Vancouver Canucks 2015-16 Season Primer
Top 10 Vancouver Canucks prospects

Looking at the Vancouver Canucks heading into this season – outlook, potential lines, roster, top prospects, draft history, stats and season schedule.

2014-15 record: 48-29-5, 101 points  (2nd in the Pacific, 5th in the Western Conference, 8th overall)
2014-15 Outcome: Lost in the first round to Calgary

Total Cap Hit: $70,126,666
Total Player Salaries: $71,940,833
Cap Space: $1,273,334

Source: General Fanager

In: Adam Cracknell, W/C, (FA – StL), Brandon Sutter, C (T – Pit), Blair Jones, C/W (FA – Phi), Brandon Prust, W/C (T – Mtl), Taylor Fedun, D (FA – SJ), Matt Bartkowski, D (FA – Bos), Richard Bachman, G (FA – Edm)

Out: Adam Clendening, D (T – Pit), Nick Bonino, C/LW (T – Pit), Ryan Stanton, D (FA – Wsh), Michael Zalewski, LW (FA-Minors), Brandon DeFazio, LW (FA – Bos), Shawn Matthias, LW/C (FA – Tor), Bobby Sanguinetti, D (FA – Buf), Brad Richardson, C/W (FA – Ari), Zack Kassian, RW (T – Mtl), Cal O’Reilly, C (FA – Buf), Kevin Bieksa, D (T – Ana), Eddie Lack, G (T – Car), Patrick McNally, D (T – SJ), Joacim Eriksson, G (FA-Europe)

Source: Sports Forecaster

The Vancouver Canucks are in a unique position for the 2015-2016 season; they could either become the first NHL team to exceed expectations for two consecutive seasons while almost openly rejecting analytics, or they could find themselves at the very bottom of the league in a very short period of time.

The 2014 off-season for Vancouver saw three moves that many considered to be a perfect example of newly hired GM Jim Benning keeping his promise of a quick, effective, on-the-fly rebuild that didn’t tear apart the team’s tenured core. Ryan Miller was brought on to finally end the goaltending controversy once and for all, Radim Vrbata added more skill to hopefully help with a four-line mentality, and Ryan Kesler was granted his request to leave the organization in exchange for a seemingly snake-bitten Luca Sbisa and American-born centre Nick Bonino.

In theory, those moves all worked the way they were supposed to. The organization didn’t overpower the rest of the league when they made the post-season, but they certainly made a splash by holding both Los Angeles and San Jose out of playoff spots. An early first-round exit to the PDO-driven Calgary Flames was disappointing, but the Canucks roster seemed to hold promise.

Then, the club went through quite possibly the most disappointing off-season across the NHL.

Where the Boston Bruins came out of the 2015 summer unsure whether GM Don Sweeney was a misunderstood genius or just completely incompetent, it’s very hard to argue that Vancouver got anything but worse.

Bonino was sent out of the organization after just one season, heading with defensive prospect Adam Clendening (a seemingly good acquisition mid-season) and a draft selection for controversial defensive centre Brandon Sutter. Despite most advanced analytics pointing to Bonino being a stronger contributor from a possession standpoint — and a far cheaper option than Sutter, meaning the club could then bring on another secondary offensive contributor who would far outweigh Sutter’s production — the Canucks pulled the trigger on the deal anyway. They then inked Sutter to the first-ever contract that paid over $4M AAV salary to a player who had never hit 40 points in a single season. The deal is set to kick in after this season.

The contract for Sutter was combined with two other contracts that many found easy to criticize. After yet another poor season, Sbisa was inked to a multi-year deal himself, and regression candidate Derek Dorsett earned himself a multi-year deal that’s almost certain to hurt the Canucks before long. Add in a below-market value trade for goaltender Eddie Lack (who fetched third and seventh round draft selections, where two other high-calibre backups fetched first rounders) and a rumor that Benning was called about a severely regressing (and expensive) Ryan Miller. Then, add in a trade for high-risk forward Zack Kassian, bringing back an aging Brandon Prust in return, and the off-season almost certainly hurt the Canucks in every area of play.

The one place that Vancouver seemed to redeem themselves was at the NHL draft. The team selected right wing Brock Boeser with the 23rd overall pick in Sunrise — and little seems to suggest that the Minnesota native will be anything but a strong contributor in a few years’ time. He’ll join two-way centre Jared McCann and energetic power forward Jake Virtanen as quality NHL-calibre players Benning took in the first round of the last two drafts. Since Cody Hodgson was the last player drafted by Vancouver — in any round — to hit over 100 NHL games played, the team needs these three to join Bo Horvat as draft successes.

