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Allvin says Canucks not interested in rentals or a rebuild

The Vancouver Canucks’ goals for this year’s trade deadline is probably one of the biggest mysteries in the league.

Amidst a season that has seen the Canucks trade JT Miller, and may also see them move on from Elias Pettersson and Brock Boeser, it’s hard to get a true grasp of what Vancouver is going to do by the March 7 deadline.

According to Canucks general manager Patrik Allvin in an interview with Sportsnet’s Iain MacIntyre that was published on Tuesday, the team will probably fall somewhere in between. While he is looking to improve the team, Canucks fans shouldn’t expect them to pursue any traditional rentals like last year’s acquisitions of Nikita Zadorov and Elias Lindholm.

However, that doesn’t mean that the Canucks aren’t going to make any additions. Instead, they’ll focus on acquiring players with a long-term outlook with the team.

Vancouver has already acquired Marcus Pettersson and Drew O’Connor using assets they acquired in the Miller trade, with both players having already re-signed with the team. Should the Canucks make any other trades before Friday’s trade deadline, expect them to lean more in that direction. However, it won’t be for the intention of another rebuild.

“When you’re looking at teams that are talking about rebuilding, they’re looking to get players like Quinn Hughes and Elias Pettersson,” Allvin said to Sportsnet. “We have those guys. There’s not a guarantee that [players like that] are going to be available in the draft. And if they are, they might be good four or five years from now. Finding superstars like Quinn, it’s hard. I believe that with this group, we’re just going to continue to build and get better. I don’t envision us to take a step back. The results might not be the way we want, but I don’t envision us to take a step back.”

Ultimately, it appears that Allvin and the Canucks have no intent on selling any of those big names for assets meant for the future. If they acquire any picks or prospects in return for Pettersson or Boeser, they’d prefer to utilize those assets to get players who are of that ilk and not wait it out to see if these assets can become a Hughes or Pettersson-type player down the road.

We’ll see what this management group is able to do by Friday’s trade deadline.

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/allvin-says-vancouver-canucks-not-interested-rentals-or-rebuild
 
Canucks NHL Trade Deadline rumours and notes ft. Frank Seravalli: Canucks Conversation

On today’s episode of Canucks Conversation, David Quadrelli and Harman Dayal welcomed NHL insider Frank Seravalli to discuss the latest trade rumours surrounding the Vancouver Canucks as they head into Friday’s NHL Trade Deadline.

Brock Boeser’s Future in Vancouver


Seravalli started by breaking down the likelihood of Brock Boeser staying in Vancouver past the deadline.

“I would say 40% chance they extend him, 25% chance they keep him as a rental—so 65% chance Brock Boeser is a Vancouver Canuck past Friday at noon, and a 35% chance of him being traded,” said Frank.

He emphasized that the decision on Boeser ties directly into Vancouver’s overall direction.

“It’s a philosophical conversation: do we need to vastly re-tool this team, and is Pettersson moving, whether it’s now or before the draft? Miller’s gone. If Pettersson is gone and if you remove Boeser, you have zero chance. Pack it in for the next three-plus years. I don’t care what kind of magic Quinn Hughes can create—you don’t have a chance to compete. No team is going to give back assets that could be used in a competitive fashion for the now. The only teams trading for Boeser are teams in contender mode.”

The Canucks are at a crossroad, and management will have to make the tough choice of whether it makes sense to lock Boeser into a long-term deal with the future uncertain.

“At one point, Brock was supposed to be the key secondary scoring piece for a team that was going to contend for a Stanley Cup, and now we’re not only potentially missing the playoffs this year, but if things go haywire with Pettersson and we have to step back for a couple years, does it make sense to have Boeser extended on a six-year deal if it’s going to take us three years to compete again?”

The Risk of Losing Leverage in a Pettersson Trade


The conversation then shifted to Elias Pettersson and the Canucks’ looming decision on his future.

“This decision is critically important. The last thing you can allow is for Pettersson to have any leverage in the process. You can’t be held hostage by a guy you don’t want there and who isn’t productive on a massive contract,” Seravalli said.

“A recent real-world example: Seth Jones gave the Blackhawks two teams to which he would accept a trade—Dallas and Florida. The Stars have so many young players to pay, starting with Wyatt Johnston, that they wouldn’t get involved at all. So suddenly, the Panthers were the only team left Jones was willing to accept a deal to. If Florida found that out, they could have leveraged the hell out of the Blackhawks, but instead, Chicago got a deal that worked out for them.”

The Canucks cannot afford to let Pettersson dictate terms on a potential trade.

“The last thing you want is Pettersson telling your team he’s only going to accept a trade to X team. He can do and say whatever he wants,” Seravalli continued. “You can’t let it get to that point. And when you talk about him maybe rebounding and being your best chance at a number one centre, I understand that thought process. But I’m going to side with 16 months of evidence that not only is Pettersson broken, but he’s especially broken in Vancouver. If we were going to see him put the pieces back together, we would’ve started to see it at the 4 Nations or after the Miller trade.

“He was around his countrymen, speaking his own language, getting a shot of confidence, playing with talented players he knows and likes—but all it did for me was remove every excuse possible for him. You’re making this much money; you have to produce and be a driver.”

Has Pettersson’s Trade Value Already Plummeted?


Seravalli believes Pettersson’s value has already declined significantly, making a potential trade even more complicated.

“There’s not one team in the league that could acquire Elias Pettersson right now and feel good about it,” said Seravalli. “At least right now, there’s some mystique—teams thinking, ‘We believe we could be the one to unlock that 100-point player we once saw.’ But the longer this goes on, the more we see, the less likely someone is going to buy on that. And not only that, I think we’re already at the point where his value has plummeted so much that I don’t know that there is a return for him.”

With a long-term contract in place, the financial commitment alone makes a trade difficult.

“You’re asking for someone to take on 80+ million dollars. I don’t know how you could extract a return on top of that with the risk someone will be taking. He’s basically at the point in time where he’s looking at a million dollars per goal. You can find a team—with the cap increasing the way it is—that might be willing to take the risk. But the risk is heavy enough alone, and the acquisition cost on top of it is too much.”

“If you’re the Canucks, you have to focus on what’s the bigger risk—losing him for less than ideal value and watching his play bounce back, or being stuck with this contract for the next seven years and significantly impacting our ability to build a team?”

With the trade deadline just days away, the Canucks have some major decisions to make regarding both Boeser and Pettersson. Whether they choose to retool around Hughes or commit to a longer rebuild could shape the team’s trajectory for years to come.

You can watch the full segment below:

Get ready, hockey fans! The Daily Faceoff Deadline is happening on March 7th from 11 AM to 4 PM Eastern, and you won’t want to miss it. We’ll be LIVE, breaking down every trade and big move as it happens, with instant reactions and expert analysis from the Daily Faceoff crew. Plus, we’ve got special guests lined up throughout the show, offering exclusive insights from some of the biggest names in the game. From blockbuster trades to surprise moves, we’re covering it all. Tune in to the Daily Faceoff YouTube channel and follow Daily Faceoff socials on March 7th to catch all the action!


Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/vancou...notes-ft-frank-seravalli-canucks-conversation
 
Ex-Canuck Vinny Desharnais traded to Sharks for 5th round pick

A former member of the Vancouver Cancuks’ blue line is on the move again.

On Wednesday, the San Jose Sharks acquired defenceman Vincent Desharnais from the Pittsburgh Penguins for a fifth-round pick in the 2028 NHL Draft.

#sjsharks have acquired D Vinny Desharnais from #letsgopens in exchange for a 2028 5th Round Pick.

— Frank Seravalli (@frank_seravalli) March 6, 2025

It’s the second time in a little over a month that the 28-year-old is on the move. Desharnais started the season in Vancouver. On Feb. 1, just hours after the Canucks sent J.T. Miller to the New York Rangers, Desharnais, along with Danton Heinen and prospect Melvin Fernstrom were traded to the Penguins for defenceman Marcus Pettersson and forward Drew O’Connor.

Desharnais came to Vancouver after two seasons with the Edmonton Oilers. The Laval, Quebec native signed a two-year contract with the Canucks wth an AAV of $2 million.

In 34 games in Vancouver, Desharnais notched three assists, posting a plus/minus of -5 while averaging just under 16 minutes of ice time. He only ended up playing 10 games with Pittsburgh before being sent to San Jose, not registering a point while skating over 14 minutes of ice time per game, with a -4 rating.

