Canucks Cannot Assume Malhotra Solves Their Biggest Rebuild Problem

The Canucks' 2026 draft success sparks optimism, but ongoing searches for elite center and defense talents remain crucial for a true rebuild breakthrough.

Now that the 2026 NHL Entry Draft is in the books, the Canucks can feel pretty good about where they landed in Buffalo. For a franchise trying to start over, it was a solid first step into a new era, and the headliner was Caleb Malhotra at third overall.

Malhotra was viewed as the best centre in the draft, and that alone gives Vancouver a huge piece to build around. In a league where centres are always at a premium, that kind of swing matters. He now joins a young group that already includes Zeev Buium and Tom Willander, two defenders the Canucks see as major parts of their future.

That trio gives Vancouver something real to dream on. If everything breaks right, Malhotra grows into a 1C while Buium and Willander become top-pairing defenders. From there, it’s easy to start sketching out a future that looks tidy and complete: Braeden Cootes slides in as a 2C, Elias Pettersson, Liam Öhgren, and others settle into their roles, and suddenly the rebuild feels close to finished.

But that kind of clean path is rarely how this works. Prospects miss.

Development stalls. Even the best-looking young cores usually need more than one shot at the same position before they’re truly set.

And that’s exactly why Vancouver should keep targeting centres and defenders in the drafts ahead.

The centre depth is a good place to start. Cootes and Malhotra are both said to have top-six upside, but the ceilings aren’t identical.

Cootes is generally viewed as a player who could top out as a good 2C, while Malhotra has drawn more debate. Some scouts still see him as a strong second-line centre, while others believe he can grow into a true 1C.

That uncertainty is reason enough for the Canucks to keep swinging if another high-end centre comes along. The 2027 Draft Class, in particular, is being described as rich with premium centre talent, and adding another one would only strengthen Vancouver’s hand. Even if Malhotra and Cootes both reach their potential, having a third option down the middle would give the Canucks either a powerful 1-2-3 centre stack or a major trade chip.

The same logic applies on the blue line, maybe even more so. Buium has already been mentioned as one of the league’s top young defenders and has true 1D upside in the eyes of some.

Willander is seen by many as a top-pairing defender at his peak, which would put him in the 2D conversation. Still, neither is projecting as a sure thing to reach superstardom right away, and neither is currently on a Norris track.

That’s why the Canucks should keep loading up on defenders in the next few drafts too. The 2027 and 2028 classes are said to include players with that kind of upside, and Vancouver will need a lot more than two promising young blueliners to build a long-term top four.

The bigger picture is pretty clear: the Canucks are rebuilding from a talent-poor position, after years of not stockpiling picks and prospects the way they should have. That means the job now is simple, if not easy - keep adding premium talent, especially at centre and defence.

So even with Malhotra, Buium, and Willander already in place, Vancouver shouldn’t act like the heavy lifting is done. If anything, the best outcome would be for the Canucks to look back in June 2026 and realize they still hadn’t drafted their future top centre or future top defender.

That would mean the rebuild is still adding fuel instead of settling for what’s already there. And with the next few draft classes expected to be loaded at those positions, that remains very much on the table.

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