Trending Up

Christopher Tanev (RD): Possibly Vancouver’s most valuable free agent pickup in years, Tanev is about to finally get the pay raise he’s long deserved. Once told he wouldn’t make it playing pro hockey because he’s too small, the 6 foot 2 blue liner finished his 2014-2015 campaign with moderate offensive output (2G, 18A, 70GP) and some of the team’s best underlying possession numbers for yet another season.

It depends on where Tanev is being used, but his recent five-year extension suggest that the Canucks are willing to let the 25 year old blue liner shoulder some responsibility next year. He won’t be a total replacement for the recently-shipped out Kevin Bieksa, but he’s a band-aid for what could be some pretty godawful possession numbers next year. For Canucks fans, he’s going to be a strong part of the reason next year isn’t awful to watch — after putting in the work to earn a $4.5M AAV cap hit, there’s little evidence to suggest that Tanev won’t be one of the Canucks’ strongest contributors next year.

Bo Horvat (C): It came as a bit of a surprise when London Knights forward Max Domi was re-assigned to the major juniors last fall and Bo Horvat wasn’t. Horvat certainly saw some growing pains last year that Domi managed to likely avoid with an extra year in the OHL. That being said, the now-20 year old centre is primed to have a breakout year this season. Like Tanev, there’s little to suggest that Horvat won’t be one of the team’s bright spots on what could be a pretty miserable season.

Horvat finished his rookie year with 13 goals and 25 points over a 68 game sample size, suggesting that he was on pace for somewhere between 15 and 20 goals over a full season. What makes him more likely to finish in 2016 with 20 goals than with 15, though, is that he struggled to find a consistency in his game last year. Now that the Rodney, Ontario native is more accustomed to the speed and spacing of the NHL game, expect his numbers game-to-game to improve.

Where the Canucks aren’t sure if Horvat or Sutter will be the team’s second line centre next year, it’s hard to tell exactly which option would be more beneficial. Horvat is certainly trending up, but he’s probably got a season or two left before he hits his true career numbers; seeing him in a third line role shouldn’t be a red flag next year. If he does get that second line job, though, look to see how he handles the responsibility as a top six contributor behind the Sedin’s. When they’re gone, he and Jared McCann will almost certainly be the two looked upon to make the post-Sedin transition less painful.

Trending Down:

Ryan Miller (G): The writing has been on the walls for a few seasons now, and it’s becoming nearly impossible to deny that 35-year old Ryan Miller is a severely depreciating asset. From an advanced numbers standpoint, he struggled more last season than Arizona Coyotes starter Mike Smith and Philadelphia Flyers backup Ray Emery — only having a more successful year than Ben Scrivens in Edmonton. From a technical evaluation standpoint, few can look at Miller without observing that he’s losing his speed and flexibility in a big way.

If Jacob Markstrom’s extra AHL time over the last few seasons was all that the younger netminder needed to become the bona fide NHLer everyone expected him to be, things could be fine in Vancouver. Eddie Lack’s ability to shoulder a big chunk of the starts in the 2014-2015 season were a big part of the reason that the Canucks saw post-season action last year, and a repeat performance from Markstrom could have them overachieving for yet another year. Those good games don’t look much like they’ll be coming from Miller, though, and that makes his $6M AAV cap hit a huge problem.

Alex Burrows (LW): As Vancouver’s fourth highest paid forward in 2015-2016, and he should be the team’s fourth highest offensive contributor — but he’s not. He finished the 2014-2015 campaign with only 33 points in 70 regular season games, and he’s been on that downward trend for a while.

All four of Vancouver’s top paid forwards are the same age, so saying that ‘Burrows will regress because he’s 34 and counting’ is a polite way of saying that ‘Burrows, both Sedins, and Radim Vrbata will all regress to some degree, because they’re all 34 and counting’. It’s a painful situation for the club to be in, especially since Burrows is signed with a NTC through the end of the 2016-2017 season. If he has another year where he barely crests 30 points — or, worse yet, drops below the 30 point mark altogether — then the Canucks will only continue to feel the burn of their biggest deals; that would put the veteran winger in bottom six production territory making top six money, and with still one more season to go. That, like Ryan Miller’s deal, is a huge problem.

