#NHLDraft tickets go on sale May 23 and the limited inventory is expected to sell fast! #Canucks Season Ticket Members will get priority access beginning this Thursday. nhl.com/canucks/news/v…
Nation Sites
The Nation Network
CanucksArmy has no direct affiliation to the Vancouver Canucks, Canucks Sports & Entertainment, NHL, or NHLPA
Canucks release ticket information about 2019 NHL Entry Draft

Photo credit: NHL.com
May 14, 2019, 17:00 EDTUpdated: May 26, 2019, 17:15 EDT
We are five and half weeks away from the 2019 NHL Entry Draft and the Canucks have released information about the event:
As always, the draft is split up over two days with Day One beginning at 5 pm on Friday, June 21st and then Day Two commencing at 10 am the following morning. The full ticket information is below:
Round 1: Friday, June 21 at 5:00 pm
- Ticket Price: $27.20
- Seating: Lower Bowl: Assigned seating
- Upper Bowl: Assigned seating
- Ticket Limit: Four (4) seats per account
Rounds 2-7: Saturday, June 22 at 10:00 am
- Ticket Price: $11.50
- Seating: Lower Bowl: Assigned seating
- Upper Bowl: General admission
- Ticket Limit: Eight (8) seats per account
The Friday night is more of the event for the weekend as it is broadcast on television and thus is more a spectacle with breaks between picks. While the Saturday is a whirlwind of picks that happen extremely quickly.
Although it says that you can purchase lower bowl seats, there are limited amounts due to the lower bowl seating being “primarily reserved for Draft-eligible players and their families, broadcast locations, and related media needs”.
No matter what it happens, it’s a fantastic event for hockey fans as they get a look at the future of the NHL realizes their dreams.
Breaking News
- NHL Notebook: Mammoth match Devils offer sheet to Barrett Hayton
- Milestone watch: Boeser has a chance to become a top-5 goal scorer in Canucks history next season
- 5 teams who could be interested in Canucks’ Jake DeBrusk post-free agency
- Ex-Canuck centreman David Kämpf signs in Czechia
- Rogers shutters Vancouver’s Sportsnet 650 in mass radio station closures
