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The Canucks might have found their own Tim Stutzle at No. 3

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David St-Jean
May 6, 2026  (12:42)
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Nov 23, 2024; Ottawa, Ontario, CAN; Vancouver Canucks center Aatu Raty (54) faces off against Ottawa Senators center Tim Stutzle (18) in the second period at the Canadian Tire Centre.
Photo credit: Marc DesRosiers-Imagn Images

Adam Foote's Canucks landed the 3rd overall pick at last night's lottery, putting Vancouver in striking distance of Ivar Stenberg, the Swede who openly models his game after Tim Stutzle.

Vancouver moves down from the projected slot and now sits at three. That changes every conversation in the building this morning. It means Gavin McKenna will not be available.

Stenberg told The Prospect Don he built his game around Stutzle and Lucas Raymond. Two creative European forwards with skating, edge, and finishing touch. The fit is right there.

Vancouver closed the year 25-49-8 with 58 points. A -100 goal differential. The kind of math that drags any front office toward youth, speed, and offensive talent.

The Canucks finished 32nd overall and went 9-27-5 at Rogers Arena. Foote inherited a building that stopped scaring anyone. A top-three pick is the first real lifeline.

Look at Brock Boeser's season. 22 goals, but a -48 rating across 75 games. The veteran scoring is there. The structural offense around him is not.

Why a Stutzle-style winger fits Vancouver's roster vacuum

Elias Pettersson finished with 15 goals and 36 assists in 74 games. A -30 rating. The Canucks need a winger who can make the top-line center's life simpler again.

Filip Hronek logged 49 points from the back end. The blue line moves the puck. The forward group can't finish what gets generated. That's where Stenberg enters the conversation.

The Stutzle comp is loaded. Stutzle went 3rd overall in 2020 and grew into a legitimate top-six driver in Ottawa. Vancouver is now drafting in the same slot.

Stenberg in the yellow Sweden jersey, backwards cap, calmly explaining the comparison without overselling it. He didn't blink. That's the kind of poise scouts circle in red.

There's risk too. Modeling your game after Stutzle and being the next Stutzle are two different sentences. Vancouver fans have been burned by hype before.

The Canucks' last 10 games told the same story as the season. A 4-6-0 stretch. No late surge, no spark, just the slow walk into the lottery.

Foote was hired on May 14, 2025. A 3rd overall pick now reframes his runway. Patience is easier to sell when the prize lands on draft floor in June.

Vancouver hasn't drafted at three since the days when expectations defined a generation. The next eight weeks will tell us what this front office actually believes about its own roster.