Desharnais certainly struggled during his tenure in Vancouver. He was a healthy scratch multiple times and didn’t perform well enough to knock guys like Derek Forbort out of the lineup. It’s hard to say he received a fair shake with a struggling team in Pittsburgh. Now, with the plum-last Sharks, Desharnais should get plenty of ice time to get a rhythm in the everyday lineup.

The 6-foot-7 rearguard earned his deal after having a coming-out season last year in Edmonton. In 78 games, Desharnais scored a goal and 10 assists for 11 points, posting a +3 rating while averaging 15:44 of ice time.

In 158 career NHL games, Desharnais has scored a goal and 18 assists for 19 points. He also posted three assists in 28 Stanley Cup Playoff games with the Oilers.

The Sharks (17-37-9) have the NHL’s worst record, two points behind the Chicago Blackhawks. The Penguins (24-30-10) are last in the Metropolitan Division, eight points back of the last Wild Card spot in the Eastern Conference.



Get ready, hockey fans! The Daily Faceoff Deadline is happening on March 7th from 11 AM to 4 PM Eastern, and you won’t want to miss it. We’ll be LIVE, breaking down every trade and big move as it happens, with instant reactions and expert analysis from the Daily Faceoff crew. Plus, we’ve got special guests lined up throughout the show, offering exclusive insights from some of the biggest names in the game. From blockbuster trades to surprise moves, we’re covering it all. Tune in to the Daily Faceoff YouTube channel and follow Daily Faceoff socials on March 7th to catch all the action!

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/ex-van...harnais-traded-san-jose-sharks-5th-round-pick
 
Canucks: Is Pius Suter is the best rental centre available at the 2025 NHL Trade Deadline?

The Vancouver Canucks haven’t had much of the best anything throughout the 2024/25 season. But they might just have the best rental centre available in the entire NHL at the 2025 Trade Deadline, and that’s something that might just matter.

That rental centre is, of course, Pius Suter.

We know that Suter has played all three forward positions for Vancouver during his two-year tenure, but he’s been a full-time centre ever since JT Miller was shipped out of town, and on Wednesday’s matchup against the Anaheim Ducks – the Canucks’ last before the deadline – Suter lined up as the 2C on a line with Jake DeBrusk and Brock Boeser.

He’s, at the very least, more of a centre than a lot of the other pending UFAs who happen to be listed as centres on NHL.com or Puckpedia.

And being an actual centre is something that really counts when it comes to determining Trade Deadline value.

The centre position is one that virtually any playoff-bound will try to reinforce if they can. Like defensive depth, one can never really have too many centres. Any centre can always be converted to the wing – and Suter especially so – but only a handful of wings every successfully convert to centre. It’s a position with some very specific value, is what we’re saying, and one at which it could prove very lucrative to be leading the market.

Which is where the Canucks possibly find themselves heading into Friday.

As of this writing, Suter technically ranks 11th overall in scoring amongst centres who are set to become unrestricted free agents this summer. But we have to say ‘technically,’ because many of the players listed ahead of him aren’t really centres. Mikko Rantanen, the top-scoring ‘centre’ this year, has only ever performed short stints in the middle, and is far more typically thought of as a winger. The same definitely goes for Ryan Donato and Brad Marchand, both of whom are confusingly listed as pivots on most sites.

The rest of the actual UFA centres who are outscoring Suter at the moment can mostly be sorted into the ‘not available’ category. Matt Duchene and Mikael Granlund (post-trade) play for the Dallas Stars, a team well on its way to a meaningful playoff run. John Tavares won’t be leaving Toronto anytime soon. Claude Giroux seems entrenched in Ottawa (and is also more of a winger these days.) And Sam Bennett definitely won’t be going anywhere quite yet (though we do think he’s an excellent summer signing target for the Canucks, but more on that after the Trade Deadline.)

No, the only other UFA centres to both outscore Suter and potentially be available at the 2025 Trade Deadline are Brock Nelson and Jack Roslovic. And both of them come with caveats.

We’ve heard conflicting reports about Nelson’s availability. Some think he’ll be traded for a haul, and others think GM Lou Lamoriello is leaning toward re-signing him. The Islanders, just four points back of a playoff spot as of this writing, could also be considering the ol’ self-rental route with Nelson.

Suffice it to say that if Nelson does hit the trade block, he’ll be the best rental centre available, and by a pretty long shot. But if he doesn’t…

Then we’re pretty much down to Suter and Roslovic. And on that note, we’ve got to mention that Roslovic – a player the Canucks reportedly had some interest in earlier in the season – is also far more of a winger these days than he is a centre, though like Suter, he’s comfortable at any position.

We’ll also note that Roslovic is outscoring Suter by a single point (29 to 28) with one more game played (61 to 60), so offensively-speaking, they’re virtually identical.

In other parts of the game, Suter is also probably the more well-rounded. He’s almost always had better defensive stats, and even in this 2024/25 season, in which Roslovic has played for a much stronger team than has Suter, their rate of expected goals are quite similar, with Roslovic slightly edging out Suter to the tune of 51.27% to 50.43%. And that’s with Suter taking on tougher matchups (tougher than league average), in general, and definitely more matchups at the actual centre position.

There’s an argument to be made on either side here, but for our money, Suter would be the much more impactful acquisition for a playoff-bound team.

And beyond those two? Then we really hit the bottom of the centre barrel. Past Suter and Roslovic, the next-best UFA centre available might be San Jose’s Luke Kunin, or maybe St. Louis’ Radek Faksa. Or maybe our old friend, New Jersey’s Curtis Lazar.

There’s a steep drop-off, is what we’re saying, from the likes of a middle-six player like Suter and the clearly bottom-line centre talents that make up the rest of the field.

That’s just a terrific market position for the Canucks to find themselves in as they look to move Suter between now and noon on Friday.

Another prominent UFA centre, Seattle’s Yanni Gourde, just got traded to Tampa Bay as part of a truly massive package. Now, there was another Kraken, Oliver Bjokstrand, involved, and he probably made up a larger portion of the value in the overall deal. But that value included two first round picks and a second rounder, and Gourde must have made for at least the equivalent of one of those two firsts.

Gourde, for what it’s worth, has scored at the exact same rate as Suter this season in more limited games. He’s almost certainly considered the more well-rounded centre between the two, even if his game hasn’t aged particularly well.

We’re not here to argue that Suter is more valuable, overall, than Gourde. But the value Gourde returned could be seen as an indication of what teams might be willing to pay for centre depth at this Trade Deadline. And with Gourde now off the market and back with the Lightning, that’s one fewer centre – out of an already miniscule pool – that Suter is ‘competing’ with for the top ranking as a rental centre.

Like we said at the outset, it hasn’t been a season of ‘bests’ for the Vancouver Canucks. But heading into Friday with the best rental centre available is still worth something, and that something is almost certainly a useful future asset or two.

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/vancou...t-rental-centre-available-2025-trade-deadline
 
Canucks listening to offers on Pettersson before NHL Trade Deadline: report

According to Elite Prospect’s Cam Robinson, the Vancouver Canucks are again listening on offers on forward Elias Pettersson:

I'm hearing that Vancouver is once again listening on Elias Pettersson ahead of tomorrow's deadline.

— Cam Robinson (@Hockey_Robinson) March 6, 2025

The report came Thursday afternoon, just under 21 hours until the NHL Trade Deadline. Robinson further highlighted more of what he’s hearing:

“But teams kept calling. In previous days and weeks, the club had told them that they were holding Pettersson for now and waiting to see how things went with Miller gone. However, it appears that they are more open to actively listening to see if there’s a rich enough return to make it worthwhile.”

It became evident that one of JT Miller and Elias Pettersson needed to be traded, and when the club decided to move on from Miller, they believed that Pettersson would turn his game around. However, that hasn’t happened. Pettersson has just three assists in 11 games.

Despite the trade, Pettersson remained on Frank Seravalli’s Trade Targets board. But shortly after, Robinson again reported that the Canucks had officially taken Pettersson off the market. The belief around the league was that the Canucks were going to allow Pettersson to ride out the remainder of the season, evaluate his play, and make a decision on his future in the offseason.

But these reports now indicate that the club is back to listening to offers on their freshly signed $11.6 million player.

