Canucks Should Explore Trade With Maple Leafs for the 1st Overall Pick

The Toronto Maple Leafs should be keeping a close eye on Gavin McKenna's ongoing legal situation, considering he's their main target.
Getty
The Toronto Maple Leafs should be keeping a close eye on Gavin McKenna's ongoing legal situation, considering he's their main target.

The rumour mill surrounding the 2026 NHL Draft already makes it feel like it’s going to be a pretty wild summer around the NHL. While most people still expect the Toronto Maple Leafs to simply take Gavin McKenna first overall, there’s another rumour that has quietly started building in the background involving the Vancouver Canucks.

The rumour centres around the Canucks potentially trying to acquire theMaple Leafs win Draft lottery. For Vancouver, this is the kind of opportunity organizations wait years for. They’ve spent a long time trying to fully figure out their long-term core, and McKenna is viewed as one of those players who can completely shift the direction of a franchise. Not just a really good prospect either. A legitimate face-of-the-team type of player.

What the Canucks Would Need to Pay

The hard part, obviously, is convincing the Maple Leafs to even consider moving the pick. Teams almost never trade first overall anymore, especially when the player sitting there is being talked about the way McKenna is right now. If Maple Leafs general manager John Chayka is even willing to listen, the offer probably has to be something that changes the direction of the organization as a whole.

Not just a decent package either. Something massive. If Vancouver seriously wants to move from No. 3 to No. 1, it probably starts with a deal that looks something like this:

Projected Trade

To Toronto:

  • 3rd Overall Pick (2026)
  • 2026 Second-Round Pick (SJS)
  • 2027 First-Round Pick
  • Jonathan Lekkerimäki
  • Tom Willander

To Vancouver:

  • 1st Overall Pick (2026)
  • Matias Maccelli (RFA)

From Toronto’s side, you can at least understand the logic behind thinking about it. They’d still be drafting near the top of the board and likely landing a player like Caleb Malhotra, Ivar Stenberg, or even Keaton Verhoeff, while also adding two really strong prospects in Lekkerimäki and Willander, plus a second-round pick in the 2026 Draft and another first-round pick next year.

For a management group that seems focused on building out depth and reshaping the organization a bit, it’s probably the kind of offer that forces a real conversation behind closed doors. Especially with Chayka now running things. His teams have always leaned more toward long-term asset building and roster flexibility.

Does it Make Sense for Both Teams?

From the Canucks’ perspective, this would be an enormous swing. They’d basically be moving a huge part of their prospect pool for one player. But when that player is McKenna, teams could probably talk themselves into taking that risk pretty quickly.

If McKenna becomes what a lot of people think he can become, potentially one of the best players in hockey a few years from now, then no package is ever really going to look good enough afterward. That’s why there are still a lot of people who think the Maple Leafs should just keep the pick, draft McKenna, and not overcomplicate this. Fans have waited a very long time for this kind of opportunity.

Whether Vancouver is actually willing to pay a price this high is another question entirely. But even the fact these rumours are starting to happen already makes the 2026 Draft feel a lot bigger than normal.

5 Comments

Canucks Should Explore Trade With Maple Leafs for the 1st Overall Pick

Notify of
5 Comments
Follow this thread
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
5
0
Would love your thoughts, please commentx
()
x