Anaheim DucksBoston BruinsBuffalo SabresCalgary FlamesCarolina HurricanesChicago BlackhawksColorado AvalancheColumbus Blue JacketsDallas StarsDetroit Red WingsEdmonton OilersFlorida PanthersLos Angeles KingsMinnesota WildMontreal CanadiensNashville PredatorsNew Jersey DevilsNew York IslandersNew York RangersOttawa SenatorsPhiladelphia FlyersPittsburgh PenguinsSan Jose SharksSeattle KrakenSt. Louis BluesTampa Bay LightningToronto Maple LeafsUtah Hockey ClubVancouver CanucksVegas Golden KnightsWashington CapitalsWinnipeg Jets

Canucks News & Rumours: Hoglander, DeBrusk, Öhgren & Lekkerimäki

The Anaheim Ducks play the Vancouver Canucks tonight, looking to get back on track after having a seven-game winning streak snapped by Edmonton. Even in that loss, Anaheim didn’t look rattled. They still looked like a team that knows what it’s doing right now — structured, confident, and getting contributions from all over the lineup, even while dealing with injuries.

Vancouver, on the other hand, is just trying to stop the free fall. The Canucks have lost 14 of their last 15 games and followed that up with a lifeless 5–2 loss to the San Jose Sharks on Tuesday. That result dropped them to 1-5-0 on an eight-game homestand that was supposed to stabilize things, not quietly bury the season.

Related: Canucks: 5 Worst Jim Benning Trades

Injuries are a factor for both teams, but that’s where the comparison stops. Anaheim has adjusted. Vancouver is still searching for answers from night to night — and right now, the identity seems to change with every period.

Item 1: Hoglander Injury Adds to the Canucks’ Growing List

Nils Höglander is being evaluated after suffering a lower-body injury in Tuesday’s loss to San Jose, just another blow to a lineup that’s already stretched thin. There’s no timeline yet, but if he can’t go Thursday against Anaheim, David Kämpf is expected to draw back into the lineup.

Nils Hoglander Vancouver Canucks
Nils Hoglander, Vancouver Canucks (Bob Frid-Imagn Images)

Höglander’s numbers don’t jump off the page — two assists in 18 games — but his value hasn’t really been about production lately. He’s been one of the few forwards consistently finishing checks, skating with pace, and at least trying to inject some energy into games that have gone flat early. On a team struggling to find traction, that kind of effort matters more than the stat line suggests.

Related: Today in Hockey History: Jan. 29

From the Canucks’ point of view, this isn’t really about who replaces Höglander. It’s about what keeps getting exposed. Vancouver is running out of players who can play through chaos, and every new injury narrows the margin a little more. If this stretch is about learning who can survive tough minutes when things aren’t going well, Höglander’s absence just makes that evaluation harder and the season feel longer.

Item 2: Jake DeBrusk Heating Up, But for How Long in Vancouver?

Jake DeBrusk picked up two assists in Tuesday’s loss to San Jose, giving him five points in his last four games and keeping him on the top line. It’s a familiar DeBrusk stretch where he shows flashes of offence, speed through the neutral zone, and just enough production to remind coaches why they keep going back to him. When he’s rolling, he looks like a fit. When he’s not, things get uncomfortable in a hurry.

Jake DeBrusk Vancouver Canucks
Vancouver Canucks left wing Jake Debrusk celebrates his goal with teammates
(Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images)

Not long ago, DeBrusk was a healthy scratch, and it didn’t sit well with him. That kind of thing lingers, especially for veterans who still see themselves as top-six players. Since then, his response has been solid, showing more urgency, creating more chances, and points starting to follow. From the Canucks’ perspective, that’s encouraging. It also raises some uncomfortable questions about consistency and trust.

Related: Canucks News & Rumours: Lankinen, Pettersson, Hronek & Celebrini

The timing is hard to ignore. DeBrusk is producing again, playing meaningful minutes, and he checks a lot of boxes that contenders talk themselves into at the deadline: speed, playoff experience, and power-play skill. In short, there would be interest. The real question for Vancouver is whether this stretch represents something stable to build on or just another DeBrusk heater that arrives right when the league starts paying attention. If the Canucks keep sliding, this might not be about whether he fits long-term. Instead, it could be about what he could bring back while his value is up.

Item 3: Öhgren’s Quiet Value and Familiar Connection

When Liam Öhgren came to Vancouver as part of the Quinn Hughes return alongside Zeev Buium and Marco Rossi, he was easy to overlook. Eighteen games into his season without a point, he looked more like a depth add than a meaningful piece. But through his first 22 games in a Canucks sweater, he’s shown that assumption missed the mark.

Liam Ohgren Vancouver Canucks
Liam Ohgren, Vancouver Canucks (John Jones-Imagn Images)

What may have been underestimated at the time of the trade was how naturally Öhgren fit into the Canucks’ young core — especially his long-standing relationship with Jonathan Lekkerimäki. The two go back to their early days at Djurgårdens, arriving at the U16 level and spending much of their junior careers on the same line. From club hockey to international play, they’ve grown together.

Related: Vancouver Canucks’ Top 3 Defensemen of All-Time

That familiarity shows. There’s a comfort level between them that can’t be coached or rushed, especially for young players trying to establish themselves at the NHL level. For a Canucks team searching for direction in a difficult season, Öhgren’s emergence (paired with a trusted connection) looks less like a footnote in a big trade and more like a quietly important return.

What’s Next for the Canucks?

What makes this stretch feel heavier is that the Canucks aren’t just losing; they’re unravelling. Games aren’t slipping away late. They’re getting away early. Defensive details are missed. Breakouts stall. Retrievals turn into turnovers. You can hear it in the players’ quotes now: this isn’t frustration anymore, it’s self-awareness mixed with exhaustion.

The rest of the season may not be about wins and losses so much as information. Who holds their game together when things are ugly? Who competes when the margins are gone? With Thatcher Demko out long-term and young players like Nikita Tolopilo getting extended looks, Vancouver is entering a stretch that may quietly shape decisions well beyond this year — whether the standings cooperate or not.

SUBSCRIBE FOR FREE TO OUR VANCOUVER CANUCKS SUBSTACK NEWSLETTER

Free Newsletter

Get Commentary coverage delivered to your inbox

In-depth analysis, breaking news, and insider takes - free.

Subscribe Free →
The Old Prof

The Old Prof

The Old Prof (Jim Parsons, Sr.) taught for more than 40 years in the Faculty of Education at the University of Alberta. He's a Canadian boy, who has two degrees from the University of Kentucky and a doctorate from the University of Texas. He is now retired on Vancouver Island, where he lives with his family. His hobbies include playing with his hockey cards and simply being a sports fan - hockey, the Toronto Raptors, and CFL football (thinks Ricky Ray personifies how a professional athlete should act).

If you wonder why he doesn’t use his real name, it’s because his son – who’s also Jim Parsons – wrote for The Hockey Writers first and asked Jim Sr. to use another name so readers wouldn’t confuse their work.

Because Jim Sr. had worked in China, he adopted the Mandarin word for teacher (老師). The first character lǎo (老) means “old,” and the second character shī (師) means “teacher.” The literal translation of lǎoshī is “old teacher.” That became his pen name. Today, other than writing for The Hockey Writers, he teaches graduate students research design at several Canadian universities.

He looks forward to sharing his insights about the Toronto Maple Leafs and about how sports engages life more fully. His Twitter address is https://twitter.com/TheOldProf

More by The Old Prof →