Canucks May Have A Shot At Solving Their Biggest Roster Question

With Shane Wright seeking a fresh start, the Canucks might find an unexpected gem to strengthen their center lineup.

The Canucks have a type, and Shane Wright fits it.

When a high draft pick hasn’t quite lived up to the billing, NHL teams start circling. They convince themselves the right environment can unlock the player the rest of the league hasn’t fully seen yet. Vancouver has done that before, and Wright now looks like the next name in that conversation.

Wright has asked the Seattle Kraken for a trade, and the appeal is obvious. He’s still the player many people expected to see much earlier in his career, even if the draft-night memory most fans carry is the glare he was said to have given the Montreal Canadiens’ table in 2022 after he slipped to fourth and landed with Seattle. Wright denied the death-stare analogy, but he did say the draft snub left him with a chip on his shoulder.

That edge matters. So does the fact that he is an Alpha male who is assertive and confident.

Vancouver is trying to sort out its “riddles in the middle” situation, and Wright would give them another option down the middle if the price makes sense. Elias Pettersson trade rumours keep hanging around despite his no-movement clause.

Filip Chytil, who is concussion-prone, should probably be on wing to limit the risk of heavy contact. Aatu Raty could move up after putting up seven points (4-3) in 10 games to help his native Finland to the 2026 world championship title in May.

And Braeden Cootes is a prize prospect who could either be eased into the NHL or take advantage of a new rule allowing him to play at 19 in the AHL and pile up big minutes.

That’s the backdrop for Vancouver’s interest in Wright.

The 6-foot, 192-pound Burlington, Ont. centre had 12 goals this season while averaging just 13:48 of ice time, which was six minutes less than Chandler Stephenson and Matty Beniers. He scored 19 goals in 2024-25 in 14:04 of average ice time, and the projection remains that he can grow into a dependable second-line centre.

Seattle, for its part, is not about to land the kind of return it may have once hoped for. The Kraken have already tried to chase bigger targets such as Zeev Buium or Tom Willander, but those swings aren’t happening.

A high draft pick is also off the table, since that kind of asset is vital in a rebuild. If Vancouver gets involved, the Canucks are more likely to move a veteran with value and could include Jake DeBrusk along with a second- or third-round pick.

DeBrusk, 29, is at a point in his career where winning matters most, while Seattle sits as an afterthought in the Pacific Division. The Anaheim Ducks and San Jose Sharks have climbed in the standings, and the Kraken often looked this season like a team trying not to lose instead of pushing to win.

They need help in a lot of places.

Wright also wasn’t used on the first unit of a power play that finished 20th, and he wasn’t on the penalty kill either, where his reads, reactions and smart stick work might have helped a unit that ranked second-worst in the league. At five-on-five, he was trapped in a cautious system that produced low-event hockey and didn’t make the most of his skill set. Seattle’s forwards were drilled to think defence first, which slowed transition play, and Wright never had the kind of steady linemates that help a young centre build chemistry and production.

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