Trade Deadline Outlook:

Nearly every stat projection has the Canucks getting significantly worse in the 2015-2016 season. Unless Ryan Miller reverses what’s now a multi-year regressive trend, Jacob Markstrom records his first season of good numbers in the NHL, the Sedin twins and Radim Vrbata all fail to regress even a little bit, and players like Virtanen and Horvat immediately become NHL-calibre talent, the team will plummet out of playoff contention.

The Canucks need Brandon Sutter to start exponentially increasing the number of zone entry attempts he makes, especially if he’s playing with youngsters. Ronald Kenins and Derek Dorsett are expected to regress, so they’ll need to buck those predictions. Alexandre Burrows needs to stop his own age-based regression, and Luca Sbisa needs to get significantly better in every single category of play.

It seems unlikely that more than one or two of those hypotheticals will come true, so it’s best to examine the Canucks as sellers this year. Not many teams are willing to take on expensive, aging forwards for very much in return — much less a pair of them who refuse to play apart from one another — so moving the Sedins isn’t even something to consider. If a team is still willing to call Benning about Ryan Miller, though, that’s a move the GM needs to make.

One of Vancouver’s biggest mistakes this summer was sending out Clendening and a second round draft pick with Bonino in exchange for only Sutter and a lower draft pick in return. If there’s anything the Canucks need to hold on to, it’s prospects — Clendening is only 22 — and high draft selections; if the team finishes poorly, not much will separate that second rounder from a low first round position. That gives Pittsburgh a potential first round pick-calibre player that Vancouver almost certainly needs.

Players like Derek Dorsett, Luca Sbisa, Ryan Miller, and Alex Burrows will all almost certainly be making above market value next year, as will Brandon Sutter. It seems unlikely that Sutter will want to waive his no-trade clause to help the team, but the other four need to be approached if a team is even remotely interested in them. Benning left himself with very little cap space to work with next year, and the Canucks could find themselves backed into a corner rather quickly if he doesn’t try to shed some of that salary at the first signs of a missed playoff year. Most of his poor contracts aren’t Toews and Kane money-sized, but they are painful for bottom six talent — which is what most of his poor signings are.

Written by Catherine Silverman, who can be found on twitter @CataCarryOn

Canucks: Outlook | Lines and Roster | Top Prospects and Draft History | Stats | Schedule

Potential line combinations, defensive pairings, and goalies.

Daniel Sedin – Henrik Sedin – Alexandre Burrows
Sven Baertschi – Brandon Sutter – Radim Vrbata
Chris Higgins – Bo Horvat – Brandon Prust
Derek Dorsett – Linden Vey – Jannik Hansen
Brendan Gaunce – Adam Cracknell

Alexander Edler – Chris Tanev
Dan Hamhuis – Yannick Weber
Luca Sbisa – Matt Bartkowski
Frank Corrado

