The Vancouver Canucks enter the final stretch of a historically difficult 2025-26 season, having already secured the dubious honor of being the first team in the NHL mathematically eliminated from playoff contention. With the postseason out of reach as of March 22, the final games serve as a high-stakes evaluation period for a roster and coaching staff that has struggled through a league-worst goal differential and a string of non-competitive blowouts.
A rare surge of physicality and grit has emerged amidst recent lopsided defeats, including a 4-0 shutout by the Los Angeles Kings and a 7-3 drubbing by the Calgary Flames. Rookie defenceman Zeev Buium earned significant locker room respect by dropping the gloves with Brandt Clarke during the Kings game.

Veteran Brock Boeser praised the grit, stating: “It was awesome. We loved it. It just shows that they care, and they’re getting in there and sticking up for each other. So, you know, it’s great to see, and we’ve got to make sure we maintain that mindset.” This physical push was echoed in the following game against Calgary, which featured a historic heavyweight bout between the Canucks’ 6-foot-9 Curtis Douglas and the Flames’ 6-foot-8 Adam Klapka. The scrap marked Douglas’ first fight as a Canuck and tied the NHL record for the tallest fight in league history.