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Ryan Johnson may have just made things even worse after firing Adam Foote

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Vincent Carbonneau
May 20, 2026  (1:14 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 Ryan Johnson are now right in the middle of Vancouver's bench story after the Canucks shut down a head-coach interview request.

That hits differently now because Adam Foote is out. Vancouver fired Foote on Monday after one season behind the bench, with the club coming off an NHL-low 58-point year.

So this is no longer about protecting someone on Foote's staff.

This is about protecting a coach while the top job is open.

Mike Johnson's report was simple and loud: another team asked to talk to Malhotra about a head coaching role, and Vancouver said no. If that report is right, the Canucks made their stance clear without needing a formal announcement.

Teams do not block those requests by accident. They do it when they believe the coach matters to their own plans.

That is what makes this feel bigger than a routine internal move. Vancouver is acting like Malhotra is not just useful. Vancouver is acting like Malhotra is part of the answer.

He already had real momentum anyway. Malhotra was named Abbotsford's head coach in May 2024 and quickly built more NHL buzz through his work there.

Mike Johnson: Re Canucks: From what I've heard, someone asked to talk to Manny Malhotra as a head coach and Vancouver said no - OverDrive (5/19)

Ryan Johnson just rejected a major request after firing Adam Foote

This is where the timing matters most. Ryan Johnson has just stepped in as general manager, and the Sedins have taken on bigger leadership roles in hockey operations, which means the next coaching choice says a lot about what kind of rebuild they want.

Malhotra fits that picture.

He knows the market. He has NHL experience. He has development value. And he does not feel like a tired retread getting recycled because his name is familiar.

That last part matters in Vancouver right now. After a season bad enough to cost Foote his job, this team should not be chasing comfort. It should be chasing the right teaching voice.

Blocking an interview request does not automatically mean Malhotra is the next Canucks head coach.

It does mean the organization sees enough there to keep another club away.

That is a message.

For the team that asked, it is a dead end. For Vancouver fans, it is a strong hint that Malhotra's value inside the organization has gone up, not down.

And with Foote already fired, there is no reason to frame Malhotra as a background piece anymore.

He looks like a coach the Canucks do not want to lose.