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A major GM candidate just snubbed the Canucks

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Jonathan Ouimet
May 2, 2026  (1:37)
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Apr 14, 2026; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vancouver Canucks forward Jake DeBrusk (74) during a stop in play against the Los Angeles Kings in the third period at Rogers Arena.
Photo credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images

Vancouver has a hole at the top of hockey operations, and David Pagnotta dropped a name Friday that put the search in plain view.

The Canucks had internal interest in talking to Brad Treliving. Treliving has no interest in the conversation going further.

Pagnotta said it on Leafs Morning Take this week.

The fit isn't there from the candidate's side, and Vancouver now goes shopping somewhere else.

That's a small line with a loud message about how this job looks from the outside.

The Canucks finished the season at 25-49-8 for 58 points. Last in the NHL. Goal differential of 216 scored, 316 allowed.

Their final ten games went 4-6-0 with the season already buried. The home record came in at 9-27-5, which is its own kind of warning to any executive reading the listing.

Why Treliving's pass should worry every Canucks fan

Adam Foote took over as head coach last May.

He inherits a roster that lost 49 times and now operates without a long-term general manager in place to give him cover.

Treliving sees that picture and walks the other way.

He spent over a decade running Calgary's front office before his Toronto stint, and he knows what a real rebuild costs.

The Maple Leafs job didn't end in glory either.

Toronto missed the playoffs at 32-36-14 and 78 points, finishing 28th overall on a seven-game losing skid. Treliving is one of the names attached to that fall.

You'd think a GM coming off a disappointing exit would jump at a fresh chair. He didn't. That's the part that should sting in Vancouver.

Hiring an NHL general manager is a little like recruiting a chef to a restaurant where the previous staff burned the kitchen down. The salary is real.

The dining room is empty. Most candidates politely keep walking.

The Canucks aren't a roster patch away from contention.

The pipeline, the cap structure, and the locker room culture all need addressing in the same window.

Whoever signs up is committing to two or three painful years before the standings move. Treliving has options. This wasn't one of them.

The candidate pool now narrows in a meaningful way.

Vancouver's ownership can pivot to a first-time hire willing to take the swing, or extend bigger title and budget to a name with leverage.

Foote spends another month waiting to find out who his boss will be. The roster spends another summer waiting for direction.

Every other name attached to this search now arrives with a quiet question: did you say no first too?