The Canucks are staring at two very different centre-ice decisions, and both could say a lot about where the franchise is headed.
One is about Elias Pettersson, a player who once looked like the obvious face of the team. The other is about Shane Wright, a former fourth-overall pick who may be looking for a reset. Put together, they give Vancouver a classic NHL front-office dilemma: hold on, or take the swing.
Pettersson’s case is the harder one to process because of what he was supposed to be. A few years ago, it would have sounded absurd to wonder whether the Canucks should move on from him.
He had the skill, the hockey sense and the game-breaking ability that teams spend years chasing. But after two frustrating seasons since signing his eight-year, $11.6 million contract, the conversation has shifted.
According to Canucks insider Thomas Drance, Vancouver may even be willing to accept a very small return just to get Pettersson’s contract off the books. That would have been unthinkable not long ago, but it speaks to how the NHL works now.
Teams aren’t only trading players. They’re trading the money attached to them.
That $11.6 million annual cap hit is the real issue. For a player who has struggled to find consistency over the last two seasons, it’s a massive commitment.
The Canucks may no longer be chasing a blockbuster haul. They may simply be chasing flexibility.
That’s what makes the Pettersson situation so stark. It’s not about declaring him a bad player. It’s about the gap between what Vancouver expected, what he has delivered, and what the contract now demands.
Wright represents the other side of the ledger. When Seattle took him fourth overall in 2022, plenty of people expected him to become a franchise centre. His path in the NHL has been slower than expected, but the talent that made him such a prized prospect is still there.
The issue in Seattle was opportunity. Wright was stuck behind established centres and fighting for minutes instead of growing into a bigger role.
Vancouver could offer something different: responsibility. The Canucks need young help down the middle, and Wright would have a real chance to play meaningful minutes right away.
In the right setting, he could rebuild confidence and start looking like the player people projected.
The catch, of course, is the price. Seattle is not going to hand over a former fourth-overall pick for nothing, and the Kraken will want young assets back.
Vancouver has to be careful here. Players like Zeev Buium and Tom Willander are the kind of young pieces the Canucks need to keep building around.
Still, if the cost stays in range, Wright is exactly the sort of gamble that makes sense. He’s young.
He’s talented. And he plays one of the toughest positions to fill in hockey.
So Vancouver is left with two paths at centre: one about knowing when to cut bait, the other about knowing when to bet on upside. The Pettersson decision would mean admitting the original plan didn’t work the way anyone hoped. The Wright pursuit would be about trusting that a young player can still become what people thought he could be.
Either way, the Canucks have some major calls ahead.
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What makes the list notable for the Canucks is not just the volume of names, but the range of projections attached to them. Wheelers evaluations point to a system with both high-end upside and longer-view bets, the kind of mix that can shape a teams future roster in different ways depending on who hits and how quickly. For a club trying to keep its next wave moving in the right direction, having that many prospects in one respected ranking is the sort of buzz that tends to travel quickly. [Read more 🡒]
