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Bad news hits Ryan Johnson just hours into his new role with the Canucks

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Vincent Carbonneau
May 14, 2026  (3:04 PM)
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Jan 12, 2026; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; View of a Vancouver Canucks logo on a jersey worn by a member of the team during the second period at Bell Centre.
Photo credit: David Kirouac-Imagn Images

Ryan Johnson and Adam Foote now sit at the center of Vancouver's first real offseason pressure point.

Johnson's promotion to general manager does more than fill an office. It puts one of the organization's biggest calls right in front of him before summer really gets moving.

The first one is obvious. Does he stick with Foote behind the bench, or does he hand the job to Manny Malhotra and fully reset the coaching track?

That question matters because it is not just about results. It is about development, direction, and whether Johnson wants the NHL club to mirror the trust he already built in Abbotsford.

Foote still has 2 years left on his deal, which makes this more complicated than a simple change for the sake of change. But after a season that bad, no coaching decision is small anymore.

«One of the biggest questions Johnson will need to answer right away is who will be the Canucks' Head Coach next season. At the time of writing, there appear to be two options. Those are either keep Adam Foote or promote Manny Malhotra.» - Adam Kierszenblat

Malhotra is the pressure from the other side. He is well regarded in the organization, he has real momentum, and there is even outside interest building around him.

The Canucks' new GM Ryan Johnson is already facing a major problem

The coaching call is only the first layer. The bigger rebuild question is which veterans Johnson is ready to move once the market opens.

That is where this gets sharp. The report points directly at experienced players with value and term, including Filip Hronek, Elias Pettersson, Jake DeBrusk, and Marcus Pettersson as names Vancouver should at least examine on the trade front.

«As for Malhotra, he has a strong resume as the Head Coach of Abbotsford and is well-regarded by both players and members of the organization. There is also some speculation that he could be a candidate for the open Toronto Maple Leafs job.» - Adam Kierszenblat

That tells you what this offseason may really become. Not a light tune-up. Not a soft pivot. A real attempt to jump-start the rebuild by turning current roster pieces into younger assets.

And if Johnson goes that route, he has to be clear-eyed about who actually fits the next competitive window. Sentiment cannot run this roster now.

There is also the contract layer hanging over the whole summer. Zeev Buium and Liam Öhgren are both eligible to sign extensions on July 1, and the article makes it clear Vancouver could look at long-term bets on both as part of the new core.

That may end up being one of Johnson's biggest tests. Trading veterans is one thing. Locking in young players early is where a rebuild starts to show real conviction.

«When a team is in a rebuild, it needs to capitalize on the trade market by acquiring as many young assets as possible. That often means trading experienced players to contending teams for draft picks and prospects.» - Adam Kierszenblat

So yes, Johnson has the GM title now. But titles are the easy part.

What comes next is harder. Foote or Malhotra. Keep veterans or flip them. Pay the young core now or wait. Johnson's first Canucks offseason is not about one move. It is about whether his first three or four moves all point in the same direction.

Source : 3 Important Questions New Canucks General Manager Ryan Johnson Will Need To Answer During The 2026 Off-Season