Ryan Miller
Jacob Markstrom

FORWARDS HT/WT BIRTHDATE ACQUIRED
Sven Baertschi (LW/RW) 5’11″/190lbs 10/5/1992 T-Cgy ’15
Matt Beattie (C/RW) 6’3″/173lbs 12/14/1992 Van ’12 (7/207)
Ludwig Blomstrand (LW) 6’1″/198lbs 3/8/1993 Van ’11 (4/120)
Brock Boeser (RW) 6’1″/191lbs 2/25/1997 Van ’15 (1/23)
Alexandre Burrows (RW/LW) 6’1″/188lbs 4/11/1981 S-Van ’03
Cole Cassels (C) 6’0″/178lbs 5/4/1995 Van ’13 (3/85)
Derek Dorsett (RW/LW) 6’0″/192lbs 12/20/1986 T-NYR ’14
Dane Fox (C) 6’0″/185lbs 10/13/1993 S-Van ’13
Alex Friesen (C) 5’9″/186lbs 1/30/1991 Van ’10 (6/172)
Adam Gaudette (C) 6’1″/170lbs 10/3/1996 Van ’15 (5/149)
Brendan Gaunce (C/LW) 6’2″/207lbs 3/25/1994 Van ’12 (1/26)
Alexandre Grenier (RW) 6’5″/200lbs 9/5/1991 Van ’11 (3/90)
Jannik Hansen (RW/LW) 6’1″/195lbs 3/15/1986 Van ’04 (9/287)
Chris Higgins (LW) 6’0″/205lbs 6/2/1983 T-Fla ’11
Bo Horvat (C) 6’0″/206lbs 4/5/1995 Van ’13 (1/9)
Lukas Jasek (RW) 5’11″/165lbs 8/28/1997 Van ’15 (6/174)
Nicklas Jensen (RW/LW) 6’3″/202lbs 3/6/1993 Van ’11 (1/29)
Blair Jones (C/W) 6’2″/216lbs 9/27/1986 FA ’15
Ilya Kablukov (C) 6’2″/183lbs 1/18/1988 Van ’07 (5/146)
Ronalds Kenins (LW) 6’0″/201lbs 2/28/1991 S-Van ’13
Joseph Labate (C) 6’4″/190lbs 4/16/1993 Van ’11 (4/101)
Jared McCann (C) 6’0″/179lbs 5/31/1996 Van ’14 (1/24)
Kyle Pettit (C) 6’4″/200lbs 1/19/1996 Van ’14 (6/156)
Brandon Prust (W/C) 6’0″/195lbs 3/16/1984 T-Mtl ’15
Anton Rodin (RW/LW) 5’11″/174lbs 11/21/1990 Van ’09 (2/53)
Daniel Sedin (LW) 6’1″/187lbs 9/26/1980 Van ’99 (1/2)
Henrik Sedin (C) 6’2″/188lbs 9/26/1980 Van ’99 (1/3)
Hunter Shinkaruk (LW) 5’10″/181lbs 10/13/1994 Van ’13 (1/24)
Brandon Sutter (C) 6’3″/190lbs 2/14/1989 T-Pit ’15
Bill Sweatt (LW) 6’0″/190lbs 9/21/1988 FA ’10
Linden Vey (C/RW) 6’0″/189lbs 7/17/1991 T-LA ’14
Jake Virtanen (LW/RW) 6’1″/208lbs 8/17/1996 Van ’14 (1/6)
Radim Vrbata (RW) 6’1″/194lbs 6/13/1981 FA ’14
Dmitri Zhukenov (C) 5’11″/169lbs 3/24/1997 Van ’15 (4/114)
DEFENSEMEN HT/WT BIRTHDATE ACQUIRED
Matt Bartkowski (D) 6’1″/196lbs 6/4/1988 FA ’15
Alex Biega (D) 5’10″/187lbs 4/4/1988 FA ’13
Jeremie Blain (D) 6’3″/195lbs 3/19/1992 FA ’13
Guillaume Brisebois (D) 6’2″/175lbs 7/21/1997 Van ’15 (3/66)
Anton Cederholm (D) 6’2″/204lbs 2/21/1995 Van ’13 (5/145)
Frank Corrado (D) 6’0″/190lbs 3/26/1993 Van ’11 (5/150)
Alexander Edler (D) 6’3″/215lbs 4/21/1986 Van ’04 (3/91)
Taylor Fedun (D) 6’0″/200lbs 6/4/1988 FA ’15
Dan Hamhuis (D) 6’1″/209lbs 12/13/1982 FA ’10
Ben Hutton (D) 6’2″/183lbs 4/20/1993 Van ’12 (5/147)
Evan McEneny (D) 6’2″/203lbs 5/22/1994 S-Van ’12
Carl Neill (D) 6’1″/213lbs 7/6/1996 Van ’15 (5/144)
Tate Olson (D) 6’2″/174lbs 3/21/1997 Van ’15 (7/210)
Andrey Pedan (D) 6’4″/207lbs 7/3/1993 T-NYI ’14
Ashton Sautner (D) 6’1″/195lbs 5/27/1994 S-Van ’15
Luca Sbisa (D) 6’2″/198lbs 1/30/1990 T-Ana ’14
Mackenze Stewart (D) 6’3″/240lbs 8/10/1995 Van ’14 (7/186)
Jordan Subban (D) 5’9″/175lbs 3/3/1995 Van ’13 (4/115)
Chris Tanev (D) 6’2″/185lbs 12/20/1989 S-Van ’10
Nikita Tryamkin (D) 6’7″/228lbs 8/30/1994 Van ’14 (3/66)
Yannick Weber (D) 5’11″/200lbs 9/23/1988 FA ’13
Mike Williamson (D) 6’3″/187lbs 9/5/1993 Van ’13 (6/175)
GOALIES HT/WT BIRTHDATE ACQUIRED
Richard Bachman (G) 5’10″/183lbs 7/25/1987 FA ’15
Joe Cannata (G) 6’1″/200lbs 1/2/1990 Van ’09 (6/173)
Thatcher Demko (G) 6’4″/192lbs 12/8/1995 Van ’14 (2/36)
Jacob Markstrom (G) 6’6″/196lbs 1/31/1990 T-Fla ’14
Ryan Miller (G) 6’2″/168lbs 7/17/1980 FA ’14

Canucks: Outlook | Lines and Roster | Top Prospects and Draft History | Stats | Schedule

Some top Vancouver Canucks prospect lists heading into the season.