Robinson later mentioned that neutral parties have wondered if the Canucks are floating Pettersson’s name to the Carolina Hurricanes in an attempt to trade for recently-acquired Mikko Rantanen.

The Hurricanes acquired Rantanen from the Colorado Avalanche – one week before the Miller trade – in exchange for forward Martin Necas, Jack Drury, a 2025 second-round pick and a 2026 fourth-round pick.

There was earnest belief that the Hurricanes would acquire Pettersson in a similar package, but ultimately decided to trade for Rantanen.

When I posted this yesterday, I was flat out told that Pettersson could be moved asap.

Every indication is that there was a deal in place for him to go to Carolina but the Hurricanes decided on Rantanen instead. https://t.co/k9xcGfSblM

— Cam Robinson (@Hockey_Robinson) January 25, 2025

However, now that the Hurricanes are having trouble coming to an agreement with Rantanen on an extension, Carolina is listening to offers to re-flip him.

Another team has entered the mix as a potential Pettersson destination: the New Jersey Devils.

Pete Blackburn joined the What Chaos Podcast and shared that a little birdie told him that the Devils were looking into Pettersson:

Pete Blackburn on the What Chaos Podcast said that "a little birdie" told him in his ear to not be surprised if the New Jersey Devils are cooking something up with the Vancouver Canucks and Elias Pettersson." 👀

— Yegor Sharangovich replaced Breadman (@FierySharky) March 6, 2025

The Devils were rumoured to be interested in acquiring a centre at this year’s deadline. However, that need became even more of a necessity after star centreman and brother of Quinn Hughes, Jack Hughes, suffered a season-ending shoulder injury earlier this week.

The Canucks have just over 18 hours at the time of this writing before the NHL Trade Deadline, and the team might not be done dealing after sending Carson Soucy to the New York Rangers in exchange for a third-round pick. Not only is Pettersson’s name out there, but general manager Patrik Allvin also have to decide on pending UFAs Brock Boeser, Pius Suter and Derek Forbort.

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/vancou...n-pettersson-before-nhl-trade-deadline-report
 
Canucks willing to retain on a Brock Boeser trade: report

We have reached the NHL trade deadline day, with the actual deadline just over three hours at the time of this writing. Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman joined Halford & Brough on Sportsnet 650 Friday morning to share some news on Vancouver Canucks sniper, Brock Boeser:

“We’ll see,” Friedman said when asked about the market for Boeser. “I think there’s a lot of players – and I think Boeser is in that category – where teams know what the price is, and they’re kind of waiting to see how everything fell and made their decisions today.

“I think Vancouver is willing to retain. I think they’re looking for the best possible asset they can get. We’ll see how things fall. I think the thing to is that these are really high prices. So, I’m very curious to see if teams don’t get what they want, do they simply say ‘you know what, we’re not doing that.’ I think Vancouver is probably at the mercy of other teams that have to make some decisions.”

Boeser is in the final year of his three-year deal that pays him $6.65 million annually. Following his career-high 40-goal, 73-point campaign in 2023-2024, Boeser has underperformed. After suffering a concussion after receiving a shot to the head from Tanner Jeannot, Boeser has mounted just 18 goals and 19 assists for 37 points in 54 games. That puts him on pace for 24 goals and 26 assists for 50 points in 73 games.

Reports came out that the Canucks offered Boeser a five-year, $8 million per season contract earlier in the season. Boeser rejected the offer. Further reports came out that the club would make one more offer toward Boeser ahead of the trade deadline, but there has been no word on that.

The Canucks have also showed comfortability in keeping Boeser through the trade deadline, using him as their “own rental” if they can’t find a trade or extend him by the trade deadline.

Friedman further touched on what the Canucks plans are before noon’s trade deadline:

“I think they’d like to move their UFAs if they could. I know they feel that they would love to get – and it seems like everybody’s always talking about this. I feel they’d like to get their hands on a centre with team control if they could. I don’t know what the chances of that are.

“I think they feel they took care of a big thing in goal getting [Kevin] Lankinen signed. They feel much better about the overall state of their defence moving ahead. I think they would love to add a centre if they could. But that’s a hard thing to do.”

The top-six centre market is dwindling, as it appears Dylan Cozens and Josh Norris have been traded for each other.

Confirming Dylan Cozens is part of deal going from #Sabrehood to #GoSensGo. @KevinWeekes reported Josh Norris and Jacob Bernard-Docker going the other way.

— Frank Seravalli (@frank_seravalli) March 7, 2025

The Canucks will have their handful of decisions no only with Brock Boeser, but with their other pending unrestricted free agents, Pius Suter and Derek Forbort.

For more up-to-date trades, check out our live blog here!



Get ready, hockey fans! The Daily Faceoff Deadline is happening on March 7th from 11 AM to 4 PM Eastern, and you won’t want to miss it. We’ll be LIVE, breaking down every trade and big move as it happens, with instant reactions and expert analysis from the Daily Faceoff crew. Plus, we’ve got special guests lined up throughout the show, offering exclusive insights from some of the biggest names in the game. From blockbuster trades to surprise moves, we’re covering it all. Tune in to the Daily Faceoff YouTube channel and follow Daily Faceoff socials on March 7th to catch all the action!

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/vancouver-canucks-willing-retain-brock-boeser-trade-report
 
Instant Reaction: Sherwood and Pettersson score in Canucks’ win over Wild

Welcome back to Instant Reaction, the series here at CanucksArmy where we give you our instant reaction to tonight’s Vancouver Canucks game and ask our readers to do the same in the comments section below!

The Canucks started this game fine, but the Wild began to stack shifts in the offensive zone and had the Canucks running around in a bit of a track meet early.

Kevin Lankinen made some key saves, Elias Pettersson (the forward) had a big shot block, and Tyler Myers dove to stop what likely would have been a sure goal.

Tyler Myers gets his stick on the puck at the last second preventing a Minnesota goal.

🎥: Sportsnet | NHL#Canucks | #mnwild pic.twitter.com/Z5avCmyB0g

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) March 8, 2025

The Canucks got the game’s first power play when Drew O’Connor was hauled down at the Minnesota line. The Canucks’ first unit was about as loaded up as it could have been, but it was obviously still missing Quinn Hughes. They did not score.

The Canucks got a second power play chance, and this time, Pettersson built upon his strong game against the Ducks, letting go of a vintage Pettersson one timer to give the Canucks the game’s first lead.

🚨CANUCKS GOAL🚨

Elias Pettersson blasts a one timer to the back of the net to open the scoring!

🎥: Sportsnet | NHL#Canucks | #mnwild pic.twitter.com/Yi5x9oIsVW

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) March 8, 2025

1-0 Canucks.

Where has that been?

The Canucks entered the second period up by a goal.

The second opened with Elias Pettersson blasting another one-timer, only this one — at 91 miles per hour — missed the net wide. The Pettersson line again came close to bolstering the Canucks lead, with a solid zone entry from Kiefer Sherwood followed by a near miss from Pettersson, who had a nose for the net early in this one.

Elias Pettersson makes a couple nice moves. Somehow the puck stays out of the Minnesota net.

🎥: Sportsnet | NHL#Canucks | #mnwild pic.twitter.com/BfM7biHcTX

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) March 8, 2025

The middle frame was defined by sloppy play from both sides, leading to relatively low-event hockey. Victor Mancini, making his Rogers Arena debut, made a sharp defensive play to sweep a trickling puck out of the Canucks’ goal crease with his skate.

Things started to tighten up a but after this. Late in the period, Yakov Trenin slashed Marcus Pettersson’s stick, giving the Canucks their third power play of the game and a prime chance to push their lead to two.

Filip Hronek and Pettersson played catch before Pettersson fed the puck down low to DeBrusk, who found Garland for a tap-in that Filip Gustavsson made a huge save on.

Jake DeBrusk makes a nice pass to Conor Garland open at the side of the net but he can't beat the Minnesota goaltender.

🎥: Sportsnet | NHL#Canucks | #mnwild pic.twitter.com/XKyVgPKgBA

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) March 8, 2025

The Canucks power play didn’t stop there, generating more quality looks to close out the period. Again though, Gustavsson stood tall.

As a result, the Canucks entered the third up by just a single goal.

Filip Hronek was called for tripping, giving the Wild their second power play of the game early in the third. Lankinen made some phenomenal saves after an unfortunate stick break for Tyler Myers extended the Wild’s zone time. Eventually, the Canucks broke, as Brock Faber tied this one up after far too much east-west movement.

