TL;DR
Thatcher Demko has struggled with significant hip injuries over the past two seasons, limiting his playtime with the Vancouver Canucks. After undergoing hip surgery, he is hopeful this will resolve his ongoing issues.
Thatcher Demko believes that this is it.
For the past two years, Demko said, he’s been “playing with zero degrees of internal rotation in the hip.” Since starting Game 1 of the Vancouver Canucks’ 2024 Stanley Cup Playoff series against the Nashville Predators and missing every post-season game after that, Demko has only played in 43 games for the Canucks. He didn’t make his season-debut in 2024–25 until December 10 and missed two more week to months-long stretches of time until ultimately finishing the season with 23 games played. This season saw him take a weekend away for maintenance, miss a month of action from November 11 to December 11, and exit a January 10 game against the Toronto Maple Leafs that would be his last of the season.
To put it in Demko’s words, “it’s brutal, quite frankly.”
But Demko’s most recent operation, a hip surgery that ended his 2025–26 season early at the end of January, looks like it could provide the solution to all of the injury problems he’s faced these past few seasons — according to the goaltender.
“I think that this last operation that I had is going to be the answer for all that. So it’s kind of like that one last time going through all this, hopefully,” Demko explained during Vancouver’s end-of-season media availability on Friday. “Obviously it’s a game, and you don’t know what the future holds as far as injuries. Anyone can get hurt any night, but just some of the nagging stuff I had, hopefully kind of dissipates. We’ve addressed the larger picture. That’s kind of where my mind frame is at right now.”
The decision to end his season early to undergo this procedure was not taken lightly. Demko took on the opinions of many within the Canucks organization, weighing how this could impact both him and his play long-term, as well as the team moving forward.
“We had glimpses, kind of coming into this season, that there might be some underlying problems that were causing some of the issues that I was having. It is such a major surgery that I had done that it was kind of like our last resort. You’re trying to play through things and find a way to navigate through some of that without having to take the drastic measures that we ended up taking. But I think at a certain point, we just realized that I wasn’t really able to, one, stay healthy, and two, I wasn’t really able to play at the standard that I’m used to playing at, so we sat down as a group, sat down with with Jim Rutherford and our medical staff, and made the decision that this was kind of the best thing for me moving forward.”