SEARCH


Major twist in Canucks GM search is turning heads

PUBLICATION
Vincent Carbonneau
May 2, 2026  (5:12 PM)
SHARE THIS STORY

Dec 21, 2023; Dallas, Texas, USA; A view of the NHL puck and Stars logo and hockey stick and the face-off circle during the game between the Dallas Stars and the Vancouver Canucks at the American Airlines Center.
Photo credit: Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

Quinn Hughes and Adam Foote now sit closer to Vancouver’s next front-office decision as the Canucks move this search into face-to-face meetings.

That is the biggest update here. After nearly two weeks of Zoom interviews, Vancouver has started bringing candidates to town, which means this process is no longer broad theory. It is down to the people who made a real impression early.

And that changes the stakes. Once candidates are flying in, the club is no longer collecting names. It is testing fit, presence, and whether someone can handle a market that gets loud fast.

Shane Doan is one of the names still alive, and that stands out for a reason. Vancouver asked Toronto for permission to speak with him earlier in the search, and there has been steady belief around the league that the Canucks like him.

Evan Gold is also still in the mix, which says Vancouver is not locked into one type of background. Gold brings a different résumé than Doan, and that matters in a search that has looked wide from the start.

Ryan Johnson remains a factor too, and that may be the most important internal detail. If the Canucks go outside the organization, questions about Johnson’s future do not go away. If they stay with him, the club is betting familiarity can steady a messy reset.

The search also still appears open enough for other names to linger around the edges. Jamie Langenbrunner, Brad Pascall, Jeff Tambellini, Kevyn Adams, and Brett Peterson have all been tied to the process as Vancouver works toward a final call.

“The process just took a serious turn behind the scenes. What started as routine interviews is now something much bigger. And not everyone expected who made it this far.”
– Jim Rutherford

Major twist in Canucks GM search is raising serious questions

This is why the in-person phase matters more than another rumor dump. The Canucks are not just filling a title. They are trying to decide how this operation should look around Foote and Hughes after a season that forced a hard reset.

That part is easy to see. Vancouver does not need another soft hire or a ceremonial one. It needs someone who can run the draft, sort the roster, and give the organization a cleaner line of command.

Doan and Gold feel like the two names with the most momentum outside the building. Johnson feels like the name that keeps the internal lane alive. That is a real fork in the road.

“Sources say the final stage is already shifting the direction of the franchise. Some candidates are rising fast… while others are quietly fading out. The next move could surprise a lot of people.” – Elliotte Friedman

One path gives Vancouver a fresh voice from outside. The other leans on someone who already knows the market, the roster, and the pressure points inside the room.

“After weeks of virtual talks, things are getting real fast. The shortlist is tighter, the pressure is higher… and one decision could change everything.”
– Francesco Aquilini

Either way, this search has moved past window-shopping. The Canucks are now bringing finalists into the building, and that usually means the hardest conversations are next.

The calendar matters too. Vancouver will want this settled well before the June 26 and 27 draft, which is why this next round feels like the point where the board finally starts to shrink.

Source : Here's the latest on the Vancouver Canucks' GM search & Canucks: Search for GM moves to in-person interviews