quickly lost trust in the perimeter-oriented forward. Reichel’s ice time plummeted to 9:34, and he was eventually healthy scratched in favor of grinder MacKenzie MacEachern.

    By late November, reports surfaced that the Canucks were actively shopping Reichel, less than a month after acquiring him.

    The decision to acquire Reichel was poorly thought out and an embarrassment to the Canucks organization as it did not align up with the needs or coaching philosophy of Adam Foote, and his need for a “grinder”. And did not follow plan for success of the organization, if there was ever one established, symptomatic of a front office that is reacting rather than planning.

    The scouting department acquired a player (Reichel) whose primary attributes (finesse, perimeter skill) were fundamentally incompatible with the coach’s (Foote) non-negotiables (interior drive, board battles). 

    Acquiring a player who never fit the job description of the Head Coach that demanded a grinder is a failure of pro-scouting due diligence. 

    Furthermore, publicly placing a player on the trade block 30 days after acquisition destroys all leverage. Vancouver is desperate to move him, likely forcing them to attach an asset to offload him or lose him on waivers for nothing. This turns a low-risk bet into a negative-value transaction.

    Captain Quinn Hughes

    In November 2025, Head Coach Adam Foote made comments to the media regarding the need to “tame” Hughes, citing his excessive ice time (28:00+ minutes per game) and his intense desire to win as variables that needed management.

    We have to tame him,” Foote said, according to The Hockey News’ Adam Kierszenblat“Rather have to tame him than push him. His desire to win, if that is something I have to deal with, then I will deal with it, and we will adjust and keep working with him. He is fun to coach and fun to be around.”

    https://bolavip.com

    Quinn Hughes continues to guide Vancouver Canucks’ blue line with the same confidence he has displayed since entering the league. Even in a challenging season marked by losses and uncertainty, his influence remains undeniable.

    This season carries a heavier burden, as Hughes takes on substantial responsibility in every situation, often serving as the one constant in a year filled with turbulence.

    When head coach Adam Foote addressed questions about Hughes’ rising ice time, Vancouver supporters were already on edge. Hughes has logged more minutes than nearly any defenseman in the NHL recently, including three straight games above 28 minutes—a testament to both his importance and the pressure Vancouver is facing.

    Long-term implications for Hughes and the Canucks

    Beyond ice-time debates and defensive lapses, the bigger concern is Hughes’ long-term future in Vancouver. The Canucks’ current slide has reignited worries, especially after Elliotte Friedman reported management isopen to discussing veteran players as part of a youth-focused direction. While Hughes is not currently included in trade talks, uncertainty about team stability naturally fuels speculation about its cornerstone players.

    Meanwhile, Hughes continues to deliver on the ice, tallying 21 points in 18 games and driving the Canucks’ offense while maintaining heavy minutes night after night.

    The team appears to lean on him more than usual, particularly after his recent return from injury, perhaps as a strategy to postpone a full-scale rebuild and keep him invested in Vancouver.

    Alexander Rosquez

    In the context of a 9-12-2 season, telling the media that a superstar captain needs to be “tamed” is a high-risk communication strategy. Hughes is the franchise’s most valuable asset and its only consistent performer.

    The suggestion by Foote that Hughes’s competitive drive is a problem to be “dealt with” instead of to be followed by his teammates suggests coaching philosophical rigidity in the coaching staff as a whole, with no public disagreement from Foote’s assistant coaches to claim different.

    This treatment of Hughes and this needless friction is “the match” behind the fire that often precedes a trade request, and rumours of such, through lack of respect and appreciation of his leadership.

    Elias Pettersson

    While his play improved in November 2025, riding a five-game point streak, the broader context is grim. The organization has reportedly made “veterans” available for trade, with Hughes being the only untouchable. By omission, Pettersson—with his $11.6 million cap hit—is available.

    The question here is the timing. If the Canucks intended to pivot, trading Pettersson before his no-move protection fully locked in or before the season spiraled, would have yielded a higher return.

    Now, they are trading a high-salary player from a position of weakness (a losing team).

    However, his recent uptick in production provides a momentary sell-high window that the franchise failed to utilize in previous years with other assets.

    Injuries

    Injuries are an excuse for losing games, but they are an indictment of roster construction. The Canucks built a roster that required perfect health from injury-prone players to lead them to the promised 2026 NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs, and it did not take many games for that plan to start cracking, and crumbling to pieces.

    Abbotsford Canucks call-ups could not fill the gap, some of whom met with injuries themselves from being put into situations they were not experienced in handling or dealing with.

    The Demko Gamble:

    • Relying on Thatcher Demko to be a workhorse despite his chronic injury history was a known risk. The “stability” move was signing Kevin Lankinen to a long-term deal as insurance, but this created a “1A/1B” mindset that prevents either goalie from getting into a true rhythm. When Demko is out (as he has been for maintenance/injury), the team plays nervously, knowing the “savior” isn’t back there.

    The “Fragile” Middle-Six:

    • Betting on Filip Chytil (concussion history) and Evander Kane (coming off major surgery) was a high-risk gamble disguised as a depth add. When these players miss time, the team doesn’t just lose bodies; they lose the specific players acquired to insulate the stars.

    Quinn Hughes Overload:

    • With injuries to the supporting cast (like Soucy or the new depth pieces), the coaching staff’s default “stability” move is to play Quinn Hughes 26-28 minutes a night. This wears down the team’s best asset, reducing his explosive effectiveness and increasing his own injury risk.

    Next

    Navigating the crisis: market precedents/valuation and the review of historical NHL blockbuster trades.

    Until next time, hockey fans