Brock Faber ties this game up on the power play.

🎥: Sportsnet | NHL#Canucks | #mnwild pic.twitter.com/DTVPEgVqMz

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) March 8, 2025

1-1.

The Wild really hunkered down on defence, limiting what the Canucks were able to create as soon as they hit the neutral zone. As a result, the Canucks fell behind on the shot chart, iced the puck a bunch, and did their best to bend but not break.

The Canucks went against the run of play, after some solid work from Nils Höglander to extend the Canucks’ zone time. Filip Hronek found Kiefer Sherwood, who made no mistake.

🚨CANUCKS GOAL🚨

KIEFER SHERWOOD PUTS THE CANUCKS UP BY ONE!

🎥: Sportsnet | NHL#Canucks | #mnwild pic.twitter.com/tih3Tz6nFk

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) March 8, 2025

Multi-point game for Hronek. 2-1 Canucks.

Teddy Blueger added an empty net goal to put the finishing touches on this one.

3-1 Canucks final.

Some more takeaways from tonight:

-Funny enough, I know he scored a goal in this game and that it is certainly another building block for him to turn his game around, but I thought Pettersson was better against Anaheim than he was tonight. Go figure that he didn’t get a point in that game but opened the scoring in convincing fashion tonight. Two strong games in a row for Pettersson. Now let’s raise the bar and see games like this become the norm for him, as they once were.
-A very strong start for Kevin Lankinen, who has had some great games since signing his extension.
-Victor Mancini and Jonathan Lekkerimäki both strike me as a bit raw, but they’re no-doubt gaining valuable experience in these games.
-Elias Pettersson (the defenceman) is looking better and better. He’s holding his own playing alongside Filip Hronek on the top pair.
-Another great game for Hronek, who is picking up the slack in Hughes’s absence.

What’s your instant reaction to tonight’s game? Let us know in the comments section below!

And be sure to tune into the Rink Wide Vancouver post game show LIVE on YouTube moments after the final horn!

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/instan...on-score-vancouver-canucks-win-minnesota-wild
 
The Statsies: Kevin Lankinen carries Canucks to win against Wild

There’s getting goalied, and then whatever that was last night.

We have a Elias Pettersson smile when talking to the media #Canucks pic.twitter.com/P87pfMpWOz

— Lucasparmenter23 (@Lucasparmenter0) March 8, 2025

The Vancouver Canucks topped the Minnesota Wild 3-1 last night at home, in what could only be described as a truly Wild affair. Minnesota was all over Vancouver in every sense and regard, dominating the game in every measurable statistical category. And yet, it was the Canucks who prevailed, thanks to the sheer brilliance by Kevin Lankinen between the pipes to hold the Wild at bay. Seriously — the numbers are not good, but a win is a win, right?

Here’s the win, by the numbers.

As always, you can find our glossary guide of advanced stats here.

Game Flow


20242025-21000-xgdiff-5v5.png


The game flow paints a pretty accurate picture of how last night went. Vancouver posted a 44.74 CF% in both the first and second periods, while their xGF% of 35.49 jumped to 48.23 between the two frames. However, come the third period, the Wild really pushed their weight around and left the Canucks almost entirely on the back foot. Both goals were wildly against the flow of play as Vancouver was reeling, recording a 21.43 CF% and 11.50 xGF%. In total, their xGF in the third stood at 0.19 – compare that to Minnesota, who tallied 1.5 xGF in the final frame alone to try and even this game up.

Heat Map


20242025-21000-5v5.png


Going along with the game flow, the heat map does not paint a complimentary picture for the Canucks either. While the Wild’s 27-18 scoring chance lead at 5v5 doesn’t sound awful right off the bat, consider that the high-danger chances were at 16-4 in favour of the visitors. Yes, that’s right, Minnesota managed to create four times the amount of high-danger chances than Vancouver, nearly equaling the Canucks’ entire scoring chance output at 5v5 play. Again, it’s characteristic of the Canucks team and shows just how much they rely on some brilliant goaltending to carry them to victories – because seriously, there is no way that this sustainable, nor a good way to be getting wins.

Individual Advanced Stats


Corsi Champ: Pius Suter was tossed out primarily against the Matt Boldy line, but somehow resulted in him posting the team’s best CF% last night with a 55.00. While Suter’s 26.01 xGF% doesn’t look good on paper, consider that number was merely -5.67 xGF% rel to team average, a byproduct of just how badly the Canucks were outplayed in that statistical category. The most impressive part about the numbers from last night was that Suter was only on ice for one high-danger chance against.

Pius Suter admits he’s never been in trade rumours as much as he has been leading up to this deadline. #Canucks

— David Quadrelli (@QuadrelliD) March 7, 2025

Corsi Chump: Elias Pettersson the forward finds himself trailing the team in CF%, tacking on 26.47 while splitting his offensive zone shift and faceoff starts evenly at 50%. Now granted, he’s playing top 6 minutes, meaning that Pettersson was thrown out against a Wild team that was definitely outplaying the Canucks overall. The Swede finished with a 30.05 xGF%, just barely below team average, while posting the team’s 4th-best xGF of 0.52. It was that kind of night for everyone, but at the very least, we got to see Pettersson one-time a goal home on the powerplay. How long has it been since he did that?

🚨CANUCKS GOAL🚨

Elias Pettersson blasts a one timer to the back of the net to open the scoring!

🎥: Sportsnet | NHL#Canucks | #mnwild pic.twitter.com/Yi5x9oIsVW

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) March 8, 2025

xGF: These ones aren’t going to be looking very pretty. The man to lead the way in xGF% was Conor Garland’s 50.36, splitting evenly at 0.39 in both xGF and xGA. That genuinely was as good as it got, with Garland not even being on ice for a single high-danger chance against, 3 high-danger chances coming against the Canucks during that same span. Raw xGF saw Filip Hronek lead the team with a 1.07, but also recording a 2-10 differential in high-danger chances to finish with a team-worst 1.79 xGA. It was just how the numbers shaped up last night.

Jake DeBrusk makes a nice pass to Conor Garland open at the side of the net but he can't beat the Minnesota goaltender.

🎥: Sportsnet | NHL#Canucks | #mnwild pic.twitter.com/XKyVgPKgBA

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) March 8, 2025

GSAx: My goodness Kevin Lankinen. The Finn was on another level last night to help the Canucks secure the win, because there was nothing in front of him that suggested the team earned this victory. Facing down a massive 4.13 xGF across all situations, Lankinen only gave up a single middle-danger goal against to finish with a 3.13 GSAx. Guess what – he saved more expected goals than the Canucks scored as run support for him last night. There’s no telling how badly Vancouver would’ve gotten buried had Lankinen not turned in this kind of performance.

It will never not be amazing that the Canucks found Kevin Lankinen for under $1M sitting around in the middle of September while the Oilers have been searching for a legit goalie for 15 years

— Logan (@CanuckSkate) March 8, 2025

Statistical Musings


Giving up possession for offence: Getting back a little to Pettersson last night, he once again found himself between Dakota Joshua and Conor Garland for the game. While their CF% of 38.89 was not the most impressive, sitting at second-last amongst all forward lines, they were the only forward line to crack 50.00 xGF%. In fact, Joshua-Pettersson-Garland were sitting at 70.77 xGF%, recording a team-best 0.16 despite giving up 3 high-danger chances against. While the DOC-Chytil-Lekkerimaki unit were producing the best xGF of 0.42, the Joshua-Pettersson-Garland line came in a close second at 0.38 xGF with better defensive numbers.

Elias Pettersson makes a couple nice moves. Somehow the puck stays out of the Minnesota net.

🎥: Sportsnet | NHL#Canucks | #mnwild pic.twitter.com/BfM7biHcTX

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) March 8, 2025

Interesting numbers: Victor Mancini probably has gone under the radar for many Canuck fans in the lineup, but his numbers alongside Derek Forbort are interesting. While their CF% of 21.74 and xGF% of 25.42 don’t leap off the page, surprisingly the duo were on ice for a 2-3 high-danger chance split. If you’re keeping track, that means that Forbort-Mancini were on ice for half of the high-danger chances that the Canucks got all night. While that obviously didn’t translate to anything tangible, it seems at odds with how their numbers were running all of last night.

this play by mancini pic.twitter.com/tdT7jkvz37

— madison²³ ˚✩⋆。˚ (@knieswoll43) March 8, 2025

Why the Canucks were okay with giving up Carson Soucy: The trade that sent Soucy to the New York Rangers was partly due to the fact that Elias Pettersson the defenceman played so darn well in his time with the big club. Last night, partnering Filip Hronek, the young Swede defenceman was clipping comfortably as the Canucks’ second-best defenceman by the numbers, with an xGF of 0.80 as the second-best player on the entire roster. For a rookie, it’s really good stuff, and it seems that he could be a really solid part of this back line for the future.

