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Canucks legend just dropped blunt honesty on a return and fans are stunned

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Jonathan Ouimet
May 22, 2026  (1:28)
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May 14, 2026; Vancouver, BC, Canada; The Vancouver Canucks promoted Henrik Sedin (left) to co-president during a press conference at Rogers Arena.
Photo credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images

Mike Gillis isn't the GM in Vancouver anymore, but he's making one thing clear. If the Sedin twins or Ryan Johnson pick up the phone, he's answering.

"I would absolutely help them out," Gillis told Sekeres and Price on Thursday. Not in a formal role. Just a former GM offering ammunition to the people now running his old building.

That's the line every Canucks fan circled. The guy who ran the front office from 2008 to 2014 publicly endorsing the new regime in a market where endorsements are rare.

The context matters. Vancouver finished the year 25-49-8 for 58 points. Dead last in the NHL at 32nd overall. The wheels didn't come off. They were never on.

A goal differential of -100 tells you the rest. 216 goals for, 316 against. At home, the Canucks went 9-27-5. Rogers Arena was a tomb.

Gillis hands the new front office a survival guide

Gillis's advice was short and pointed. Authenticity. Integrity. Patience. Autonomy. And one more thing that any Canadian-market exec learns the hard way.

"They have to stick with it no matter what's going on around them," he said. Translation, ignore the noise. Vancouver eats executives who flinch.

He'd know. Gillis admitted on the show that the chatter, the talk-radio churn, the postgame opinion factory, all of it got to him at times during his run.

Here's the rhetorical question every Canucks fan should sit with. If a Stanley Cup finalist GM was rattled by this market, what does it do to first-time front-office people?

That's why the Gillis lifeline matters. He's not running the team. He's offering institutional memory to a group walking into a job that ate his predecessors.

The full conversation lived in Sekeres and Price's interview, picked up by The Province. Gillis spoke calmly, no shots, no shade, just a guy genuinely wanting the next regime to survive the storm he survived.

Vancouver's last game was a 6-1 loss in Edmonton. That's how this season ended. A scoreboard beating in a building where the Oilers were busy losing their own coach.

The Sedins are now running point on a rebuild while Foote tries to stop the bleeding behind the bench. Gillis is sitting by the phone.

Whether they call is the next chapter.