Welcome back to Groundhog Day, Vancouver Canucks fans.
After Quinn Hughes was traded from the Canucks, it seemed like the club was finally going to rebuild. They even admitted as much.
Well, not so fast.
Shortly after the Canucks mercifully started mentioning the word rebuild, reports filtered out that the team wasn’t really interested in the type of organizational revamp that fans in this market have been crying for.
Canucks General Manager Patrik Allvin basically echoed that sentiment Monday during an interview with Amazon Prime Hockey.
“We felt that the package that Minnesota gave us with the younger players, it gives us a chance to take a step back here and retool it a little bit with a hybrid form.”
Canucks GM Patrik Allvin joins the Prime Monday Night Hockey crew 👀 pic.twitter.com/6OUyILBnz5
— Sports on Prime Canada (@SportsOnPrimeCA) December 23, 2025
That’s certainly one way to put it.
It looks like The Athletic’s Pierre LeBrun was right last week when he reported that the Canucks wanted to perform a “hybrid rebuild.”
For fans who were hoping the Canucks would do a proper rebuild, similar to teams like the San Jose Sharks, Chicago Blackhawks, and Montreal Canadiens, prepare to be disappointed.
The organization’s preference based on messaging is that this Canucks team doesn’t plan to be bad for a prolonged stretch. Jim Rutherford basically admitted as much following the trade.
“We do now need some success in this draft,” Rutherford told Postmedia last week. “If we were to do that, we’ll avoid a four- or five-year rebuild.”
Of course, the best way to have success at the draft is to collect picks and make a selection near the top of the first round.
It remains to be seen whether the Canucks will collect more picks, but they should once they trade some of their pending unrestricted free agents.
Whether or not they can snag a top-five pick remains to be seen. Their recent winning streak, coupled with strong play from Thatcher Demko, raises some concern about whether they can actually remain near the bottom of the standings in April.