It’s funny how a season can drift into meaninglessness and still leave you with something to think about. The Vancouver Canucks haven’t had much to celebrate at home this year, and the numbers at Rogers Arena have been ugly enough that you don’t really need to dress them up.
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But hockey’s a strange game like that. Even in a season that’s been largely frustrating, you still get nights where something feels like it’s trying to come together. Or at least you get the feeling about what could come together if it were handled a little differently.
This latest 4-3 overtime win against the Los Angeles Kings on Tuesday night had that feeling. It was far from a perfect game. But it was one of those games where you start looking past the result and asking a different question entirely: What if the answers were here all along? Because there were a few players in this game who didn’t just “contribute.” They looked like they might actually matter going forward.
Kirill Kudryavtsev: Calm Looks Like a Skill
Kirill Kudryavtsev stood out in a way that doesn’t always jump off the scoresheet. There’s a calmness to his game that feels almost out of place on this roster at times. He’s not rushing reads. He’s not chasing plays. He’s just in the right spot at the right time, doing the simple things properly. You almost forget he’s a young player because the decision-making doesn’t look rushed.
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He saves a goal early, he makes a smart offensive-zone activation later, and suddenly you start wondering something a little uncomfortable: why does the most structurally sound defenceman feel like the least “coached” one?
That’s not a shot at anyone specifically — it’s more a question of fit. Sometimes players play a game that doesn’t need to be overthought.
Nils Höglander: The Chemistry Question That Keeps Coming Back
Then there’s Nils Höglander, who is starting to become a player you can’t quite pin down in the system. Every time he ends up near Elias Pettersson, something happens. It doesn’t happen every shift or every game, but it does happen enough that you notice it. There’s pace, pressure, and a bit of chaos that actually works in their favour. And then, just as quickly, it’s gone again.
That’s frustrating. It feels like this combination keeps flashing in front of the coaching staff, but never lasts long enough to matter. They get a good shift, a good period, maybe even a good game — and then it’s shuffled away again like a temporary experiment.
At some point, you start to wonder if the team is searching for something it’s already stumbled into more than once.
Aatu Räty: Quiet Control in the Details
Then there’s Aatu Räty, who doesn’t demand attention but earns it anyway. A 17-for-21 night in the faceoff circle speaks to control and possession. Those are the kinds of details that quietly tilt the ice. And on a team that’s often struggled to control games in small but important ways, that matters more than it probably should.
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He doesn’t play like someone trying to prove he belongs. He plays like someone who expects to be there. That’s a distinction that matters.
Zeev Buium: Chaos That Might Actually Be Useful
And then there’s Zeev Buium. He’s probably the most polarizing player in this group. His movement seems to put him at risk. He has offensive instinct without much interest in slowing down first. Some of it looks brilliant. Some of it looks like it shouldn’t work.
And yet, the result is a goal, some zone chaos, and a reminder that structure and creativity don’t always coexist comfortably. The question with players like this is never whether they’re noticeable. It’s whether a team knows how to use them.
So What’s the Real Story With These Canucks?
Strip everything else away, and this game wasn’t really about beating the Kings. It was about something more subtle: the sense that the Canucks might already have pieces worth building around — they just don’t seem entirely sure how to arrange them yet.
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That’s the uncomfortable part. Because when you zoom out, this isn’t a roster begging for a total teardown. It’s a roster that keeps producing small, interesting answers… and then moving on from them too quickly.
The structure isn’t fully there. The identity still shifts from night to night. But the raw material? It might be closer than it looks. And that’s the question that lingers after the game. It isn’t just what we saw — it’s why we don’t see more of it.