Here comes 💥 D-Petey 💥 pic.twitter.com/TAaf7rTNqE

— Vancouver Canucks (@Canucks) March 8, 2025

As a team


CF% – 40.63% HDCF% – 29.17% xGF% – 39.90%

The Canucks had Lankinen’s performance to thank for this win. They didn’t manage to figure out how to respond to the Wild turning it up a notch, which is REALLY concerning if one considers that they realistically could be an opponent if Vancouver somehow claws into the first round of the playoffs. This team still needs to figure out how to generate chances consistently and win games in a sustainable manner. But, a win is a win, and there were definite bright spots to take away from a game where they got shelled.

Vancouver hosts Tom Gaglardi’s Dallas Stars and their new shiny Mikko Rantanen tomorrow.

Stats provided by naturalstattrick.com

Sponsored by bet365

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/statsies-kevin-lankinen-carries-vancouver-canucks-win-minnesota-wild
 
Abbotsford Canucks acquire Jujhar Khaira from Syracuse Crunch

The Abbotsford Canucks announced on Saturday night that they have acquired Surrey’s Jujhar Khaira from the Syracuse Crunch in exchange for future considerations.

Abbotsford Canucks General Manager, Ryan Johnson, announced today that the club has acquired forward Jujhar Khaira from the Syracuse Crunch in exchange for future considerations.

FULL DETAILS | https://t.co/RJvbOcNDyA pic.twitter.com/dNROCWqtuM

— Abbotsford Canucks (@abbycanucks) March 9, 2025

The 30-year-old left winger has played with the Syracuse Crunch this season, posting three goals and six assists in 18 games.

Khaira was drafted 63rd overall by the Edmonton Oilers in 2012. He’s played in 337 NHL games across eight seasons with the Oilers, Chicago Blackhawks, and Minnesota Wild, scoring 33 goals and 47 assists for 80 points. Khaira brings a hard-working, two-way winger who isn’t afraid to mix things up, as he racked up 229 penalty minutes during his time in the NHL.

Before being selected by the Oilers, Khaira played two full seasons for the Prince George Spruce Kings of the BCHL from 2010-2012, recording 39 goals and 82 assists in 112 games.

A native of Surrey, Khaira became the third player of Punjabi descent to play in the National Hockey League behind Vancouver Canucks alumni Robin Bawa and current Abbotsford Canucks Head Coach Manny Malhotra.

Khaira signed an AHL contract with the Syracuse Crunch, the Tampa Bay Lightning’s farm team, in September 2024. He will become an unrestricted free agent at the end of this season.

He joins an Abbotsford Canucks team short a forward with the likes of Jonathan Lekkerimäki and Nils Aman recently being summound to the NHL club. Aman has played in eight games in Vancouver, registering two assists. Lekkerimäki has two goals and one assist for three points through 13 games with the big club.

The Abbotsford Canucks have added an important veteran forward to their team as they chase a playoff spot in the AHL’s Pacific Division. Abbotsford currently sits tied for sixth in the pacific division standings heading into tonight’s game against the San Jose Barracuda.

Here is one of Khaira’s 33 goals, scored against the organization he’s now joining, the Canucks.

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/abbotsford-canucks-acquire-jujhar-khaira-syracuse-crunch
 
Canucks Game Day: Facing a Texas-sized test with Stars in town

Vancouver Canucks (27-22-11) shoot for a third straight victory when they host the Dallas Stars (41-20-2) at Rogers Arena.

But they’ll likely have to get the job done against one of the league’s top teams without their captain.

What we know​


The Canucks elected to forego a morning skate ahead of tonight’s 6 pm faceoff so final lineup decisions won’t be revealed until closer to game time. Kevin Lankinen is expected to make a third straight start in goal. He posted a season-high 37 saves in a 3-1 win over Minnesota on Friday night. Lankinen has held opponents to two goals or fewer in seven of his last nine outings (6-2-1).

Elias Pettersson and Kiefer Sherwood both snapped 15-game goal droughts in Friday’s win over the Wild. Pettersson opened the scoring with a one-time blast on the power play while Sherwood snapped a 1-1 tie with under four minutes to go with what proved to be the game-winner. Teddy Blueger sealed the victory into an empty net.

Blueger has now scored in back-to-back games after going 28 games without a goal. And with two assists on Friday, Filip Hronek now has back-to-back two-assist games, has two goals and 11 helpers in his last 20 games and leads the team in scoring with eight points in 11 games since February 1st.

The Canucks are expected to go with the same forward lines and defence pairings they used against Minnesota. That is how they skated at practice at UBC on Saturday. That means Quinn Hughes will likely miss a third straight game and his 13th game this season.

After struggling for much of the season on home ice, the Canucks are finding their form in front of the home fans. They have won four straight and are 5-0-1 in their last six at home, outscoring opponents 15-8 over that span.

Minnesota’s third period power goal on Friday was the first goal surrendered by Canucks penalty killers on home ice since January 18th. The team has successfully killed off 13 of its last 15 penalties at home (86.7%).

With Calgary’s 1-0 win over Montreal last night, the Flames moved back ahead of the Canucks and into the second wild card slot in the West. The Flames have 70 points in 63 games. The Canucks have 69 points in 62 games. St. Louis has 69 points but through 65 games.

The opponent​


The Stars arrive here following a 5-4 loss in Edmonton last night. Newcomer Mikko Rantanen had a goal and an assist in his Stars debut while Wyatt Johnston, Jamie Benn and Matt Dumba also scored. Jake Oettinger allowed five goals on 27 shots.

The loss snapped the Stars’ four-game win streak. They had won seven of their last eight. And despite dropping last night’s game, Dallas is still 12-3-1 in its last 16 and a league-best 21-7-2 since Christmas.

Rantanen leads Dallas with 28 goals, followed by Jason Robertson with 27, while Matt Duchene and Roope Hintz both have 25 goals. Hintz took a puck to the face and left last night’s game. His status for tonight is unknown.

Wyatt Johnston has scored in five straight games (seven goals) and has nine goals and 15 points on a nine-game point streak, while Jason Robertson has seven goals and 14 points on a seven-game streak. Victoria’s Jamie Benn needs one goal to reach 400 for his NHL career.

On the season, the Stars are the fourth best team in the league in both offence and defence. They are also third in the overall standings behind only Winnipeg and Washington and boast the league’s best penalty killing.

With back-to-back games, the Stars are expected to give Casey DeSmith the start in goal. The former Canuck netminder is 11-6-2 on the season and has won his last five starts.

Dallas defeated the Canucks 5-3 in the Lone Star State on January 31st. That was the night JT Miller was traded to New York and also the same night Quinn Hughes suffered an oblique injury. These teams will meet one more time this season in Dallas on April 8th.

Tonight’s referees: Graham Skilliter & Brandon Blandina

Tonight’s broadcasters: John Shorthouse & Dave Tomlinson

Make sure to join the Rink Wide Vancouver postgame live stream immediately following tonight’s game. Rink Wide will provide a full breakdown and comprehensive coverage of the Canucks game. When the final buzzer sounds, be sure to log onto Rink Wide and join the YouTube live chat to discuss the game with other Canucks fans. Subscribe to the Rink Wide YouTube channel and never miss an episode.

Sponsored by bet365

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/vancouver-canucks-game-day-facing-texas-sized-test-dallas-stars-town
 
The Stanchies: Rick Tocchet demands more from top players in 4-1 loss to Dallas

I missed Friday’s Vancouver Canucks game, which means I didn’t witness one of the few games this season Elias Pettersson reached into his bag of tricks to unleash a clap bomb goal against the Minnesota Wild.