Rk The Hockey News Corey Pronman ESPN Hockey’s Future Hockey Prospectus NHL.com
1 Jake Virtanen Jake Virtanen Jake Virtanen Jared McCann Jake Virtanen
2 Thatcher Demko Brock Boeser Jared McCann Brock Boeser Jared McCann
3 Jacob Markstrom Hunter Shinkaruk Cole Cassels Cole Cassels Brock Boeser
4 Brock Boeser Jared McCann Thatcher Demko Jake Virtanen Cole Cassels
5 Jared McCann Thatcher Demko Brock Boeser Thatcher Demko Thatcher Demko
6 Sven Baertschi Frank Corrado Hunter Shinkaruk Hunter Shinkaruk
7 Cole Cassels Cole Cassels Frank Corrado Nicklas Jensen
8 Hunter Shinkaruk Jordan Subban Ronalds Kenins Frank Corrado
9 Frank Corrado Brendan Gaunce Brendan Gaunce Guilaume Brisebois
10 Adam Clendening (traded) Guilaume Brisebois Nicklas Jensen Jordan Subban

* Different sites have different guidelines for who is a ‘prospect.’

A look at the Vancouver Canucks drafting from 2010 to 2015.

2015 Draft
Round # Player Pos Drafted From
1 23 Brock Boeser R Waterloo Black Hawks (USHL)
3 66 Guillaume Brisebois D Acadie-Bathurst Titan (QMJHL)
4 114 Dmitry Zhukenov C Omsk Jrs. (Russia)
5 144 Carl Neill D Sherbrooke Phoenix (QMJHL)
5 149 Adam Gaudette C Cedar Rapids RoughRiders (USHL)
6 174 Lukas Jasek R Trinec Ocelari HC (Czech)
7 210 Tate Olson D Prince George Cougars (WHL)
2014 Draft
Round # Player Pos Drafted From
1 6 Jake Virtanen R Calgary Hitmen (WHL)
1 24 Jared McCann C Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds (OHL)
2 36 Thatcher Demko G Boston College (H-East)
3 66 Nikita Tryamkin D Yekaterinburg Automobilist (KHL)
5 126 Gustav Forsling D Linkoping (Sweden Jrs.)
6 156 Kyle Pettit C Erie Otters (OHL)
7 186 Mackenze Stewart D Prince Albert Raiders (WHL)
2013 Draft
Round # Player Pos Drafted From
1 9 Bo Horvat C London Knights (OHL)
1 24 Hunter Shinkaruk L Medicine Hat Tigers (WHL)
3 85 Cole Cassels C Oshawa Generals (OHL)
4 115 Jordan Subban D Belleville Bulls (OHL)
5 145 Anton Cederholm D Rogle Jrs. (Sweden)
6 175 Mike Williamson D Spruce Grove Saints (AJHL)
7 205 Miles Liberati D London Knights (OHL)
2012 Draft
Round # Player Pos Drafted From
1 26 Brendan Gaunce C Belleville Bulls (OHL)
2 57 Alexandre Mallet C Rimouski Oceanic (QMJHL)
5 147 Ben Hutton D Nepean Raiders (CCHL)
6 177 Wesley Myron F Victoria Grizzlies (BCHL)
7 207 Matthew Beattie R Exeter (N.H. H.S.)
2011 Draft
Round # Player Pos Drafted From
1 29 Nicklas Jensen R Oshawa Generals (OHL)
3 71 David Honzik G Victoriaville Tigres (QMJHL)
3 90 Alexandre Grenier R Quebec Remparts (QMJHL)
4 101 Joseph Labate C Holy Angels Academy (Minn.)
4 120 Ludwig Blomstrand L Djurgarden Jrs. (Sweden)
5 150 Frankie Corrado D Sudbury Wolves (OHL)
6 180 Pathrik Westerholm L Malmo Redhawks (Swe-1)
7 210 Henrik Tommernes D Frolunda HC (SEL)
2010 Draft
Round # Player Pos Drafted From
4 115 Patrick McNally D Milton Academy (Mass.)
5 145 Adam Polasek D Prince Edward Island Rocket (QMJHL)
6 172 Alex Friesen C Niagara IceDogs (OHL)
6 175 Jonathan Iilahti G Blues Jrs (Finland)
7 205 Sawyer Hannay D Halifax Mooseheads (QMJHL)

Canucks: Outlook | Lines and Roster | Top Prospects and Draft History | Stats | Schedule

Vancouver Canucks 2014-15 player stats.

