Analyzing Canucks’ Performances From Past Week (March 9th-14th), Anticipated Games This Week (March 17th-21st)

Infographic summarizing the Vancouver Canucks' recent games from March 9 to 14, 2026, including performance details and upcoming matchups from March 17 to 21, 2026.

By Andrew Phillip Chernoff | CanucksBanter

March 15, 2026

Residing at the bottom of the National Hockey League standings and the Pacific Division, with a record of 20-38-8 and 48 total points, the franchise has prioritized the acquisition of high-ceiling draft capital and the acceleration of prospect development over short-term competitive viability.

This strategic positioning is designed to improve the organization’s probability of securing the first-overall selection in the 2026 NHL Entry Draft, with an elite prospect such as Gavin McKenna viewed as a potential franchise cornerstone.

The Week Ending March 15, 2026

The performance during the week of March 9 to March 15 provided a mixture of low-volume offensive output, flashes of elite individual potential from the young core, and a persistent struggle to maintain structural integrity in the defensive and neutral zones.

The Canucks played three home contests at Rogers Arena, yielding a 1-2-0 record that, while statistically poor, provided essential data points for the coaching staff led by Adam Foote.

Monday, March 9: Offense Left Wanting vs. Ottawa Senators

The week commenced with a 2-0 shutout loss to the Ottawa Senators, a game that highlighted the Canucks’ inability to generate sustained pressure against a disciplined defensive structure. The contest was defined by a critical lack of shot volume, with Vancouver managing only 16 shots on goal against veteran netminder James Reimer, who earned his 32nd career shutout in his first start since early February.

MetricSenatorsCanucks
Final Score20
Shots on Goal2416
Power Play0/40/3
Face-off Win %43.9%56.1%
Blocked Shots99
Hits2228
Giveaways1112
Takeaways29

Thursday, March 12: Roster Resilience, the Successful Comeback vs. Nashville Predators

In a stark contrast to the Monday performance, the Canucks demonstrated a high degree of psychological fortitude during Thursday’s matchup against the Nashville Predators. Trailing 3-1 late in the third period, the team executed an improbable comeback to secure a 4-3 shootout victory.

This result was historically significant, marking only the fifth instance in the franchise’s history where the club emerged victorious after trailing by multiple goals in the final five minutes of regulation.

PeriodNashVanNotes
1st11Boeser (16) scores on a double-tip.
2nd20Jost scores twice; Wood adds a deflection.
3rd02Rossi and Hronek score late with net empty.
OT00Scoreless overtime period.
SO01DeBrusk scores; Tolopilo stops all 3.

Saturday, March 14: Defensive Breakdowns In Loss vs. Seattle Kraken

The week concluded with a 5-2 defeat to the Seattle Kraken, a game that exposed the defensive inconsistencies of a roster forced to integrate multiple rookie defensemen simultaneously. Seattle’s Bobby McMann, making his debut following trade deadline acquisition and subsequent visa delays, dominated the contest with two goals and an assist.

The Canucks struggled with turnovers (22 recorded) and a lack of special teams execution (0-for-2 on the power play), while outshooting the Kraken 34-33.

Injury Tracker

PlayerInjuryStatusReturn
DemkoHip (Post-Op)Out2026 Season
ChytilFacial FractureIRMarch 17
JosephUndisclosedIRLate March
ForbortUndisclosedLTIRLate March
Pettersson (D)Lower BodyDay-to-DayEvaluate March 16

TakeAways

The emergence of the forward line of Liam Ohgren, Marco Rossi, and Brock Boeser, has been the primary silver lining of the March homestand. Since its formation on March 4, this unit has become the team’s most consistent offensive threat.

  • Brock Boeser, who previously endured a 21-game goal drought, has scored four goals in his last five games, while Marco Rossi has demonstrated his elite playmaking vision that made him a central piece of the Quinn Hughes trade.
  • Ohgren’s elite skating and puck-retrieval skills have provided the necessary balance to Rossi’s puck management and Boeser’s scoring ability.

The Canucks’ special teams remain a significant thorn in the side of the Canucks ability to strike competitive consistency.

