Curtis Douglas Makes the Canucks Harder to Play Against

2 min read• Published June 12, 2026 at 11:19 a.m.
Featured image
Logo Crest

Curtis Douglas didn’t arrive in Vancouver with fanfare, but he didn’t need it. In a season where the Canucks at times looked too easy to play against, his presence added something more subtle but increasingly important in today’s NHL: consequence. Not just size or fighting majors, but the idea that every shift carries a little more risk for the opposition.

Douglas doesn’t score much, but his value shows up in other ways.

Douglas finished the year with four points in 43 games between Tampa Bay and Vancouver, along with 108 penalty minutes and 10 fights. On paper, that doesn’t move the needle in the modern analytics conversation. But players like Douglas are not really measured in points. They are measured in behaviour change—how often opponents avoid the middle of the ice, how quickly they move the puck under pressure, and whether they finish checks differently because they know someone is on the ice who will respond. That’s where the real value sits.

There is also a quieter layer to this kind of player that teams don’t always talk about publicly. In a young or evolving room, someone like Douglas sets a tone. Not in speeches or systems meetings, but in the everyday reality of practice and shifts. Young players know there is someone willing to push back if things get uncomfortable. That type of informal protection doesn’t show up in box scores, but it does show up in confidence.

Related: Elias Pettersson Is the First Question the Canucks Can’t Duck

Douglas isn't just an enforcer; he's trying to earn a space as a depth player.

Douglas isn’t just a throwback enforcer. He can move through depth roles at centre or wing, and while he is not going to drive offence, he is functional enough to stay in the lineup when needed. His job is narrower and more specific: make the game heavier, particularly against Western Conference teams that thrive on wearing opponents down over time.

And those players, despite how the league has changed, are still in demand. Every contender still needs a few players who can shift the tone of a game when structure breaks down. They don’t stay available long, and they rarely come at a premium price. From Vancouver’s perspective, that matters. Douglas already fits the room, understands the system, and requires minimal financial commitment to retain.

Even if Douglas doesn't play every game, he still can make an impact.

The Canucks do not need him to play every night. They do not need him to score. What they need is a player who changes how other teams approach them when he is in the lineup.

And that, more than anything on a stat sheet, is why he still belongs in the conversation.

Related: Jake DeBrusk Might Be the Canucks’ Most Logical Trade Asset