This has been on my mind a lot lately and yes you can call me salty or whatever. On December 12th 2025 the Vancouver Canucks traded star player Quinn Hughes to the Minnesota Wild for Marco Rossi, Zeev Buimm, Liam Ohgren and a first round pick. Many Canucks like myself were very upset but saw it coming a 100 kilometres away. Buy as soon as Quinn Goes to the Wild he shows his true self. Before his first game against his former team he was asked about his former team and his response “honestly I don’t know any of there guys” Not a good look as*hat He was the Captain of the Canucks for two years and played there for almost 7 seasons. You know at least AT LEAST SIXTEEN OF THEM He also treated his tenure with the Canucks as a prison sentence always with one word answers but as soon as he goes to the Wild he’s all jolly. He never seemed happy even though his best years so far are with Vancouver. He never smiled and never did anything for this community he never cared to help people less fortunate in Vancouver especially going to B.C. Children’s Hospital where Canucks captains always have gone. No he’s done nothing. Sorry this was kinda a rant
Fun or not So fun fact. The Canucks who finished last in the league last year. Had a 25.5 percent chance of drafting 1st and a 18.8 percent chance of drafting second overall. They got neither and the Toronto Maple Leafs got the first overall pick. They had a 8.5 percent chance to pick 1st.
If you ask NHL fans what players had the best chemistry? They would Answer the Sedin twins. why? Beacuse they are literally twins. Born just minutes apart Daniel and Henrik had instant chemistry when It came to playing hockey. Even playing together in the SHL. it seemed they both knew where there were at all times on the ice with Henrik usually passing and Daniel Finishing. Both being drafted by the Canucks in 1999 Vancouver came to love the twins. both making there debut together on October 5th 2000 and on October 9 2010 henrik sedin was named captain of the Vancouver Canucks. The same season when the Canucks made their legendary cup final run. In there final game at Rodger’s Arena home of the Vancouver Canucks. Daniel Sedin scored the OT winner assisted by Henrik Sedin at the 2:33 mark to send the sold out crowd in a frenzy. And on Feb 12 2020 Daniel and Henrik got there jerseys raised up into the rafters together as they always seemed to be.
The Vancouver Canucks represent British Columbia from Rogers Arena, where the blue, green, and white carry the hopes of one of Canada's most passionate and frustrated hockey markets. Vancouver's fanbase has supported the Canucks through five decades of near-misses and heartbreaking losses, with the 2011 Stanley Cup Finals riot illustrating both the passion and the pain of Vancouver hockey. The Canucks play in a city that lives and breathes hockey, with Rogers Arena providing a loud, intense home that has made Vancouver one of the league's toughest road venues. The Canucks are building around young stars like Quinn Hughes and Elias Pettersson, creating hope for a franchise that has reached the Finals three times without winning. Vancouver's beautiful setting and passionate fans make Canucks games an experience that reflects the best of West Coast hockey.
Founded in 1970 as part of NHL expansion, the Canucks reached the Stanley Cup Finals in 1982, 1994, and 2011—losing each time and creating a narrative of playoff heartbreak that defines the franchise. The 1994 run, led by Pavel Bure's electrifying speed and Trevor Linden's leadership, captured Vancouver's imagination before the Rangers ended the dream in seven games. The 2011 team, featuring the Sedin twins, Ryan Kesler, and Roberto Luongo, won the Presidents' Trophy and reached the Finals before losing to Boston in seven games—a series that ended with a devastating Game 7 defeat and the subsequent riot. Henrik and Daniel Sedin became the greatest Canucks ever, their chemistry and skill producing a decade of competitive hockey. Vancouver's championship drought remains one of the longest in the NHL, a source of ongoing frustration for one of hockey's most devoted fanbases.
Source: Claude