  • The penalty kill, in particular, has regressed to a league-worst 70.9% efficiency rate.
  • The power play has also struggled, operating at an 18.2% efficiency that frequently fails to capitalize on momentum-shifting opportunities.
    • The lack of a true quarterback on the first unit, has leading to a period of tactical adjustment as the young defensemen of the Canucks navigate NHL-level on the go, and increased the workload for Zeev Buium and Filip Hronek.

Goaltending, with Thatcher Demko out for the season, is being shared between Kevin Lankinen and Nikita Tolopilo.

2026GAASV%SO
Lankinen7-21-53.65.877 0Winless last 8
Tolopilo5-6-23.34.892 0

Lankinen’s last win was on January 21 at home against the Washington Capitals, and before that he had two consecutive wins on December 29 and 20.

Tolopilo has had two consecutive wins and three losses in March, the wins coming in starts on March 6 and 12, before his loss against the Kraken on Saturday night.

Canucks head coach Adam Foote will continue to be looking at his veteran-rookie lineup, regarding work ethic, whether they are developing the right habits, their workouts in the gym, whether it is translating onto the ice, and finally, just how coachable are they, especially in executing the game plan, and adjusting it on the go when the game style changes up and down the ice on their shifts.

Coming Up On The Schedule This Week

The Canucks enter the upcoming week, continuing their 8-game homestand, with three matchups against playoff-caliber opponents from the Eastern and Western Conferences. These games will serve as critical benchmarks for the evaluation of the club’s young talent against elite systems.

DateOpponentTime (PT)
Tue, March 17Florida7:00 PM
Thu, March 19Tampa Bay7:00 PM
Sat, March 21St. Louis4:00 PM
  • The Florida Panthers (32-29-3) represent a significant physical and tactical challenge. Led by Matthew Tkachuk and Sam Bennett, the Panthers employ a high-pressure forecheck that will test the puck-handling efficiency of Vancouver’s young defense. The Canucks’ secondary scoring lines will need to account for the defensive prowess of the Panthers’ blue line, while the penalty kill must find a way to neutralize Florida’s 19.10% power play unit.
  • The Tampa Bay Lightning (39-19-4) arrive in Vancouver following a period of sustained excellence, including a franchise-record-tying 11-game winning streak that was only recently snapped. The Canucks’ primary objective in this contest will be the containment of Nikita Kucherov, who leads the NHL with 103 points and remains the primary driver of the Lightning’s offensive architecture. Vancouver has a statistical opportunity to secure a “season sweep” of the Lightning, a feat that would provide significant psychological validation for the rebuilding group.
  • The St. Louis Blues (25-29-10) enter the week on a seven-game point streak (6-0-1), driven by the elite playmaking of Robert Thomas and the goaltending of Joel Hofer. The Blues play a heavy, structured game that punishes neutral-zone turnovers—a specific area of weakness for the Canucks during their Saturday loss to Seattle.

What’s Up

Looks like it’s more of the same, with steady as it goes. The focus remains firmly fixed on the “race for McKenna” and the evaluation of AHL assets.

  • The Abbotsford Canucks have seen significant production from winger Danila Klimovich, who is nearing a franchise record for goals and could be a candidate for a late-season NHL call-up. And there may be others on the squad that may deserve an NHL call-up.

The coaching staff will prioritize the following three operational objectives noted by the fans, the media, and Canucks management:

  • Reducing the number of high-danger turnovers in the defensive zone by emphasizing safer breakout options
  • Refining the penalty kill rotation to identify a core group of “shorthanded specialists” who can improve the unit’s historically low 70.9% efficiency.
  • Providing extended ice time for the “Boeser, Rossi, Öhgren Line” to solidify the rapport between Marco Rossi and Brock Boeser, ensuring that the team’s most productive unit remains intact for the 2026-2027 season.

Canucks ownership and its management are determined to stay the course to the end of the season, no matter how unsettling, messy, or disconcerting to the local market and the Canucks world-wide fanbase.

The organizational leadership remains steadfast in the belief that this “learning laboratory” is the only viable path to long-term contention in the Pacific Division.

