Former Canuck Aaron Rome Is Taking Another Coaching Step

Aaron Rome returns to the Brandon Wheat Kings as an assistant coach, bringing a wealth of WHL and NHL experience to the team.

Aaron Rome is heading back to a familiar bench in Brandon.

The former Vancouver Canucks defenceman is set to join the Brandon Wheat Kings of the WHL as an assistant coach, marking another stop in a coaching career that has already taken him through several roles with the club.

Rome spent last season as head coach of the Wheat Kings’ U-17 AAA team. Before that, he had already worked in Brandon as an assistant coach in 2016-17 and later as a skills coach from 2017-18 through 2018-19. In his first season as an assistant with the Wheat Kings, Brandon finished 31-31-7-3 and placed fourth in the WHL’s East Division.

His playing background stretches deep into the WHL as well. Rome logged five full seasons in the league, starting with the Saskatoon Blades from 1998-99 to 2000-01.

He then spent two seasons with the Kootenay Ice, now the Wenatchee Wild, followed by nearly three seasons with the Swift Current Broncos. He finished his WHL career with the Moose Jaw Warriors during the back half of the 2003-04 season.

Rome went on to play in the NHL with the Anaheim Ducks and Columbus Blue Jackets before landing in Vancouver for three seasons. That stretch included the Canucks’ 2011 Stanley Cup run, when he was suspended for four games of the Final after a hit on Boston Bruins forward Nathan Horton.

Brandon’s roster currently includes Ducks prospect Brady Turko, defencemen Ilari Kapanen and Josh McGregor, and forward Colin Grubb. Marty Murray remains the club’s head coach and general manager.

In Other News...

Canucks Insider Floats Risky Leafs Trade Idea That Says A Lot

Rick Dhaliwals latest trade idea is the kind of thought exercise that tells you as much about the market as it does about the Canucks. The Vancouver insider suggested the club should be hunting for young, cost-controlled players who do not have no-move or no-trade protection, a category that naturally points to names like Matthew Knies, Kent Johnson and Shane Wright. In a league where flexibility matters almost as much as talent, that kind of profile can look awfully appealing from a front-office standpoint.

Knies stands out most in the conversation because he has already shown top-line upside and, at least for now, cannot block a deal. But the broader issue is whether a player being movable means he would actually want to land in Vancouver, which is a very different question. It is an interesting frame for the Canucks, especially if they are looking for younger pieces who fit both the age curve and the cap sheet, but it also shows how quickly a clean trade theory runs into real-world complications. [Read more 🡒]

Canucks First Rounder Is Already Framing His Path In The Rebuild

Adam Novotn is already talking like a player who understands where he fits in Vancouvers timeline. The Canucks recent first-round pick spent development camp discussing his growth, his path through the Czech league and North America, and the way he wants to keep sharpening his game as he pushes toward the NHL. He started his professional career in the Czech league at 15, and that early jump into mens hockey has clearly shaped the way he views the next steps.

For Vancouver, that matters because the organization is leaning hard into a rebuild built around younger talent, and Novotn sounds eager to be part of it. He has spent time in North America, models pieces of his game after Mason McTavish, and seems focused less on the draft-night label than on becoming useful in the long run. In a camp full of prospects trying to make their mark, he is already framing his future in terms the Canucks can appreciate: patience, development and eventually helping the next wave move the team forward. [Read more 🡒]

Canucks Are Headed For A Leadership Decision That Could Change Everything

The Canucks have spent the past six months without a captain, their longest stretch in that spot since Henrik Sedin retired, and the situation has turned into one of the more interesting organizational decisions on the horizon. With Filip Hronek, Brock Boeser and Elias Pettersson serving as the teams permanent alternate captains, Vancouver has at least maintained a veteran leadership core while it weighs whether the next step is to keep things as they are or make a more formal change.

What makes the discussion more delicate is that this is not just about handing out a letter, but about how the room should be structured going forward. Boesers standing gives the group some continuity, Pettersson remains part of the conversation despite the pressure that comes with his role, and the Canucks are also looking at whether other veterans could be folded into the mix as they decide if a captain should be named before the 2026-27 season or whether a different setup makes more sense. [Read more 🡒]