The Vancouver Canucks are back on home ice Thursday night, hosting the Nashville Predators. On paper, this one looks brutal. The Predators are on a bit of a roll, fresh off a 4-2 comeback over the Seattle Kraken that keeps their playoff hopes alive. Meanwhile, the Canucks are still trudging through a season of roster upheaval, trades, and experimentation. Wins are rare, home victories even rarer—they haven’t won in Vancouver since late January—and the team is still deep in the race for a top draft pick.
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Still, despite the lopsided matchup, there are threads worth watching. The Canucks have shown flashes of fight, glimpses of cohesion, and moments where you almost forget they’re at the very bottom. The trick is stringing enough of those moments together to make them meaningful.
Item One: Canucks’ Youth Movement: Learning on the Fly
Vancouver is essentially a learning laboratory right now, with the old guard gone and a new generation thrust into the deep end. Veterans Quinn Hughes, Kiefer Sherwood, Conor Garland, and Tyler Myers are no longer around. That leaves rookies and younger players to step up in ways they might not have expected. Head coach Adam Foote has been rotating players even in critical situations like the penalty kill which ranks dead last in the NHL at 70.9%.
“These guys need the reps,” Foote said prior to the game. “You can talk about it in practice, but you need to learn the hard way out there.” And boy, is it the hard way. The results are messy. Ugly, even.
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But this is exactly the kind of testing ground that accelerates development. Players like Max Sasson are learning leadership by default because there’s no one else on the roster to carry the team. For fans, it can be tough to watch, but for the organization, it’s a crash course in resilience and responsibility for a young core that will eventually form the backbone of the team.
Item Two: Danila Klimovich: AHL Star to Watch
While the NHL roster struggles, Abbotsford’s own Danila Klimovich is showing why he might be part of the solution. The 23-year-old right winger, drafted by Vancouver 41st overall in 2021, scored twice in a 4-1 win over the Manitoba Moose on Wednesday, adding to a hot stretch in March where he has four goals and two assists in five games. Klimovich has had a rough season overall—24 points, 125 shots, and a minus-17 rating—but he’s closing the season strong and showing the kind of offensive instincts the Canucks hope will translate to the big club.
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At 6-foot-2 and 202 pounds, he has the size, reach, and offensive instincts and scoring ability to make an impact. His development has been steady, moving from 18 points as a rookie to 38 points last season. If he keeps this pace, Klimovich could be a player to watch next season—a potential depth scorer or someone ready to push for NHL minutes. For a team desperately seeking positive storylines, he’s shaping up to be one of them.
Item Three: Draft Race: Bottoming Out with Purpose
The Canucks’ season-long narrative is painfully clear: secure the first-overall draft pick, likely used to select Canadian forward Gavin McKenna. Every trade, every veteran sent out, every loss is part of the long game. It’s frustrating, sure, but the team is building toward something bigger.
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As Sasson said, “It’s tough seeing a lot of guys leave, but at the end of the day, it is what it is. We have to step up and lead in our own way.” This season isn’t about wins; it’s about building character, testing youth, and preparing the team to compete down the line. Every loss, every lesson, is part of that plan.
What’s Next for the Canucks?
Vancouver has an eight-game homestand ahead, a chance to let younger players gain experience and test different combinations on the ice. It’s also a critical period to evaluate which AHL prospects, like Klimovich, are ready to step into bigger roles next season.
For the fans, it’s a long slog—but one with purpose. The Canucks are planting seeds now, hoping that the pain of this season pays off in growth, cohesion, and a young core capable of competing in the future. It won’t be quick or pretty, but there’s a method to the madness.

