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This slap in the face for the Vancouver Canucks changes everything

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David St-Jean
May 31, 2026  (11:46)
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Apr 14, 2026; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vancouver Canucks forward Elias Pettersson (40) and forward Jake DeBrusk (74) and forward Curtis Douglas (42) and defenseman Filip Hronek (17) and forward Nils Hoglander (21) and forward Aatu Raty (54) and defenseman Zeev Buium (24) and forward Liam Ohgren (92) and forward Ty Mueller (39) celebrate DeBrusk's game winning goal overtime goal against the Los Angeles Kings at Rogers Arena.
Photo credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images

Aatu Räty just made a quiet statement at the World Championship that the Canucks won't enjoy reading on a Saturday afternoon.

In 9 games with Finland, the 23-year-old centre matched the exact goal total he produced over 66 games in Vancouver this season.

Four goals. Same number. Different stage. The gap in sample size is doing the loud talking.

Räty finished the year with 14 points, a -4 rating, and zero power-play goals in 66 NHL appearances on a team that ran out of answers.

His final 10-game stretch was quieter still. One assist. No goals. A -3 rating in that window.

The bottom-six minutes never opened up in Vancouver. The role never expanded. The look on the man advantage never came.

Finland gave the Canucks centre a runway he never got at home

Then he goes home, plays real top-six minutes for Finland, draws PP1 looks, and starts burying pucks. Insider Adam Kierszenblat flagged the split on Saturday.

The post hit 16.6K views in a hurry and lit up Canucks circles for the rest of the afternoon.

Is the player suddenly different? Or is this what happens when a young centre finally gets the rope his NHL deployment refused to hand him?

The Canucks finished the season 32nd overall at 25-49-8, with 58 points and a 216-316 goal differential that tells the whole story.

When your club scores 2.6 goals per game and a $775,000 centre is burying pucks at Worlds, you don't bury him on the depth chart in October. You feed him.

The home record was the real wreckage. 9-27-5 inside Rogers Arena. A roster of veterans played slow and small while younger pieces sat in neutral.

Räty's NHL ceiling is still up for debate. His Vancouver usage this year is not.

The next staff walks into a clean test on opening night. Hand him a real role, or watch a Finnish centre quietly build his market somewhere else.