The Canucks have held preliminary extension talks with defenseman Derek Forbort, Rick Dhaliwal of CHEK reports. The pending unrestricted free agent is coming off surgery on his orbital bone after breaking it in a fight with Wild forward Yakov Trenin, ending his season earlier than planned on April 12.
Forbort, 33, landed a one-year, $1.5MM commitment from Vancouver last summer. He was coming off a three-year deal with the Bruins that ended poorly. His 2023-24 campaign was sidetracked by multiple lower-body injuries and he only made 35 appearances as a result. He didn’t draw into the postseason lineup, either, as Boston reached the second round against the eventual champion Panthers.
A stay-at-home defender only capable of depth minutes at this stage of his career, Forbort struggled with knee issues this year but was able to record 2-9–11 in 54 games with a minus-seven rating. He averaged 17:06 per game with Vancouver, roughly in line with his usage in Boston but technically the lowest deployment of his NHL career since his 14-game rookie trial with the Kings in 2015-16. He contributed 77 blocks and 65 hits and, while his even-strength minutes were limited, was one of the team’s most frequently-used penalty killers alongside Marcus Pettersson, Filip Hronek, and Tyler Myers.
Possession metrics aren’t always the best judge of defensive specialists, given their deployment. That’s true in Forbort’s case, considering he started 62.1% of his shifts in the defensive zone at even strength. His 46.4% Corsi share and 43.4% expected goals share are still underwhelming but not as damning as they would be for a defender deployed in more two-way situations.
Forbort may have earned a small raise on a one or two-year extension since he managed to stay in the lineup for over half the year and was a legitimate factor on the Canucks’ above-average PK (82.6%), but likely not enough to push him much over the $2MM mark against the cap. The Canucks already have $23.6MM committed to their top-four group of Hronek, Myers, Pettersson, and Quinn Hughes next year, and youngsters Victor Mancini and Elias Pettersson (the defenseman) will be in competition for opening-night roles. Re-upping Forbort would presumably mean a lack of activity from Vancouver on the UFA defenseman market this summer unless they pursue an unforeseen trade.
Is it just me or does the article read like it is kinda trolling Forbort?