Player GP G A P +/- PIM PP SH GW S S%
Daniel Sedin 82 20 56 76 5 18 4 0 5 226 8.8
Henrik Sedin 82 18 55 73 11 22 5 0 0 101 17.8
Radim Vrbata 79 31 32 63 6 20 12 0 7 267 11.6
Nick Bonino 75 15 24 39 7 22 1 0 6 149 10.1
Chris Higgins 77 12 24 36 8 16 3 0 1 171 7
Alexandre Burrows 70 18 15 33 0 68 4 1 3 145 12.4
Jannik Hansen 81 16 17 33 -6 27 0 1 2 145 11
Alexander Edler 74 8 23 31 13 54 5 0 2 175 4.6
Shawn Matthias 78 18 9 27 -3 16 1 0 0 132 13.6
Derek Dorsett 79 7 18 25 4 175 0 2 3 89 7.9
Bo Horvat 68 13 12 25 -8 16 0 1 1 93 14
Linden Vey 75 10 14 24 -3 18 4 0 2 61 16.4
Dan Hamhuis 59 1 22 23 0 44 1 0 0 82 1.2
Brad Richardson 45 8 13 21 0 34 0 1 1 66 12.1
Yannick Weber 65 11 10 21 4 30 5 0 1 117 9.4
Christopher Tanev 70 2 18 20 8 12 0 0 1 53 3.8
Zack Kassian 42 10 6 16 -5 81 1 0 3 55 18.2
Kevin Bieksa 60 4 10 14 0 77 0 0 1 99 4
Ronalds Kenins 30 4 8 12 -2 8 0 0 0 38 10.5
Luca Sbisa 76 3 8 11 -8 46 0 0 2 79 3.8
Ryan Stanton 54 3 8 11 9 35 0 0 0 59 5.1
Adam Clendening 17 0 2 2 1 8 0 0 0 15 0
Sven Baertschi 3 2 0 2 0 4 0 0 0 4 50
Alex Biega 7 1 0 1 -2 0 0 0 1 7 14.3
Tom Sestito 3 0 1 1 1 7 0 0 0 1 0
Brandon Mcmillan 8 0 1 1 -1 0 0 0 0 7 0
Frank Corrado 10 1 0 1 -7 0 0 0 0 8 12.5
Brandon Defazio 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0
Nicklas Jensen 5 0 0 0 -1 0 0 0 0 7 0
Goalie GPI GS MIN GAA W L OT SO SA GA SV%
Ryan Miller 45 45 2542 2.53 29 15 1 6 1198 107 0.911
Eddie Lack 41 35 2324 2.45 18 13 4 2 1201 95 0.921
Jacob Markstrom 3 2 78 3.08 1 1 0 0 33 4 0.879

Canucks: Outlook | Lines and Roster | Top Prospects and Draft History | Stats | Schedule

A look at the Vancouver Canucks 2015-16 schedule.