The results of the 2026 NHL Draft Lottery on March 28 will ultimately serve as the most consequential date on the franchise’s calendar, as the Canucks seek the franchise-altering talent required to complete this radical reconstruction.

The last time a franchise-altering talent was so anticipated, and literally out of their control, was in 1970, the Vancouver Canucks entered the National Hockey League (NHL) alongside the Buffalo Sabres, beginning their existence with a series of draft events that included a notorious “lottery” loss, a 20-player expansion draft, and the 1970 amateur draft. 

Things didn’t get any better, while management was trying to attempt to overcome the negative start to acquiring a talent pool for its inaugural season and beyond, team ownership at the time was found to be corrupt.

Thomas Kaine Scallen was the first owner of the NHL’s Vancouver Canucks. He owned the team from 1970 to 1974, when Frank Griffiths, an owner of several Vancouver area radio and television stations, the next largest shareholder in the Canucks, took over after Scallen was arrested.  

Scallen was convicted in 1973 of stealing $3 million from Northwest Sports Enterprises Ltd., the company that owned the NHL Canucks, and using the money to pay off debts of Northwest’s parent company, Medical Investment Corp. He was also convicted of issuing a false prospectus in raising money to cover the $6-million fee the NHL demanded for an expansion team in Vancouver.

Let’s hope that the Canucks efforts to land a franchise altering talent comes true at the 2026 NHL Entry Draft. The Canucks have been blessed with fleeting stars like Pavel Bure, Igor Larionov, Cam Neely, Trevor Linden, and then there were the Sedin twins. Henrik and Daniel Sedin graced the Canucks for 18 years and helped lead the Canucks to heights unknown in their Hall of Fame careers. And they are still among the Canucks talent after all these years, in different capacities, helping the future of the team.

Until next time, hockey fans

PWHL Announces Head Coaches For All 6 Teams For 2024 Season

TORONTO, ON (September 15, 2023) – The Professional Women’s Hockey League (PWHL) today announced the Head Coaches who will lead the league’s six teams on the ice heading into its inaugural season. Behind the bench will be Courtney Kessel (Boston), Charlie Burggraf (Minnesota), Kori Cheverie (Montreal), Howie Draper (New York), Carla MacLeod (Ottawa), and Troy Ryan (Toronto). Coaches have all been appointed to their roles by team General Managers.

“As a league, we are fortunate to embark on our inaugural season with a distinguished group of head coaches who have demonstrated leadership and a commitment to player development at all levels of women’s hockey,” said Jayna Hefford, PWHL Senior Vice President of Hockey Operations.  

“I want to credit our General Managers for their efforts in identifying highly qualified candidates that are well respected and motivated to help our athletes reach their full potential in the PWHL.”

Jayna Hefford Senior VP Hockey Operations

Courtney Kessel

  • Joins PWHL Boston drawing experience from behind the bench and as an elite defender.
  • She served as head coach for the CWHL’s Toronto Furies in 2018-19, followed by a four-year stint as assistant coach for Princeton University’s women’s hockey program.
  • Among her accomplishments, the Etobicoke, ON native helped lead the Tigers to its first ECAC Championship in 2019-20 with a program-record 26 wins.
  • She was named associate head coach with Boston University’s women’s hockey staff in May 2023, and assistant coach for Canada’s National Women’s Team in July 2023.
  • Kessel served as assistant coach (2019) and head coach (2023) for Canada’s U18 Team, winning IIHF gold both times, and won three IIHF Women’s World Championship medals (1 Gold, 2 Silver) as a player representing her country.
  • The stalwart blueliner spent her NCAA tenure at the University of New Hampshire, then competed for the CWHL’s Brampton Thunder, where she was named 2012 Rookie of the Year and a two-time All-Star.

