Canucks Only

SEA. PHI. SEA. BOS. (yeah, we're behind.)


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In this episode of Canucks Only, Rob and Shylo work through a messy four-game stretch against Seattle, Philadelphia, Seattle again, and Boston — a sequence that perfectly captures why this Canucks season feels so hard to read. There are wins, flashes of optimism, and strong individual performances, but they’re consistently undercut by familiar structural problems.

The conversation opens with the first Seattle game, a shootout win driven almost entirely by goaltending. Despite being badly outshot, the Canucks survive thanks to Lankinen’s calm, technical brilliance and timely saves in the shootout. The youth show well, Garland provides leadership with a surprise fight, and Pettersson begins to look like he’s finding his confidence again — but the game still feels disjointed, more survived than controlled.

Philadelphia exposes the Canucks’ biggest weakness: speed. Even without elite talent, the Flyers skate Vancouver into mistakes, revealing how little margin the Canucks have when their execution slips. Demko has an off night by his standards, shot quality favors Philly, and the Canucks’ inability to sustain pressure becomes glaring. It’s a loss that feels representative, not unlucky.

Back against Seattle, the pattern repeats. The game is competitive and fast, but again heads to a shootout. Lineup decisions spark debate, particularly around usage of young players and the continued frustration of seeing development slowed by questionable pairings. The team battles, but clarity remains elusive.

The episode closes with Boston, the most encouraging performance of the stretch. Pettersson looks confident and assertive, creating offense rather than reacting to it. Buium finally gets a more suitable partner and immediately looks more effective, while the Canucks play with pace and intent. Even in a loss, the Bruins game feels like progress — not because of the result, but because of how the Canucks carry themselves.

Throughout the episode, Rob and Shylo return to the same tension: development versus results. The Canucks aren’t cohesive enough to win consistently, but there are enough positive signs — from Pettersson, Carlson, Garland, and the kids — to suggest something is slowly forming. The problem is timing. Every step forward complicates draft position, trade decisions, and expectations.

Episode 35 doesn’t offer answers — but it clearly shows a team caught between what it is now and what it’s trying to become.

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Canucks OnlyBy Rob Young