The Vancouver Canucks traded Tyler Myers to the Dallas Stars on Wednesday for a 2027 second-round pick and a 2029 fourth-round pick, with Vancouver retaining 50 percent of Myers’ $3 million cap hit. The deal represents a significant shift for the Canucks organization.
General Manager Patrik Allvin made an unfortunate comment earlier Wednesday morning that would quickly look dated. He lamented how slowly the trade market had been developing in advance of Friday’s deadline. Speaking to the media following the Myers deal, Allvin reflected on the leaguewide stasis in the lead-up to deadline day.
GM Patrik Allvin believes the market is too slow right now
“The market is interesting,” Allvin said when asked about the current state of trade discussions.
“I don’t even know if it’s a market at the moment. ” Allvin didn’t realize that Dallas’ acquisition of Myers for draft picks would set in motion an arms race for right-handed defensemen across the league.
By day’s end, the Colorado Avalanche and Utah Mammoth had joined the Stars and Edmonton Oilers in adding right-handed defenders via trades. The Myers trade represents real progress for the Canucks rebuild because it was truly electric.
Trading Kiefer Sherwood was obvious because he was a pending UFA, and then moving Quinn Hughes was necessary once it became clear he wouldn’t re-sign. But Myers? This was a choice. The Canucks didn’t have to move the 36-year-old defenseman.
They chose to do it because accumulating draft capital is the right move for a team at the bottom of the standings. Vancouver successfully monetized a veteran defender and netted reasonable future value. The return arrived in the right format for a rebuilding team.
Draft picks hold fixed value until they’re used, unlike players whose value can depreciate through injury or poor performance. The Canucks now own seven selections in the first two rounds of the 2026 and 2027 drafts. That’s beginning to represent the sort of collection required to turn the franchise around.
Myers held a full no-move clause, giving him complete control over any trade. The Canucks handled this complex situation cleanly. Myers was scratched for three games after Detroit made an offer last week, but the Houston native preferred Dallas.
Vancouver, Dallas, and Myers’ camp navigated a three-dimensional staring contest without public drama. All parties emerged as winners. The Canucks got fair value, Dallas added an experienced top-four capable defender at just $1.5 million against the cap, and Myers joined a Cup contender near his hometown.
Vancouver will need to run this gauntlet repeatedly if it wants to successfully rebuild. The Myers trade proves they can execute these complex deals without creating unnecessary conflict. This is just the start. More difficult trades involving players with longer contracts and less favorable cap hits are coming.
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