That was a more interesting opening of the free agent market than I expected, gotta say. But between that and the start of the Vancouver Canucks opening development camp, the future is here for all to see.
After a straightforward draft day, including what was officially Ryan Johnson's first trade as the Vancouver Canucks general manager, little was expected today. And for the most part, it lived up to those expectations. A quiet start had the team picking up a couple AHL players in Trey Fix-Wolanski and Akil Thomas, adding to the farm's depth. Luke Schenn and Paul Cotter shore up the NHL team on one-year deals, and Jamie Oleksiak won a two-year deal for a very specific reason...
The big deal of the day for Vancouver was clearly moving Marcus Pettersson to the New York Rangers for a first-round pick. It's top-ten protected, but that's fine. It's still a LOT more than anyone expected Pettersson to return. The trick is who's going to be around to use it, since it doesn't happen for another four years.
Akil Thomas was a second-round pick back in 2018, 51st overall. He was a high-skilled guy who could fight for his ice, and pulled decent numbers in the AHL, but hasn't managed to break through into the bigs. He had a fine playoff run last year, but he is a veteran AHLer. That's not a bad thing, and having a championship-level AHL team when the NHL team is stumbling makes it a good place to grow prospects.
The same can be said of Fix-Wolanski, though the road he took to get to where he is today is radically different from Thomas'. The 5'7" Fix-Wolanski was drafted in the same year as Thomas, but in the seventh round, 204th overall. Built like a fire plug, he racks up points and penalty minutes in the junior circuit. If you think Vancouver is too depressing to watch, you might want to take a trip to Abbotsford. Add these guys to Braden Cootes finding his pro game, and they should be worth the drive.
Paul Cotter might not be a player you're all too familiar with, and for good reason. Cotter's a solid NHLer, but a fourth-line one. He's got great speed and good size, but indifferent hands. Think a slightly less points-productive Kiefer Sherwood. He's not going to take a lot of ice from the kids coming up unless Coach Malhotra decides to put him on special teams. Is just over $2 million a bit much for a fourth-line veteran? Probably not, after this season. That cap has gone up, baby!
Veteran and three-time Canuck Luke Schenn, you know. The 36-year-old has been in the league since he was 19, and not all have been good. But it could be argued that the best of those years happened in Vancouver, riding shotgun with a young Quinn Hughes. He is the embodiment of Been There, Done That and Here's How. He loves the city, loves the team, and knows perfectly well what he's getting into. Even if he's scratched, you know he's going to practice hard against the kids.
Got Mass? Jamie Oleksiak, brother of seven-time Olympic medalist Penny Oleksiak, is a physical specimen. He stands 6'7" and weighs 250 lbs, increasing Vancouver's average size all on his own. He's spent the last five seasons in Seattle, spending a lot of time on the penalty kill there. That's going to let the younger players get what time they earn, instead of being forced into the role out of desperation.
Oleksiak has a two-year deal, front-loaded with a $1 million signing bonus in 2027, which is very tradeable. He has a 12-team no-trade list, but that leaves more than half the league to choose from. His cap hit is $5 million per year, but the actual cash outlay in year two is just $3.5 million. If a player comes up and forces the team's hand, they can find a place Oleksiak will be happy with. But until then, he's a solid player for the role.
Speaking of finding a spot on the defence, Marcus Pettersson gets moved out after just one year of his six-year contract. He's most comfortable as a middle pair, shutdown defender, but the Canucks was not a place to be comfortable last year. Pettersson played over 21 minutes a game, and he's just not what the team needs right now.
Some people are pretending he was awful, but that's simply not the case. His game doesn't show up in the boxcars the next day, but he was the best Canuck at shot suppression with a variety of defensive partners. That's valuable - just not here, not now.
The amazing thing is that he brought back a first-round pick, which is far more than expected. Even better, it's a first-round pick in 2030. Why that's a good thing is that the team is planning further ahead than the next three years. In three years, Vancouver should be planning to leave the league's basement. Yes, expect a bottom-five finish for a few seasons yet - if everything goes right.
At the end of the 2028-29 season, they will have an additional first-round pick one year away. That's as good as cash-in-hand for any deals they want to swing, assuming they haven't moved it between now and then. Or they can keep it, given that it belongs to the Rangers, a wildly unpredictable team. It's top-ten protected, which is a bit hilarious, but their next year might be even worse; you never know.
I expect at least two more veteran forwards to be moved (Jake DeBrusk, obviously, and...Drew O'Connor? Elias Pettersson? Someone.) before training camp. But even if they stop here, that's not a bad turnover from twelve months ago. Evander Kane, Conor Garland, Kiefer Sherwood, and Nils Höglander are all gone up front; Marcus Pettersson, Tyler Myers, and, of course, Quinn Hughes have left the defence.
More on-ice changes will happen between now and the next step, whenever they take it. But if this is the team they start the 2026-27 season with, it's a pretty good start.
