Predators Aim for Playoff Spot Against Struggling Canucks

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By Andrew Phillip Chernoff

March 12, 2026

The Nashville Predators, who currently hold a 29-27-8 record, visit Vancouver looking to get closer to securing the final Wild Card spot in the Western Conference. The Predators can’t afford to squander points against the worst team in the NHL.

For the Vancouver Canucks, mired at the bottom of the Pacific Division with a 19-37-8 record, and last overall in the NHL, the remainder of the 2025-26 campaign is an exercise in roster evaluation, draft lottery positioning, and sweeping organizational restructuring following a massive asset liquidation at the recent trade deadline.

The Vancouver Canucks occupy the cellar of the Pacific Division and sit at the very bottom of the NHL with 46 points in 64 games.

The Canucks have historically performed well on March 12, holding a franchise record of 11-7-3-0 across 21 games played on this date. However, the current team is struggling to maintain home-ice advantage, having failed to win consecutive games at Rogers Arena this season and having not won a home game since late January. This provides a significant opening for a Nashville team that has historically found a way to grind out results in this venue.

While not mathematically out of making the playoffs, Vancouver will be focused tonight on snapping a 5-game home losing streak in game two of their 8-game homestand.

Team Comparison: Canucks vs. Predators

Metric CanucksPredators
Record (W-L-OT)19-37-829-27-8
Total Points4666
Points Percentage.359.516
Division Rank8th (Pacific)3rd (Central)
Conference Rank16th (Western)5th (Western)
Goals For Per Game2.522.94
Goals Against Per Game3.693.41
Goal Differential-75-30
Power Play %18.2%22.9%
Penalty Kill %70.9%80.6%
Faceoff Win %48.6%51.4%
Current Streak4-game home losing skidEnded 4-game losing streak
Last 10 Games1-6-34-4-2

Nashville holds distinct advantages in nearly every measurable category, while Vancouver reflects a team that is in dissaray, which was anticipated by the moves, prior to and at the trade deadline. The team was fundamentally altered, and the resulting team on the ice has been without established talent in favor of untested prospects undergoing evaluation and prioritizing future salary cap flexibility over short-term competitiveness.

The Canucks currently have the worst goal differential in the NHL -73. Their defense has been a major liability, allowing 234 goals through 64 games (3.71 GA/GP), which ranks last in the league.

A specific painful period has been the third period, where they have allowed more goals than any other team this season, allowing 91 while only scoring 55. As of March 12, 2026, the breakdown also includes 49 GF/66 GA in the first period, 58 GF/73 GA in the second, and 3 GF/8 GA in overtime.

While the Predators also are in the negative at a goal differential of -30, Nashville is more balanced than Vancouver. They have struggled particularly on the road, where they hold a 12-14-5 record. Despite the negative differential, they remain more competitive in the standings with 64 points compared to Vancouver’s 46 points.

The Nashville Predators arrived in Vancouver desperate, so expect them to be highly focused as a bubble playoff team, determined to take a valuable two points against the Canucks. The Predators were left wanting on Tuesday night when they had to mount a comeback victory against the Seattle Kraken, winning 4-2 after falling behind 2-0. They are not likely to make that same mistake again.

For the Canucks, GM Patrik Allvin at the 2026 NHL trade deadline, traded away significant pieces of the team’s core to stockpile future draft choices. The resulting look is a hollowed-out shell of the team that began the season last October.

The outcome of tonights game has significant implications for the 2026 NHL Entry Draft.

The consensus top prospect for the 2026 draft class is Gavin McKenna, a forward projected to have a generational impact on the franchise that selects him. McKenna has separated himself from other top prospects like Ivar Stenberg and Keaton Verhoeff, making the first-overall pick exceptionally valuable.

As the current 32nd-place team in the NHL, Vancouver holds the best odds for the first-overall selection. The Canucks decision to dismantle the verteran core was undoubtedly heavily influenced by McKenna being at the top of the 2026 NHL Entry Draft class.

2026 DraftTeamPts %#1 Pick Odds
1Canucks.35925.5%
2Flames.44513.5%
3Blackhawks.46111.5%
4Rangers.4699.5%
5Blues.4698.5%
6Jets.4927.5%

Final Thoughts

The Nashville Predators enter Rogers Arena with a clear mission: capitalize on a demoralized and depleted Vancouver roster to secure two critical points in the Wild Card race. The technical edge in special teams efficiency, combined with the veteran leadership of Roman Josi and Steven Stamkos, makes Nashville the definitive favorite. The Predators must remain vigilant during the opening twenty minutes, where they have historically struggled on the road, and rely on Juuse Saros to neutralize the individual offensive threats posed by Elias Pettersson.

For the Vancouver Canucks, the game is an evaluation of the future. The performance of young acquisitions like Marco Rossi and Zeev Buium will be scrutinized by the management team as they prepare for a transformative 2026 Draft. While the Canucks’ primary goal may be long-term structural health, a victory over a playoff-hungry Nashville team would provide much-needed positive reinforcement for a young group that has endured a grueling home winless streak.

As the puck drops at Rogers Arena, the disparate paths of these two franchises intersect for the final time this season, with Nashville fighting for the present and Vancouver building for the future.

Until next time, hockey fans

Canucks vs. Jets: NHL Game Preview & Key Storylines

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By Andrew Phillip Chernoff

March 7, 2026

This game features two hockey teams at divergent stages of their seasons, grappling with the realities of a season that has largely failed to meet club expectations.

