Canucks 2025-26 Season a Success for Critical Reason

The Vancouver Canucks had an awful 2025-26 season. There’s no way of sugarcoating it. Trying to sweeten their performance on the ice this season is like trying to add sugar to medicine.

Like medicine, it might taste awful now. But the long-term relief is what truly matters. That’s why looking at the big picture makes this Canucks season a success.

The easiest event to single out is the Quinn Hughes trade. The Canucks could have clung to Hughes and tried to add around him. That would not have gotten the team very far, to say the least.

Instead, the Canucks bit the bullet and did what they had to. They traded Hughes for a haul. They got a potential replacement in Zeev Buium, while adding a legit top-six center in Marco Rossi. Liam Ohgren and the first-round pick are just extra pieces to further the rebuild.

Then, there’s the matter of the Canucks’ own first-round pick this season. Vancouver locked up the best odds for the top-overall selection. The club has a 25.5% chance of landing the most coveted pick in the 2026 NHL Draft.

While the club is not guaranteed to get the top pick, the worst it can do is pick third overall. That’s still good enough to land a transformational player. Drafting such a player would give the Canucks enough ammo to reload and compete in the not-too-distant future.

That’s why the 200-foot view of this Canucks’ season should be positive. The club pulled off a successful start to their rebuild without taking the team down to the studs.

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Could Gavin McKenna Be What Canucks Need to Contend?

All too often, teams place hope on a generational talent to lead a massive turnaround. The Edmonton Oilers did that with Connor McDavid. The Toronto Maple Leafs did it with Auston Matthews.

The Canucks might be tempted to do the same with a player like Gavin McKenna. But as the Oilers and Maple Leafs have proven, there’s only so much one player can do. Sure, landing a generational talent like McKenna could be just what the Canucks need to spur a turnaround.

But the organization has to be realistic. McKenna, or any of the other top-three picks in this year’s draft, won’t be enough to change the team’s reality. It will take a full-team effort from the Canucks, including the coaching staff and management, to truly usher in a turnaround.

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Fans Hope for Quick Turnaround

Quick turnarounds for organizations like the Boston Bruins and Washington Capitals have proven that things can change from one year to the next. Also, clubs like the Montreal Canadiens have shown that full rebuilds don’t have to take a decade.

Could the Canucks follow the footsteps of a team like Boston? Or, could Vancouver be more like Montreal?

Realistically, a path like the Canadiens might make sense. Montreal went from last overall to a playoff spot in less than five seasons. So, it might be that the Canucks could land the top pick this season and turn things around in a couple of years.

That is, of course, if everything goes according to plan.

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