Charlie Burggraf

  • Will represent his home state behind the bench with PWHL Minnesota and reunites with General Manager Natalie Darwitz.
  • The Roseau, MN native coached Darwitz in his first of two seasons as an assistant for the University of Minnesota, helping the Gophers capture the 2005 NCAA National Championship.
  • He served four seasons as head coach of the Bethel University women’s hockey program from 2006-10, highlighted by three MIAC playoff appearances and 2009 Coach of the Year honors.
  • He spent the next eight seasons leading Bethel’s men’s team through 2018.
  • As a player, Burggraf spent two professional seasons in Germany after a successful career at the University of North Dakota where he was a two-year captain and led his team to a WCHA Championship and runner-up finish at the 1979 Frozen Four tournament.

Kori Cheverie

  • Joins PWHL Montreal in her fourth season as part of Canada’s National Women’s Team staff, serving as an assistant coach for gold medal wins at the 2021 and 2022 IIHF Women’s World Championships, the 2022 Olympic Winter Games, and silver at the 2023 World’s.
  • The native of New Glasgow, NS coached her home province to its first ever women’s hockey medal with silver at the 2023 Canada Winter Games, and also made history during her five-year tenure at Toronto Metropolitan University as the first full-time female assistant for a U SPORTS men’s hockey program.
  • More recently, Cheverie guided the PWHPA’s Team Harvey’s to the 2022-23 Secret Cup as an associate head coach and was voted Coach of the Year by Association Members.
  • The former Toronto Furies forward played six CWHL seasons, winning the Clarkson Cup in 2014, following five seasons as a member of the Saint Mary’s University Huskies.

Howie Draper

  • Has been a fixture at the University of Alberta where he has served as head coach of the country’s most successful women’s hockey program for 25 years.
  • He joins PWHL New York having compiled an incredible 665 overall wins, a record eight U SPORTS National Championships, two silver medals, 14 Canada West titles, and four U SPORTS Coach of the Year awards.
  • On the international stage, Draper was an assistant coach when Canada’s National Women’s Team took silver at the 2016 IIHF Women’s World Championship.
  • He was named head coach of Canada’s U18 team in 2018 and captured two gold medals and one silver before leaving the post in 2022.
  • The Edmonton, AB native was a U of A defender from 1985-90, capturing a national championship in 1986. He was named head coach at his alma mater on Sept. 1, 1997.

Carla MacLeod

  • Comes to PWHL Ottawa on the heels of coaching Czechia to historic back-to-back bronze medals at the 2022 and 2023 IIHF Women’s World Championships – the country’s first medals as part of the tournament’s top division. The success earned her a three-year extension with the national team that will take her through the 2026 Olympics.
  • The Calgary, AB native spent the last two seasons as head coach of the University of Calgary Dinos women’s hockey team, and prior to that, was an assistant coach with Team Japan from 2012-14 and led the U18 Female Prep Team at Edge Hockey beginning in 2014.
  • MacLeod is a two-time Olympic gold medalist (2006, 2010) with Canada and won four IIHF Women’s World Championship medals (1 Gold, 3 Silver), earning MVP in 2009.
  • She competed at the club level with the Calgary Oval X-Treme, both as an independent team and as part of the WWHL, winning the league championship in 2007 and 2008.
  • In 2020, she was inducted into the University of Wisconsin Athletic Hall of Fame, recognizing her standout NCAA career with the Badgers.

Troy Ryan

  • Brings more than 20 years of coaching experience to PWHL Toronto, most notably as head coach of Canada’s National Women’s Team – a position he’s held since 2020 and is signed for through the 2026 Winter Olympics.
  • He led the team to back-to-back IIHF Women’s World Championship gold medals in 2021 and 2022, and Olympic gold in 2022. This season, he earned silver at the 2023 Women’s World’s, then joined Canada’s National Men’s Team where he won World Championship gold.
  • Ryan has also served as assistant coach with the women’s program, earning a silver medal at the 2018 Olympics and 2017 World Championship, as well as bronze at the 2019 World Championship.
  • The Spryfield, NS native has prior coaching experience with Dalhousie University, Team Nova Scotia, and various stints in the MJAHL and MHL.
  • He’s amassed four Hockey Nova Scotia and Maritime Coach of the Year recognitions, and two Sport Nova Scotia Coach of the Year awards.
  • As a player, he competed in the Maritimes in both Jr. A and U SPORTS.

Source: thepwhl.com