Canucks Brock Boeser Rising Up the All-Time List

1 min read• Published December 29, 2025 at 10:50 a.m.
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Brock Boeser has been doing his thing in Vancouver for almost ten years now. He’s the kind of player who doesn’t always grab the spotlight, but he shows up when the team needs him. Drafted 23rd overall in 2015, he came in with a reputation as a scorer and didn’t disappoint—29 goals in 62 games in his rookie season (2017–18). Since then, he’s carved out a solid top-six spot. Even with injuries, COVID interruptions, and lineup shuffles, he’s regularly hovered in the 20–30 goal range when healthy, around 25 goals per full season and hit 45 points or more in close to eight seasons. That’s steady, reliable work.

The 2023-24 Season Was Boeser’s Best with the Canucks

The 2023–24 season was Boeser at his peak. He played all 81 games, scored 40 goals, picked up 73 points, and posted a +23 rating. It was the kind of season that proves what you’ve always suspected: Boeser can be elite when the team gives him some stability. Since then, numbers have dipped a little with the team’s ups and downs, but he’s still a consistent scorer. He now has 451 points in 589 games, putting him among the Canucks’ top wingers in history.

Boeser Scores in Big Moments for Vancouver

What really sets Boeser apart is timing. He racks up the big moments—overtime goals, game-winners, key assists. He passed Todd Bertuzzi for 10th on Vancouver’s all-time scoring list, and he’s climbing the ranks in clutch goals alongside names like Tony Tanti, Brendan Morrison, and Daniel Sedin. Whether it’s a tight game or a critical moment, he seems to show up.

Through coaching changes, trades, and constant team turnover, Boeser has stayed steady. Not flashy, not always the headline, but dependable and clutch. For a Canucks team still searching for an identity, having someone like him is a reminder of how valuable quiet, steady production can be over the long haul.

Related: Zeev Buium Brings a Rare Winning Resume to Vancouver