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Canucks coaching search is over after Friedman confirmed name and timeline

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Jonathan Ouimet
May 26, 2026  (1:37)
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May 14, 2026; Vancouver, BC, Canada; Daniel Sedin listens to Ryan Johnson speak during a press conference where the Vancouver Canucks name new senior management staff. Henrik Sedin and his twin brother Daniel Sedin have been appointed as co-presidents of hockey operations and Ryan Johnson is now the new general manager of the club at Rogers Arena.
Photo credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images

The Vancouver Canucks coaching search may be days away from a resolution.

Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reported on Donnie & Dhali that the Canucks are working through the Manny Malhotra situation right now, with a decision possible in the next few days.

That's the strongest signal yet that Vancouver's head-coach vacancy is heading toward an actual hire instead of continued interviews.

Friedman doesn't float names without reason. When he says something is being worked through, the framework usually exists. The wait is on the final details.

Malhotra has been an assistant coach at the NHL level for years. The former centerman has built his post-playing career on systems, structure, and the kind of veteran voice young rebuilds tend to lean on.

That profile matches what Vancouver needs in its current spot. The Canucks finished dead last in the league at 25-49-8 with 58 points and 316 goals against. The next bench voice walks into a full reset.

Why the timing of this hire matters more than the name

Free agency opens July 1. The NHL Draft lands June 26. Any incoming head coach needs runway to set systems, evaluate the roster, and put input into the front office's summer plan.

The Canucks can't waste another two weeks on the search. Every day without a coach is a day other organizations get ahead on their off-season planning.

Vancouver's new front office has already signaled there are no untouchables on this roster. Elias Pettersson trade chatter is circling. Filip Hronek's $7.25 million cap hit could be on the move. Malhotra would inherit a roster being actively reshaped.

Is Malhotra the right fit for a rebuild this deep? You could argue both ways. The Canucks need accountability. They also need offensive identity. The next coach has to deliver both.

Honestly, hiring an experienced first-time head coach makes sense at this stage of the cycle. Vancouver doesn't need a veteran retread who's been recycled around the league. They need someone who's earned his shot and is hungry to prove it.

The Canucks ended last season on a 4-6-0 mark across their last 10. The roster needs more than tactical adjustments. It needs a voice the room actually trusts.

Pettersson's mood, Hronek's future, and the rest of the rebuild puzzle all get filtered through whoever stands behind that bench in October.

The next 72 hours may close this chapter. The next three years depend on what comes after it.