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Elliotte Friedman ignites new controversy surrounding Vancouver

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Vincent Carbonneau
May 12, 2026  (7:24)
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Jan 12, 2026; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; View of a Vancouver Canucks logo on a jersey worn by a member of the team during the second period at Bell Centre.
Photo credit: David Kirouac-Imagn Images

Ryan Johnson and Adam Foote are still waiting, and Vancouver's GM search suddenly feels a lot less settled than it did a few hours ago.

That is the real shift from Elliotte Friedman's latest comments. The first one came with a warning shot toward Nashville.

Friedman said:

«The fact the Predators have yet to make a [management] hire has me wondering, if [Ryan Johnson] does not get this job in Vancouver, if [Nashville] will circle back.»

That line matters because it turns Johnson into more than a Canucks candidate. It makes him a name with another lane still open if Vancouver goes a different way.

Then came the second hit, and it cut against the rush around Evan Gold.

Friedman said :

«There were reports earlier Monday about Evan Gold being the new GM, all I was told about that was it's premature.»

That one word changes the feel of the whole story. Premature does not mean wrong forever. It means not done now.

Major controversy growing after Friedman disputes leaked Canucks report

And that is why both quotes fit together so cleanly. One keeps Johnson alive, with a possible Nashville fallback. The other cools off the idea that Gold has already crossed the line first.

For the Canucks, that says the process is still moving. Jim Rutherford has already said he plans to step down as president of hockey operations after the 2026 draft, though he will help hire the next general manager first and remain as an adviser.

That makes this a bigger hire than a routine front-office change. The next GM is not just filling a desk. He is stepping into a structure that is already shifting above him.

Foote is in the middle of that too. He was named Vancouver's 22nd head coach, and the person who gets this job is going to help shape what the next phase around him looks like.

Johnson still makes sense in that picture. He already knows the organization, already has a hand in Abbotsford, and already looks like a candidate who would not need much time to get moving.

Gold still makes sense too, which is why Friedman did not dismiss the buzz outright. He just made it clear that people are pushing the story harder than the finish line allows right now.

That is the smooth read on where this sits tonight. Ryan Johnson is still live. Evan Gold is still live. Nashville may still matter. And Vancouver is not done deciding.