The Vancouver Canucks made two major moves on Wednesday that showed just how quickly this reset is moving.
First, Marcus Pettersson was sent to the New York Rangers, just days after arriving from the Pittsburgh Penguins. In return, Vancouver picked up a 2030 first-round draft pick, top 10 protected. Then the Canucks moved to shore up the blue line again, signing Jamie Oleksiak to a two-year deal worth $5 million in average annual salary.
It was a clean swap of money on the back end, but the bigger picture was hard to miss: Vancouver is chasing future value, and draft capital is part of the plan.
Pettersson’s time with the Canucks was brief, but he had already looked like a strong fit after the J.T. Miller deal on Jan. 1, 2025 changed the direction of the club.
He had been signed to a six-year contract worth US$5.5 million per season, a deal that seemed to make sense at the time. But his role in Vancouver never had time to settle in for the long haul before the Rangers came calling.
On the ice, Pettersson had some rough patches in his own zone, especially when it came to boxing out and clearing pucks. He finished with 18 points, including three goals and 15 assists, on a Canucks team that ranked second-lowest in the league in scoring.
Still, the move was presented as a chance for him to land somewhere with a clearer path to winning now.
“For Marcus, a team desiring him, he has a chance to win now,” said Canucks general manager Ryan Johnson. “It’s a win for us and for him in where he’s at in his career.”
Oleksiak arrives to fill the vacancy left behind. At 6-foot-7 and 252 pounds, he gives Vancouver the size it was looking for on the back end. The 33-year-old has played 758 NHL games across three teams and was a 2011 first-round pick.
The Canucks also added veteran defender Luke Schenn on Wednesday, signing the 36-year-old to a one-year contract for back-end depth and what Johnson described as culture. But the Pettersson trade and the Oleksiak signing were the bigger signals of where the franchise is headed.
“I’m OK looking into the future with teams in some of these returns and teams are limited in what they can do short term in futures and more apt to push things, which is fine by me,” added Johnson. “It was an opportunity I needed to take.”
That future-focused approach also explains why the first-round pick mattered so much. Vancouver is not just trying to patch holes. It is trying to stockpile assets while staying flexible enough to keep moving.
“Throughout the course of the week, you’re looking at all kinds of different players and what may come available and the timing of Marcus and the opportunity that may come from today,” stressed Johnson. “You have to pivot very quickly and I did it extremely quickly and thankful of the time for it to come together.
In Other News...
Senators May Be Eyeing A Division Swing Fans Will Debate
The Senators are being linked to a familiar name with a strong local tie, as Ottawa reportedly has interest in Buffalo forward Jack Quinn. The Ottawa native and former 67s standout has become a plausible trade candidate for the Sabres, and his profile makes sense for a Senators team still looking to add more finishing skill up front.
Quinn is entering the final year of his contract and is expected to head toward restricted free agency next season, which gives this idea a timing edge as Buffalo weighs its next move. Any deal would also have to satisfy the Sabres need to keep building on the blue line, with a prospect such as Logan Hensler potentially part of the conversation, setting up the kind of swap that could spark plenty of debate in Ottawa. [Read more 🡒]
Senators Make Two More Moves That Reignite A Familiar Debate
The Senators added a little more clarity to their roster picture with two more moves, bringing goalie Samuel Ersson back on a two-year deal and extending Nick Cousins for two more seasons. Both were the sort of depth decisions that matter in a long NHL season, especially for a team trying to stabilize its supporting cast while keeping options open around the edges of the lineup.
For Ottawa, the moves also reopen a familiar debate about how much value the club wants to place on familiarity versus upside in its lower-cost bets. Ersson had already been in the organization before briefly reaching free agency, while Cousins remains the kind of veteran depth piece who can be useful in a specific role. The question now is whether the Senators are simply filling out the roster or locking in pieces that will shape how they manage the rest of the summer. [Read more 🡒]
Senators Suddenly Have A Toronto Scoring Target Worth Debating
After adding William Eklund and Andre Burakovsky, the Senators still look like a club that could use one more swing on the wing, especially if they want to keep reshaping the forward group around more skill. That is why Matias Maccelli has surfaced as a name worth watching in Ottawa circles. The Maple Leafs forward has put himself back on the radar after a productive season in Toronto, and his profile is the kind that can tempt teams looking for a playmaker who might fit into a more defined role.
For Ottawa, the appeal is less about splash and more about fit. Maccellis game suggests a player who could help the Senators in the middle of the lineup and add another layer of puck movement to a forward corps that still has room for more creativity. Whether he ends up as a middle-six option or pushes higher in the pecking order, he gives the Senators a legitimate discussion point as they sort through the rest of their offseason shopping list. [Read more 🡒]
