Aleksei Medvedev showed up at his second Vancouver Canucks development camp with a different kind of energy than he brought a year ago.
The 18-year-old goaltender is coming off a second season with the OHL’s London Knights that gave him plenty to sort through, and he’s using this summer to turn that experience into something sharper. After the season ended, Medvedev started training in Ontario before heading to Vancouver, treating camp as the first real step toward the work that will carry him into his third OHL season.
“It's been great just coming back here. I feel like now you get into more serious training, you've got less than two months before the season, so this is a great step to kind of start things off and really get into that mindset,” Medvedev said.
That mindset is all about tightening the details. Medvedev said he’s working on his hands, puck tracking, reading rush plays and getting better mobility in the crease.
He’s also training with a goalie coach in Ontario who was recommended by Goalie Development Coach Ian Clark. Off the ice, he’s spending time in the gym as well, carrying a frame that measures 6-foot-3 and nearly 200 pounds while still feeling quick in net.
Last season was uneven, but it also gave him a clearer picture of what needs to be cleaned up. He opened the year with a .926 save percentage and a 7-2-1 record through 10 games, then finished the regular season at .891 with a 16-15-2 record. Medvedev isn’t pretending that was good enough, but he does see value in the stretch.
“I've taken so much away from it [last season], so I'd say result-wise, obviously not happy, but I feel like I've needed that year. [I] touched on a lot of things I've been missing and that were out of my attention, I'd say. This year brought me more clarity and more focus to areas I really needed to work on.”
A big part of that work has happened away from the rink. Medvedev has been working with sports psychologists and spent time during development camp learning from Canucks Mental Performance Consultant Alex Hodgins. For him, the mental side isn’t a side project anymore - it’s a priority.
“You always want to learn, develop that skill of mental toughness and stuff like that. I feel like I've really experienced that last year, I feel like that's something I've always been missing, and obviously putting a lot of effort into that this offseason,” he said.
The expectations around him were already heavy. In his first year with the Knights, the team won the Memorial Cup, and Medvedev entered last season with a bigger spotlight after being selected in the second round, 47th overall, in the 2025 NHL Entry Draft. He said that was new territory for him.
“I've never really been in that spot before, obviously being a really high draft pick, and then coming into the year, being off to a really good start, and then kind of losing my game a little bit. I feel like it was a great experience dealing with that, and I found a ton of things that I could work on, and I've really touched more on in the offseason, worked a lot more on, developed on them, and expanded,” he shared.
By the end of camp, Medvedev had a clean finish to take with him. The group wrapped up with 3-on-3 scrimmages at Rogers Forum and a shootout, and he stopped all seven shots he faced for a shutout.
Now he’s looking ahead with a firmer grip on what he wants to become.
“Obviously I want to be the guy, and want to be the best goalie in the OHL,” Medvedev said. “I feel like that's what I expect from myself, kind of prove that I'm ready to take that next step. London loves winners, and we win in London, so we’ve got a big year coming for us.”
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