PUBLICATION
Sam Walker
January 31, 2026 (2:15 PM)
Photo credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images
Elias Pettersson trade buzz keeps growing, and Chicago Blackhawks whispers are getting louder as Vancouver Canucks fans brace for a gut-punch.
The Vancouver Canucks are sliding, and the league can smell a seller. Even with the chaos, Pettersson is still the kind of center teams talk themselves into.
This is not a small deal to pull off. Pettersson is on an eight-year, $92.8 million contract with an $11.6 million cap hit.
The contract comes with a full no-movement clause, so nothing happens unless he wants it. That alone turns the rumor mill into a waiting game.
On the ice, the results have not matched the paycheck lately. Pettersson sits at 13-17-30 this season, and Vancouver is stuck searching for traction.
One report flagged eight possible fits, but Chicago jumped off the page. The idea is simple, the Blackhawks can buy time and also buy talent.
Chicago’s pitch starts down the middle. Pettersson could take the hard matchups so Connor Bedard gets more clean looks.
The Blackhawks also have cap space and a prospect stash that lets them swing big without tearing out the current roster. That matters when Vancouver asks for real futures.
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Tactically, Pettersson fits what Chicago needs right now, a 200-foot center who can win draws, kill plays early, and still feed the man advantage.
Here’s what DailyFaceoff’s Matt Larkin had to say:
“Why he makes sense: A couple years ago, not long before Pettersson signed his eight-year extension with the Canucks, a source close to his camp hinted to me that the Blackhawks were a franchise that interested Pettersson if things didn’t work out in Vancouver. He’d be hitching his wagon to an ascending franchise and speeding up that ascension. Assessing his fit in Chicago today: because of his 200-foot-game, Pettersson would be an ideal center to handle the tougher matchups and take pressure off Connor Bedard and Frank Nazar. The Blackhawks have more cap space than any other franchise in the NHL and will be fine next year, too, even once we factor in the upcoming extension for Bedard, a 2026 RFA. Chicago also has more prospect capital than it knows what to do with – to the point it’s one of the few teams that could build a compelling offer for Pettersson without dipping into its established NHL talent. When you have Bedard, Nazar, Artyom Levshunov and Sam Rinzel, with Anton Frondell on the way, you can afford to surrender a Sacha Boisvert or Oliver Moore or Marek Vanacker. Same goes for future first-round picks.”
The risk is the timeline. Chicago is still climbing, and Pettersson might prefer a team closer to a Cup run if he ever waives.
From Vancouver’s side, the sell is about value and flexibility. If you move a $11.6 million cap hit, you better be adding picks and blue-chip prospects.
There are other logical stops like Carolina or Detroit, and those clubs can argue “win now” louder. Chicago is the wild card because it can outbid without blinking.
With an Olympic trade freeze looming next week, the window for leverage is tight. Until Vancouver starts winning, the Elias Pettersson chatter is not going anywhere.
Previously on Chicago Hockey Insider
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