DATE Opp. RESULT
Wed, Oct 7 @ Cgy 10:00 PM ET
Sat, Oct 10 vs. Cgy 10:00 PM ET
Mon, Oct 12 @ Ana 10:00 PM ET
Tue, Oct 13 @ LA 10:30 PM ET
Fri, Oct 16 vs. StL 10:00 PM ET
Sun, Oct 18 vs. Edm 9:00 PM ET
Thu, Oct 22 vs. Wsh 10:00 PM ET
Sat, Oct 24 vs. Det 10:00 PM ET
Tue, Oct 27 vs. Mtl 10:00 PM ET
Thu, Oct 29 @ Dal 8:30 PM ET
Fri, Oct 30 @ Ari 10:00 PM ET
Mon, Nov 2 vs. Phi 10:00 PM ET
Wed, Nov 4 vs. Pit 10:00 PM ET
Sat, Nov 7 @ Buf 1:00 PM ET
Sun, Nov 8 @ NJ 5:00 PM ET
Tue, Nov 10 @ CBJ 7:00 PM ET
Thu, Nov 12 @ Ott 7:30 PM ET
Sat, Nov 14 @ Tor 7:00 PM ET
Mon, Nov 16 @ Mtl 7:30 PM ET
Wed, Nov 18 @ Wpg 7:30 PM ET
Sat, Nov 21 vs. Chi 10:00 PM ET
Sun, Nov 22 vs. NJ 10:00 PM ET
Wed, Nov 25 @ Min 7:00 PM ET
Fri, Nov 27 @ Dal 8:30 PM ET
Mon, Nov 30 @ Ana 10:00 PM ET
Tue, Dec 1 @ LA 10:30 PM ET
Thu, Dec 3 vs. Dal 10:00 PM ET
Sat, Dec 5 vs. Bos 10:00 PM ET
Mon, Dec 7 vs. Buf 10:00 PM ET
Wed, Dec 9 vs. NYR 10:00 PM ET
Sun, Dec 13 @ Chi 7:00 PM ET
Tue, Dec 15 @ Min 8:00 PM ET
Thu, Dec 17 @ Phi 7:00 PM ET
Fri, Dec 18 @ Det 7:30 PM ET
Sun, Dec 20 @ Fla 4:00 PM ET
Tue, Dec 22 @ TB 7:30 PM ET
Sat, Dec 26 vs. Edm 10:00 PM ET
Mon, Dec 28 vs. LA 10:00 PM ET
Fri, Jan 1 vs. Ana 10:00 PM ET
Mon, Jan 4 vs. Ari 10:00 PM ET
Wed, Jan 6 vs. Car 10:00 PM ET
Sat, Jan 9 vs. TB 10:00 PM ET
Mon, Jan 11 vs. Fla 10:00 PM ET
Thu, Jan 14 @ Wsh 7:00 PM ET
Fri, Jan 15 @ Car 7:00 PM ET
Sun, Jan 17 @ NYI 4:00 PM ET
Tue, Jan 19 @ NYR 7:00 PM ET
Thu, Jan 21 @ Bos 7:00 PM ET
Sat, Jan 23 @ Pit 12:30 PM ET
Tue, Jan 26 vs. Nas 10:00 PM ET
Thu, Feb 4 vs. CBJ 10:00 PM ET
Sat, Feb 6 vs. Cgy 10:00 PM ET
Tue, Feb 9 @ Col 9:00 PM ET
Wed, Feb 10 @ Ari 9:30 PM ET
Sat, Feb 13 vs. Tor 7:00 PM ET
Mon, Feb 15 vs. Min 10:00 PM ET
Thu, Feb 18 vs. Ana 10:00 PM ET
Fri, Feb 19 @ Cgy 9:00 PM ET
Sun, Feb 21 vs. Col 10:00 PM ET
Thu, Feb 25 vs. Ott 10:00 PM ET
Sun, Feb 28 vs. SJ 7:00 PM ET
Tue, Mar 1 vs. NYI 10:00 PM ET
Thu, Mar 3 vs. SJ 10:00 PM ET
Sat, Mar 5 @ SJ 10:00 PM ET
Mon, Mar 7 @ LA 10:30 PM ET
Wed, Mar 9 vs. Ari 10:00 PM ET
Sat, Mar 12 vs. Nas 10:00 PM ET
Mon, Mar 14 vs. Wpg 10:00 PM ET
Wed, Mar 16 vs. Col 10:00 PM ET
Fri, Mar 18 @ Edm 9:00 PM ET
Sat, Mar 19 vs. StL 10:00 PM ET
Tue, Mar 22 @ Wpg 8:00 PM ET
Thu, Mar 24 @ Nas 8:00 PM ET
Fri, Mar 25 @ StL 8:00 PM ET
Sun, Mar 27 vs. Chi 8:00 PM ET
Tue, Mar 29 vs. SJ 10:00 PM ET
Thu, Mar 31 @ SJ 10:30 PM ET
Fri, Apr 1 @ Ana 10:00 PM ET
Mon, Apr 4 vs. LA 10:00 PM ET
Wed, Apr 6 @ Edm 10:00 PM ET
Thu, Apr 7 @ Cgy 9:00 PM ET
Sat, Apr 9 vs. Edm 10:00 PM ET

Canucks: Outlook | Lines and Roster | Top Prospects and Draft History | Stats | Schedule