Jim Benning might not have been at the helm of the Vancouver Canucks' draft table for half a decade, but his decisions are still echoing through the halls of the NHL. The 2026 NHL draft brought Benning back into the spotlight, thanks to the news that Danila Klimovich, the Belarusian winger Benning selected in 2021, is set to test the waters of free agency.
Klimovich's journey to the NHL is a compelling one. Hailing from Belarus, a country not exactly known as a hockey hotbed, Klimovich was a beacon of raw talent at a crucial moment.
He caught the eyes of scouts and general managers during the 2021 World U18 Championship in Texas. It was a rare opportunity for NHL scouts to evaluate prospects in a season marred by the pandemic, and Klimovich shone brightly.
Then-Canucks GM Jim Benning was in attendance and was captivated by Klimovich's potential, seeing a player whose raw skills could be honed into something special.
However, Benning's decision to draft Klimovich wasn't purely based on talent. By 2021, Benning was under significant pressure. The COVID-19 pandemic had derailed his plans for the Canucks, with financial constraints imposed by ownership affecting both the NHL team and its broader organizational operations.
Despite a strong consensus favoring Logan Stankoven from the Kamloops Blazers, Benning took a different path. Having resumed control over draft decisions after the exit of amateur scouting director Judd Brackett, Benning gambled on Klimovich, a player primarily evaluated at a single tournament. This was a departure from the traditional scouting approach, which emphasizes multiple viewings over an extended period.
The rationale behind selecting Klimovich at 41st overall was partly strategic. With no picks until the fifth round, Benning saw Klimovich as a chance worth taking, despite the risk. Ideally, Klimovich would have been a more suitable choice for a third-round pick, but the Canucks' draft strategy left little room for maneuvering.
Fast forward to today, and the 2021 draft chapter for the Canucks is officially closed. Klimovich was the last remaining player from that draft class within the organization. Unfortunately, none of the players from the 2021 draft made it to the NHL, marking a stark contrast to the promise that draft once held.
This outcome follows a similarly disappointing 2020 draft class, heavily influenced by Benning and his right-hand man, John Weisbrod. From that year, only Jackson Kunz remained with the organization this past season, playing on a one-year AHL contract but spending most of his time in the ECHL. His future with the Canucks seems uncertain as well.
In hindsight, Benning's decisions during those drafts are a reminder of the challenges and uncertainties inherent in building a successful NHL team, especially under the constraints he faced. As Klimovich steps into free agency, the Canucks continue to feel the ripple effects of those pivotal draft days.
In Other News...
Senators Could Lose An RFA Forward For Almost Nothing
The Senators may have another roster issue simmering before the next round of contract business even gets fully underway. Elliotte Friedman reported that a restricted free agent forward is looking for a way out of Ottawa because the path to meaningful NHL minutes is not clear, and the club would still hold his rights if he decides to press the issue. For a team trying to manage its forward depth carefully, it is the kind of situation that can turn into a trade conversation quickly, especially when the player in question is still trying to translate strong minor-league production into a more stable NHL role.
There is also the wrinkle of an offer sheet, which would put Ottawa in a different kind of bind depending on how another club structures the deal. The compensation would hinge on the contract value, with the return changing significantly above or below the relevant threshold, so the Senators could be forced to decide whether to match, negotiate a trade, or risk losing the asset for very little. For a front office that already has to balance opportunity, depth and cap planning, it is one more negotiation thread worth watching closely. [Read more 🡒]
Claude Giroux Suddenly Puts Ottawa In A Position Fans Feared
Claude Girouxs future in Ottawa has quietly become one of the more delicate roster questions of the summer. After four seasons with the Senators, he has given them the kind of reliable two-way presence they value, producing at both ends of the ice while fitting into a lineup that still leans on veteran poise. The problem is that what the Senators want from Giroux and what they can realistically fit into the roster are not quite the same thing right now.
Pierre LeBruns report only sharpened the uncertainty around a player Ottawa would clearly like to keep. The Senators remain interested in bringing him back, but depth on the forward group and salary-cap pressure are pushing the conversation into difficult territory. For a team that has already spent years trying to build the right supporting cast, Girouxs situation is a reminder that sometimes the hardest decisions are the ones involving the players who have helped stabilize the room. [Read more 🡒]
Senators Fans Finally Got A Key Prospect Sign They Needed
For a Senators development camp that has plenty of attention on the usual group of young skaters, the sight of Carter Hensler back on the ice carried a different kind of weight. The defense prospect had been sidelined after an injury in January and spent months working through rehab, so simply getting back into drills this week was an encouraging step for a player whose momentum had been interrupted just as he was trying to build it.
Henslers return also adds another layer to a camp that is already giving Ottawa a look at prospects with different kinds of upside, including Kasper Halttunen, who arrives with a scorers resume and a history of helping drive winning teams. For the Senators, the appeal is obvious: development camp is about talent, but it is also about seeing who can get back on the ice, settle in again and start turning promise into something more reliable. [Read more 🡒]