Rest assured, I had the goal described to me in vivid detail by many a fan. They had tears in their eyes as they recounted the windup, the release, and the sound of the goal horn going off in ecstasy. One fan told me he named his child “holy sh!t Elias actually shot the puck” to honour the goal, which I found quite charming, despite my concerns about their future driver’s license.

I also watched many highlights of the goal to make sure what I was seeing was real, that this actually happened. Hell, at one point in the post-game scrums, Elias Pettersson even smiled. Not the smirk he uses when he wants you to know you’ve let him down, but a real, honest-to-goodness grin. It was one of the rare times when I didn’t envision Smithers standing behind him with a gun, telling him to keep smiling.

With this in mind, I headed to the game Sunday with maybe not vim in my step, but a lot of vigor. I was excited to see the revival of Elias Pettersson continue.

Instead, what I was met with was yet another dreary defensive game that saw Elias Pettersson end the night with 16:05 of ice time, to go along with Brock Boeser’s 15:49 and Jake DeBrusk’s measly 12:45.

When asked by Daniel Wagner post-game about their lack of ice time and if that was indicative of their play on the night, Rick Tocchet cut him off, forcefully informing us that “You gotta earn your ice time around here. That’s how you win. So you guys can stir it up all you want. You have to earn your ice time. I don’t care how long you’ve been here, you gotta earn your ice time. That’s the way it works. That’s how you win Stanley Cups.”

If you listen to the audio and hear repeated pounding during this clip, that’s because Tocchet was hitting his fist on the podium to make his point. This wasn’t a coach talking about what players need to do to get better; this was a coach emphatically letting you know that he was not having it with his top guys on the night. Which means those allegations of Tocchet maybe embracing dinosaur hockey a little too much? They aren’t going away anytime soon.

We’ve talked more than enough about his coaching career being littered with teams that lacked offensive punch, so all I will say is that in a game in which you lose 4-1 and produced little offence, maybe you give your top guys some slack as the game comes to a close. Maybe there is a time and place to teach lessons to your star players when you’re in dire need of offence and battling for that sweet, sweet playoff revenue. No offence to Drew O’Connor, but maybe I have some questions that Ja Rule can’t answer.

Of course, that being said, the Dallas Stars are an extremely good hockey club, made even better with the addition of Mikko Rantanen at the trade deadline. It’s hard to watch the Canucks play a team like the Stars and think they’re anywhere close to being able to compete in a playoff series against them, Quinn Hughes or not.

So maybe the long game here for Tocchet is to teach the lessons now and hope they pay off later. Maybe you still lose this game with your top guys on the ice anyway, so why not go Dad mode on them? Tocchet wasn’t wrong in saying they weren’t playing at a top level earlier in the game, even if I didn’t think they were that awful.

And some people, hey, they like the tough love approach. If you’ve got your third and fourth liners busting their asses off, maybe you lean into that. Maybe you see Derek Forbort scores his first goal as a Canuck and suddenly anything seems possible.

It’s just, it’s a huge ask for one of your bottom roster guys to score a goal in a tight checking game, spirited effort or not. That’s where you have to go to your top guys to come through in those key moments we keep hearing about. It’s tough to step up in a key moment when you’re not on the ice.

Which means the questions about whether Rick Tocchet knows how to produce offence coaching an NHL team or not? They are not going to be going away anytime soon.

And with a battle to make the playoffs ahead of them, I can only imagine what a potential post-season run with this team will look like offensively.

Hold onto your butts, folks.

Best good enough for me

Give me that aggressiveness every game Petey #Canucks

— Rohil Patel (@rohilpatel15) March 10, 2025

Look, for me, the Dallas Stars are a top team, which means the Canucks chances of beating them? If I run the Scott Steiner math, it’s not great.

But when you add in the fact the Dallas Stars played the night before in Edmonton, sure, maybe you feel the Canucks should have fared better.

I just keep coming back to the fact that the Dallas Stars are a ridiculously deep team. I remember many a night in which the 2011 Canucks would sleep walk through the second of a back to back game and win in the third period when Henrik Sedin would bank the puck in off of Sami Salo’s balls or whatever.

However, if you’re the type of person that lives and breathes by “get in and see what happens”, if you’re the type of person who thinks “If Brock Boeser walks in free agency that cap space saved is better than any trade deadline deal” then hey, you’re probably a little miffed with this game. Your shiny optimism won’t be broken by this game, but you’re probably a tad bit put out.

For what it’s worth, I thought the Canucks played pretty solidly considering Quinn Hughes was still out, and Brock, Jake and Elias were all being taught a valuable life lesson.

The game started off decent with Elias Pettersson actually shooting the puck with purpose, clanging a post for his efforts:

He didn’t force a pass, and he didn’t curl back and pass it off for a lethal Vittorio Mancini shot. Instead, he did what your top guys are supposed to do, and he attempted to hurt Casey DeSmith’s self-value by scoring a goal on him.

It felt like the confidence from the team was in a solid spot as you even had Vittorio dangling with the puck in his own zone before sending a floater of a pass that Boeser brought down like a young Zinedine Zidane, back heeling it for Pius Suter to skate into:

Heck, you even had Conor Garland cutting towards the middle of the ice to get a shot off:

Does Garland’s shot scare anyone? Of course not. But it’s what it represents that matters. And what it represented was a team that was well on its way to a 23 shot game, and nothing was going to get in their way of it.

Speaking of sons being punished for on-ice crimes, here was Jake DeBrusk setting up Marcus Pettersson for their lone high danger chance of the period:

Again, I understand the tough love approach; it just didn’t feel like this was a particularly egregious game from Jake, Elias and Brock.

Best new kid on the block

Lekky looking confident in the powerplay set up, just a matter of when, not if he scores! #canucks

— 44 (@canuckinsanity) March 10, 2025

It helps if you just accept the fact that the Canucks power play is a rotting corpse waiting to be found in a landfill, that way you’re never really disappointed by it.

That being said, Jonathan Lekkerimäki showed a bit of juice on the second unit during a late first-period power play:

It was nothing mind-blowing, but the fact that he looked confident with the puck and continued to move around the ice to create space? Well ok maybe that is mind blowing for this Canucks power play, I take it back.

It just felt like you could see the potential in his offensive game with the way he was zipping the puck around and had no issues loading up the shot from the slot when given the chance.

He looked like a young Lonny Bohonos out there.

Best one way of looking at it

Mikko Rantanen steps up for Jason Robertson after Nils Hoglander takes run at the Stars winger.
Nickname is Moose. Very appropriate

— Bruce LeVine (@BruceLeVinePuck) March 10, 2025

Bruce is correct in that Nils Höglander took his pound of flesh from Jason Robertson; we cannot deny that:

What Bruce fails to mention is that it was a receipt from Nils for the elbow Jason through earlier in the shift:

Look, Nils is no Cody Rhodes. He won’t take a Travis Scott shot like that and simply let it go. This is a guy who carries a list of names of people who have wronged him taped to his socks, even if I made that fact completely up. The point is, Nils is a feisty guy who has no problems going Sopranos mode when need be.

Now, the Dallas Stars ended up with the power play out of all of this, which Rick Tocchet had no problem with and accepted quite calmly.

Best lip reading

Tocchet to the ref: “that’s why you don’t work the fucking playoffs! Yeah I’m talking to you! Fucking stupid!”#canucks

— ogpinana (@ogpinana) March 10, 2025

OK, maybe Rick was a little heated:

The thing about Rick is that he will never, ever say a bad word about a referee after a game. Just won’t do it. The ref could hit him with a baseball bat, and Rick could attempt to stab him in retaliation, but after the game, he will still say they’re a good group of guys over there, and they worked it out during intermission.

Best mini stick hockey approach

Good period, we are due for another PP #Canucks

— Antagonist (@BigJ13601247) March 10, 2025

The Canucks almost opened the scoring with under 20 seconds left when who else but Conor Garland busted out the mini-sticks hockey approach and almost tapped in the puck at the side of the net off a Marcus Pettersson pass:

Again, for me, a 0-0 tie against this Dallas Stars team, tired or not, is probably the best this team can hope for? I certainly don’t envision Rick Tocchet utilizing a different style anytime soon, so love it or hate it, this counter-attack, defensive style hockey is what we’re in store for the rest of the year; lock it down and hope you get a bounce.

Doesn’t quite sell the tickets by providing any semblance of exciting hockey, but it’s all we’ve got right now.

