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Elliotte Friedman just dropped a major Manny Malhotra update that changes everything in Vancouver

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Vincent Carbonneau
May 30, 2026  (4:07 PM)
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May 14, 2026; Vancouver, BC, Canada; Daniel Sedin and Henrik Sedin and Ryan Johnson smile after 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

Manny Malhotra and Adam Foote still look aligned in Vancouver, and the latest update should calm some of the noise around this search.

That is the real takeaway.

For a few days, there had been enough chatter around the Canucks coaching situation to make people wonder if something had stalled.

Elliotte Friedman pushed back on that.

He said he is not concerned about the Malhotra situation right now, and he still believes things are moving in the proper direction.

That matters because coaching searches can get messy fast once doubt starts leaking out in pieces.

This one suddenly feels steadier again.

Malhotra has been around this organization long enough that his name never felt random. He knows the market, knows the room, and knows exactly what Vancouver has to fix after a season that forced the club to look hard at its own identity.

That is why Friedman's wording carries weight.

He did not say the job is done.

He did not say a decision is coming tomorrow.

But he did make it sound like the track has not changed.

" Elliotte Friedman: Re Canucks coaching: I'm not concerned about the Manny Malhotra situation as it stands right now, I still think as we sit here...I still think that things are moving in the proper direction - 32 Thoughts (5/29) "

A massive Manny Malhotra development just changed everything for the Canucks

That is the interesting part.

When a well-connected voice says he is not concerned, it usually means the process still has life even if the outside world is getting impatient.

And in Vancouver, impatience comes quickly.

The Canucks are not only hiring a coach. They are trying to reset the tone around the whole team. That means this decision is about more than systems and line matching. It is about who can command the room and give the next phase of this club a cleaner identity.

Malhotra makes sense in that frame.

He brings familiarity without feeling stale, and he gives the Canucks someone who understands both development and pressure.

That is a useful mix for a team still trying to climb out of a frustrating stretch.

The bigger point is this.

If Friedman thought things were drifting off course, he would have said so. Instead, he said the direction still looks proper.

That is not a guarantee.

It is still a meaningful sign.

For Canucks fans, that probably means the same thing.

Do not mistake silence for trouble.

Do not mistake waiting for collapse.

This search may not be wrapped up yet, but Manny Malhotra still sounds like a candidate very much alive in it.

And right now, that is the headline Vancouver needed.