That is the problem coming out of Vancouver right now. Jim Rutherford has used the word rebuild, but too much of the messaging around it still sounds like a team trying to skip the hard part.
Rutherford said he is not bracing for another year of real pain. He also pointed to Braeden Cootes, Jonathan Lekkerimaki, and this year's 1st-round pick as players who could be ready next season.
That is a strange tone for a club that just finished at the bottom of the league standings. Teams in that spot usually talk about patience, development, and asset building, not about fast-tracking the next step.
Rutherford also said the next general manager could add 2 to 3 character veterans. After the lottery, he followed that by saying the new GM may want to add 1 or 2 players because the Canucks cannot lose that much again.
That sounds less like a deep rebuild and more like an organization trying to dress up a quick fix in rebuild language. It is one thing to admit the roster needs work. It is another to talk like the rough patch is already close to over.
Demko sits right in the middle of that mixed signal too. Rutherford suggested Vancouver could take a big step forward if Demko is healthy, and that puts a lot of weight on one player for a team with much bigger structural issues.
That impatience matters even more with the GM hire still open. Rutherford plans to step down as president of hockey operations after the 2026 draft, but he will help choose the next general manager first.
So this is not just about tone. It is about what kind of executive Vancouver really wants. If the club hires someone because he promises a fast turnaround, then the word rebuild never meant much in the first place.
That is why the chatter around Pierre Dorion hit a nerve in this market. The fear was never only about the name. It was about the idea that ownership might prefer the candidate selling speed over the one selling discipline.
Foote should care about that as much as anyone. A head coach stepping into a fragile situation needs a front office that matches the timeline, not one that talks development while chasing shortcuts.
The Canucks do have young pieces worth building around, and the 3rd overall pick gives them another big chance to add one. But rushing Cootes, Lekkerimaki, or that pick into jobs they are not ready for is how rebuilds get stretched out, not sped up.
So the message from Vancouver still feels split. Jim Rutherford says rebuild, but too much of the plan still sounds like a team trying to jump straight to the upswing before it has earned it.
Source : Canucks are frustratingly sending mixed signals about what the future holds
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YESTERDAY
MAY 9, 2026
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| G | A | PTS | ||
| Jackson Blake | 2 | 1 | 3 | |
| Brock Faber | 1 | 2 | 3 | |
| Kirill Kaprizov | 1 | 2 | 3 | |
| Taylor Hall | - | 3 | 3 | |
| Quinn Hughes | 1 | 1 | 2 | |
| Mats Zuccarello | - | 2 | 2 | |
| Matthew Boldy | 1 | - | 1 | |
| Alex Bump | 1 | - | 1 | |
| Tyson Foerster | 1 | - | 1 | |
| Ryan Hartman | 1 | - | 1 | |
| Nathan MacKinnon | 1 | - | 1 | |
| Logan Stankoven | 1 | - | 1 | |
| Christian Dvorak | - | 1 | 1 | |
| Nazem Kadri | - | 1 | 1 | |
| Travis Konecny | - | 1 | 1 | |
| Gabriel Landeskog | - | 1 | 1 | |
| Porter Martone | - | 1 | 1 | |
| Michael McCarron | - | 1 | 1 | |
| K'Andre Miller | - | 1 | 1 | |
| Jaccob Slavin | - | 1 | 1 | |
| COMPLETE STATS | ||||