The Canucks have lost out on two top free agents they had their eyes on and that they had reportedly submitted offers for, per 'The Fourth Period.' The Vancouver Canucks <a href='https://www.hockeylatest.com/nhl-team/vancouver-canucks/vancouver-canucks-offer-for-christian-dvorak-leaked-publicly-by-nhl-insider' class='lien_marqueur' target='_blank' rel='noopener'>attempted to address center depth via free agency to no avail</a>, and now GM Patrik Allvin must look at other means. <h3>Granlund turned down a three-year deal from the Canucks</h3> The Canucks' top target was Mikael Granlund, multiple sources said. Vancouver had a four-year offer of approximately $6 million annually on the table, but Granlund signed a three-year, $21 million deal with the Anaheim Ducks for $7 million annually. On CHEK's 'Donnie & Dhali - The Team,' <a href='https://x.com/DhaliwalSports' class='lien_marqueur' target='_blank' rel='noopener'>Rick Dhaliwal</a> reiterated Granlund was a top target for Vancouver and the club also had Christian Dvorak in their sights. The 28-year-old center signed a one-year, $5.4 million deal with the Philadelphia Flyers. <div align='center' class='pl20 pr20'><blockquote class='twitter-tweet' data-lang='en'><a href='https://twitter.com/tfp/status/1941138321004277863'><div style='border:1px solid #CCCCCC;border-radius:10px;padding:20px;width:300px;'>Loading from Twitter ...</div></a></blockquote></div> <h3>Dvorak turned town a three year deal from the Canucks</h3> Dhaliwal stated the Canucks may have made Dvorak a three-year, $12 million offer, but he wanted Philadelphia. Meanwhile, Brock Boeser nearly left in free agency. The Canucks did not offer their best proposal, which was a seven-year, $50.25 million pact, until the night before free agency, TFP's David Pagnotta reports. Boeser was originally going to head elsewhere but had a change of heart and signed on the dotted line for Vancouver when the seventh year was thrown in. The search for a new center continues as the Canucks move past a silent free agency. While not many top-quality names remain on the board, perhaps GM Allvin turns his attention to making trades instead.