Best teamwork makes the dream work

Goddam LANKINEN is a beauty call him blankinen #Canucks

— bfs (@Toad0082) March 10, 2025

The official Natural Stat Trick stats had the Dallas Stars with 19 shots and only five high-danger chances (somehow the Canucks got 10 high-danger chances alone in the third period, which seems like a lie meant to embolden your Uncle on Facebook), which speaks to two things:

  1. The Canucks did play a pretty solid defensive game of hockey
  2. The Dallas Stars are a good team, which means it doesn’t take much for them to score when given a chance

Again, though, the Canucks were doing their best to play GOTI hockey, which means Conor Garland was the first guy to drop to the ice behind Lankinen to protect the net in this scramble:

Corolla Garland is the guy you ask to help you move, and he doesn’t even get mad when you tell him you haven’t packed yet. He just rolls up his sleeves and tells you to point him in a direction to get started.

Best shining Stars

DAMMIT #Canucks 1-0 stars ofc

— bfs (@Toad0082) March 10, 2025

It’s not exactly a goal brimming with skill, but Thomas Hartley managed to bank the puck in off of Marcus Pettersson for the Stars’ first goal of the night:

It was essentially a counter-attack off of a thoughts and prayers pass behind the Stars net from Conor Garland that started the rush into the Canucks zone, and after cycling the puck and causing Vancouver to chase the puck, got enough room to get a shot off that ended up getting a fortuitous bounce into the net.

Elias Pettersson was on the ice for this goal, and you can see him make a diving poke attempt at the start of the clip, and honestly? He played hard on this entire shift. In the moments before the goal, he defended the front of the net and cut off a scoring chance by tying up a stick, and then he would later chase down the puck and throw a hit along the boards. He threw in a bit of a desperation dive at the end there, but nothing about this screamed lack of effort.

All of which is to say I am still not quite sure what Elias did this game that drew the ire of his coach to the point of affecting his ice time.

Best jinx early and often

Casey DeSmith shutout incoming. Who woulda guessed 🤣 #Canucks

— Dombrova (@dombrova22) March 10, 2025

The Canucks almost scored later in the second period when Doc attempted a wraparound, which was followed up by Lekkerimäki getting a slick takeaway to keep the puck in the zone, followed up by Filip Chytil dragging the puck onto the net:

They didn’t score, but at least it was a good greasy attempt? I have to assume this is the kind of thing Tocchet is after, where you drag the puck into the crease and shave off your sideburns.

Best who is that man

I didn’t know Forbort could do that #Canucks

— s (@canucksabs) March 10, 2025

With last year’s best third line in the league re-united halfway through the game, Blueger, Garland and Joshua got to participate in the once in a life time event known as a Derek Forbort goal:

Perhaps Derek realized that someone had to step up to replace the offence the team lost when they traded Carson Soucy.

Now, what is absolutely wild about this goal isn’t the fact that Derek is almost going bar down on his shot; it’s the fact that he’s running the 2-on-1 of Rick Tocchet’s dreams.

How many times have we heard Rick talk about wanting his players to move their feet and open up space on the ice like this?

Now, I don’t know how many more of these shots Forbort has in them, but the give-and-go from the point is something this team needs more of, especially with how much they feed the puck back to the blue line.

No, no, go ahead, watch that goal again, take your time. I still can’t believe it either.

Best rigged election results

little kid from the intermission game just said his favourite player is Derek Forbort

get him a signed stick lmao #canucks

— Jisho (@glen_nelson) March 10, 2025

After the game, Derek was informed of this child in question, to which he replied the kid needed to choose a better offensive player. Then we all laughed. But it was the laughter of people grasping on to anything that could be an uplifting moment from this night.

To which I will say that after losses this year, this team feels like it’s talking at a funeral. I don’t know how the vibes got this bad, and I get that speaking after any loss probably isn’t the most enjoyable thing, but man alive, on some nights, the team just looks right at the floor and talks like they just lost the Cup final.

Everyone except Tyler Myers. That dude refuses to let you see him bleed. 10-1 loss, he will tell you all about the positives of that first goal and how nobody in that room is down right now.

Sometimes, I want to be lied to like that.

Best false fact

Fun fact:

The #Canucks have never lost a game when Forbort scores.

— Rohil Patel (@rohilpatel15) March 10, 2025

In a game in which offensive chances were few and far between, Kiefer Sherwood attempting to turn into Pavel Bure certainly stood out:

That is stickhandling normally reserved for playing online hockey in an EA Sports game, sir.

The only thing missing was dropping the puck back to his skate and kicking it back up to himself. He does that; he clearly scores here.

Best failure to launch

Yup both defenders on 1 guy #Canucks

— Brandon (@Brandon1329304) March 10, 2025

With the period coming to an end, four things happened:

  1. Elias Pettersson lost a faceoff
  2. Tyler Myers and Derek Forbort covered the same guy
  3. Kevin Lankinen punched that puck like it owed him money, giving up the juiciest of rebonds
  4. Apparently, Rick Tocchet entered into a blood feud with his top players after this

I don’t love that rebound from Kevin; I kind of hate it, actually. Just gut punches it towards the general area of the faceoff dot, which ends up blowing up in his face because Derek Forbort, covering the right side of the ice off the draw, just makes a beeline to get back to the middle of the ice, leaving his man wide open.

The end result is Markus Mikael Granlund has himself an easy tap in, which essentially sealed the game for the Stars since the Canucks are legally not allowed to make a third period come back this year.

Best Jeff was on the case

EP40 just 3 shifts over final 10:45 of 2nd period. Yes, there was a Dallas power play in there, but didn't see a lot of ice in 2nd half of second period

— Jeff Paterson (@patersonjeff) March 10, 2025

Again, I am still not sure what the three bad sons did to have their ice time this limited, but that’s where we find ourselves.

Best from bad to worse

Really interested to know what marcus pettersson was doing there. He was following robertson and as soon as the stars made it to the net he turned his back to the puck and left robertson to tip it in?? #Canucks

— the name's AP (@AP_SD_) March 10, 2025

The Stars for real for real sealed this game away halfway through the third period when Matt Duchene found Jason Robertson alone behind the Canucks defence for the easy tap-in goal:

I am also confused by what MP3 is doing on this play. My best guess is he either overthought it or thought Garland might slide in to help cover Robertson? Or he just panicked and closed his eyes and went to his happy place, building Legos on the ranch, back in a time when dairy price agreements meant something.

To me, this is just what a good team does; they find a way to break you the second you make a mistake.

And again, for what its worth, Natural Stat Trick had the Canucks generating 10 high-danger chances in this period. I have no idea how. I have no idea when. But apparently, that happened.

In my eyes, the Canucks got shut down in the third period pretty handily.

Best possible high danger chances

A little more urgency is needed from the whole team. I’m not sure if the #Canucks realize what’s at stake here….

— Bryan Suttie (@SuttieBryan) March 10, 2025

The Best Third Line in the League got at least one of those high-danger chances, and it was right after the Stars’ third goal, when Teddy KGB found Dakota Joshua in all alone for a good look at Casey DeSmith:

I also assume this was another high danger chance when Pius Suter tried to thread the puck down low to Blueger in front of the Stars net:

I think the puck rolled off of Teddy’s stick at the last second, and nobody got to any of the actual rebounds to get more shots off, but hey, at least it felt dangerous? That has to count for at least four chances.

Best a few more high danger shots

got out of my seat twice for the D-Petey crossbar and the Hoglander no-goal. Probably used up our close calls for the night there 🫠 #canucks

— Jisho (@glen_nelson) March 10, 2025

The defensive version of Elias Pettersson would also later hit the post on a shot that Blueger may or may not have gotten a small piece of:

And if punching the puck into the net counts as a high-danger chance, Nils Höglander got one here as well:

So the good news is that hypothetically, the Canucks could have tied this game up.

The bad news is, they didn’t.

Again, not the worst game in the world, and maybe in another universe the Canucks manage to win this one. Maybe you get a bounce or two here and there, and things go your way. I think their structure on the night was solid, even if the same problems of lack of offence reared their ugly heads in the end.

I just don’t envision this team being able to pull this off four times in four series in the playoffs.

Defensive hockey without any ability to score goals only gets you so far.

Best finish them

That game really annoyed me for some reason#Canucks

— Ur_fav brunette (@fav_brunette43) March 10, 2025

Here is the Stars empty-netter for posterity:

Another night, another loss, another tedious hockey game.