The Winnipeg Jets (25-26-10) enter the evening attempting to maintain a fading pulse in the Western Conference wildcard race, while the Vancouver Canucks (19-36-7) arrive as the league’s foundational basement-dweller, firmly entrenched in a comprehensive roster reconstruction following a period of unprecedented organizational turnover, prior to and at the 2026 Trade Deadline.

The two clubs reveal substantial deficits in defensive efficiency and offensive consistency.

  • The Canucks, currently ranked 16th in the Western Conference with a mere 45 points, are statistically the worst defensive team in the National Hockey League, surrendering an average of 3.73 goals per game.
  • The Jets, while more stable defensively, have struggled to generate high-volume offense, ranking 23rd in the league with 2.85 goals per game.
  • This game therefore represents a clash between a team that cannot prevent goals and a team that struggles to score them, creating a tactical stalemate that will likely be decided by special teams and goaltending performance.

The primary storyline for Winnipeg entering this game is the aftermath of a significant transaction with the Buffalo Sabres. On the eve of the deadline, the Jets traded defensemen Logan Stanley and Luke Schenn, along with veteran forward Tanner Pearson, to Buffalo.

In return, the Jets received a package designed to provide immediate organizational depth and long-term upside, including forward Isak Rosen, defenseman Jacob Bryson, a 2027 second-round pick, and a conditional 2026 fourth-round pick.

The Canucks enter the Canada Life Centre with an 18-36-7 record, placing them 32nd in the NHL standings. The 2025-26 campaign has been a catastrophic regression for a team that, only a year prior, appeared to be turning a corner. The organization’s focus has shifted entirely to talent evaluation, the 2026 NHL Entry Draft, and the management of a massive injury list that has decimated their roster.

Central to the Canucks’ story is the performance of Elias Pettersson. Following a career-high 102-point season in 2022-23, Pettersson has seen a precipitous decline in production. Entering the March 7 contest, he leads the team with only 38 points in 54 games, a far cry from the point-per-game pace expected of a player with an $11.6 million salary cap hit. Pettersson has faced immense pressure as the remaining face of the franchise, frequently expressing frustration with the team’s losing skid and his own offensive inconsistencies.

The matchup: Winnipeg’s superior offensive depth versus Vancouver’s defensive instability.

The Winnipeg coaching staff will likely emphasize a high-pressure forecheck designed to exploit the Canucks’ inexperienced defensive corps. Vancouver will play a transition-heavy game, relying on the speed of Jake DeBrusk and the playmaking of Pettersson to generate counter-attack opportunities.

The Canucks’ league-worst penalty kill and Vancouver’s inability to prevent goals on the man-advantage (70.49% success rate) is a tactical area that the Jets’ top unit, led by Scheifele and Morrissey, will look to exploit.

In return, the turnover Winnipeg experienced at the Trade Deadline, will have the Canucks trying to take advantage of any Winnipeg team cohesion the roster moves and the new players attempts to fit in and transition to the Jets game plan.

The Jets main game difference is their goalie Connor Hellebuyck, who has held a dominant record against the Canucks at 17-6-0 in his career, and a significant psychological hurdle for the Canucks shooters and playmakers to overcome, as the difference in goals scored determines the victor in the game.

Kevin Lankinen, who is expected to start tonight for Vancouver, has struggled immensely, posting a 7-20-4 record with a.873 save percentage. His goals-against average of 3.75 is reflective of a goaltender who is being overwhelmed by high-danger chances and a lack of defensive support.

Injury Reports and Roster Availability

The March 7 matchup features two teams significantly hampered by injuries, many of which are a direct result of the physical toll of the February Olympic break.

Winnipeg Jets Injury Status

Despite the return of Josh Morrissey, the Jets remain without several critical veterans. The loss of Neal Pionk and Colin Miller on the blue line has tested the organization’s defensive depth, forcing the recall of young players from the Manitoba Moose.

  • Josh Morrissey (D): Returns from upper-body injury (Olympics).
  • Neal Pionk (D): Week-to-week with an undisclosed injury.
  • Nino Niederreiter (F): Out week-to-week with a knee injury sustained at the Olympics.
  • Vladislav Namestnikov (F): Out with a lower-body injury.
  • Colin Miller (D): Recovering from knee surgery.

Vancouver Canucks Injury Status

The Canucks’ injury list is one of the most extensive in the league, with nine players currently sidelined. This has fundamentally altered the team’s ability to compete on a nightly basis.

  • Thatcher Demko (G): Out for the season following hip surgery.
  • Filip Chytil (C): Out until at least mid-March with a facial fracture.
  • P.O. Joseph (D): Out with an upper-body injury.
  • Derek Forbort (D): Out with an undisclosed injury.
  • Nils Hoglander (LW): Recently on IR with a lower-body injury, though projected in the lineup.

Final Thoughts

For Winnipeg, the game is a “must-win” if they intend to keep their postseason aspirations alive. Sitting seven points out of a wildcard spot with approximately 20 games remaining.

For the Vancouver Canucks, the remainder of the season is about securing the best possible odds for the 2026 NHL Draft Lottery. While it is unthinkable for the staunch Canucks fans, most Canucks fans will suggest it is possible, even though they and the players and coaching staff will never admit it— to “tanking” but the organizational moves at the trade deadline—sending out veterans for draft picks—speak to a strategy that prioritizes long-term talent acquisition over short-term wins.

In short, there is a game within the game. The Jets are the statistical and historical favorites, but the game is yet to be played and is unpredictable until the final buzzer.

Whether the Jets can keep their wildcard dream alive or the Canucks can play the role of spoiler will depend on which team better navigates the game off the 2026 Trade Deadline day, and makes a successful transition into the final quarter of the 2025-26 season.

Until next time, hockey fans