I honestly have no idea how this team can be jacking up the prices for next season.

Best tale of the tape

Canucks since January 1st (With NHL ranks)

Goals / Game: 2.19 (Last)
EV Strength Goals / Game: 1.56 (Last)
SOG / Game: 25.1 (31st)
Shooting Pct.: 8.7 (29th)

— Sportsnet Stats (@SNstats) March 10, 2025

Roster problems? Coaching issues? It feels like we’ve been talking about that debate all season long.

At the end of the day, this team cannot generate offence to save its life, and the only way it’s been able to tread water is by playing the type of hockey even the 2003 Minnesota Wild think is a bit much.

See you Tuesday?

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/the-st...s-more-from-top-players-4-1-loss-dallas-stars
 
Dhaliwal: Hurricanes offered Canucks 1st-round pick for Boeser in final half-hour of NHL Trade Deadline

Now that the NHL Trade Deadline has come and gone, news about the Vancouver Canucks and their lack of moves are coming out.

Donnie & Dhali’s Rick Dhaliwal reported on Monday morning that the Carolina Hurricanes made a last ditch effort after the completion of the Mikko Rantanen trade to acquire Canucks forward Brock Boeser:

“Carolina GM [General Manager] Eric Tulsky said, because the Rantanen deal took so long to get cleared by the NHL, he didn’t have enough time to get other significant deals done. Some say Tulsky called Vancouver in the last half an hour of the deadline and offered up one of the two first-round picks from the Rantanen deal for Boeser.

“But remember this, the Canucks said before the [deadline] they don’t want to get weaker. They don’t want to get worse with the Boeser trade. Picks and prospects don’t make you better today. Picks and prospects make you better in the future.

“There was a late push by Carolina. Some say to get Boeser, and some say they offered up one of those two picks.”

Dhaliwal also mentioned that the Canucks tried to re-sign the forward earlier in the week ahead of the trade deadline:

“Vancouver made Brock Boeser a new contract offer late last week. I think it was before Friday’s deadline. Clearly, the offer wasn’t good enough. [It was a] Last second stab by the Canucks to sign him on Friday. I do not believe they came close. So the Vancouver Canucks did try last week. They took a stab at him 11th hour. They made a new contract offer to Brock. It wasn’t good enough. I think they took a shot at him Wednesday or Thursday.”

Dhaliwal then clarified that this was a separate deal from the five-year, $8 million annually extension made to Boeser earlier in the season.

Boeser has spent his entire nine-year NHL career with Vancouver and currently sits ninth in goals (197) and 12th all-time in points (422) in the franchise’s history. The former first-round pick is coming off a career-year in 2023-24, where he scored 40 goals and 33 assists for 73 points in 81 games. He has followed that up this season with 18 goals and 20 assists for 38 points through 56 games.

The American winger is set to become an unrestricted free agent on July 1 and will now hold all of the cards in the decision on where he plays next season.

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/dhaliw...ick-boeser-final-half-hour-nhl-trade-deadline
 
3 Canucks Stars of the Week: Teddy Blueger steps up during NHL Trade Deadline week

Welcome back to Stars of the Week at CanucksArmy! Every week, we’ll be bringing you our Top Three best and brightest performers on the Vancouver Canucks that week. Disagree with our picks or have your own stars to nominate? Let us know in the comments below!

Did we all make it through trade deadline week? Well, there are a lot of players around the league who didn’t, for better or for worse.

The Canucks looked better this week – more confident with their passes, their speed, and shooting. They’re still mostly only scraping by wins with small goal margins and losing out on other games that they should probably win. They left this week with four out of a possible six points. At least it’s better than last week.

Teddy Blueger​


I loved Blueger’s game this week, and I hope you did, too. He hadn’t scored in 28 games and landed himself two goals this week. It looks like the kind of centre depth we’ve been missing lately. Maybe the secret to Blueger’s game could be putting Dakota Joshua and Conor Garland back on the same line, or it could be wishful thinking. Seeing remnants of last year’s Canucks team creates a more hopeful outlook. The pieces of the puzzle are there.

Take this sequence alone – in a game that certainly didn’t end the Canucks’ way, Blueger had chemistry and the team as a whole had shots on goal – something that’s been hard to come by.

Teddy Blueger makes a perfect pass to find Dakota Joshua but he can't beat Casey DeSmith.

🎥: Sportsnet | NHL#Canucks | #TexasHockey pic.twitter.com/Geyxo9sBaz

— CanucksArmy (@CanucksArmy) March 10, 2025

Filip Hronek​


I seem to say this a lot this year, but Filip Hronek has done an exceptional job stepping up in Quinn Hughes’ absence. Hronek had four points this week against the Anaheim Ducks and Minnesota Wild, but it isn’t all just about finding the scoresheet. It goes to show his abilities in isolation from Hughes and just how much he’s capable of supporting the defensive core when needed. He looks good paired with D-Petey, who provides a guiding hand to a rookie defenceman who has been needed more than ever in a chaotic year. When your captain and D-partner is down for the count, it’s nice to have other leadership in the room amongst a week – and a season – of uncertainty.

Rick Tocchet says Filip Hronek has taken D-Petey under his wing.

Gives Hronek a lot of credit for that. #Canucks

— Noah Strang (@noahstrang_) March 8, 2025

Conor Garland​


For several reasons, Conor Garland looked like his scrappy self this week, which couldn’t have come at a better time.

First of all, simply for morale. Again, with Boeser the focus of both attention and the chopping block this week and Hughes still out, it might have been very easy to take the wind out of the Canucks’ sails. He looked engaged, getting to net-front, which is one of his sweet spots, not for the prettiest attempts on goal, but ones that matter nonetheless.

Secondly, he took the last few seconds of their tilt against the Anaheim Ducks to challenge Trevor Zegras to some fisticuffs. Knowing these two players, I’m sure they had some very friendly conversation going throughout the game.

The fight we all expected: Trevor Zegras and Conor Garland. #FlyTogether #Canucks pic.twitter.com/NbUbbCepEF

— NHL News (@PuckReportNHL) March 6, 2025

With a few seconds left on the clock, the Canucks knew they had this 3-2 game signed, sealed, and delivered. This was a prime example of Conor Garland knowing when to step up on his team and providing a little entertainment value at that.

For some self-indulgent promotion, you can read my profile on him for this year’s iteration of the Botchford Project. He could not have known that this would be published this week, but it certainly was excellent timing.

Honourable Mentions​

Brock Boeser

He gets a mention for somehow, whether you want him to be or not, leaving trade deadline week as a member of the Vancouver Canucks.

Will he get all the way to free agency, or will he be extended until then? Patrik Allvin does not even have the answer to that question.

Carson Soucy

He gets a mention for somehow, whether you want him to be or not, leaving trade deadline week no longer a member of the Vancouver Canucks.

Soucy scored his last goal as a Canuck against the Anaheim Ducks on Wednesday, and was traded on Thursday, which is a fitting farewell. He could be a decent defenceman on occasion, which was maybe the issue.

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/3-vanc...eddy-blueger-steps-up-nhl-trade-deadline-week
 
Scenes from morning skate: Lankinen starts as Canucks shake up all 4 forward lines vs. Canadiens

The Vancouver Canucks (29-23-11) close out a four-game homestand when they host the Montreal Canadiens (30-27-6) tonight at Rogers Arena.

It’s the start of a back to back set with the Canucks scheduled to face the Flames in a key Western Conference wild card showdown in Calgary on Wednesday.

What we saw​


JP1.png




The club was back on the ice for a full morning skate after taking Monday off from practice. Captain Quinn Hughes joined the group in a non-contact jersey and took part in drills. However, he will miss his fourth straight game tonight.

Drew O’Connor and defenceman Elias Pettersson are both battling the flu and left the morning skate early, but both are expected to play tonight.

The Canucks will show the Habs some new looks up front. Rick Tocchet is adding O’Connor speed to the left side with Elias Pettersson and Brock Boeser, while Teddy Blueger looks to rekindle the success he had last season centering Dakota Joshua and Conor Garland. Leading goal-scorer Jake DeBrusk will skate with Filip Chytil and Jonathan Lekkerimäki, while Pius Suter slides to a line with Nils Höglander and Kiefer Sherwood.

Kevin Lankinen makes his fifth straight start in goal. He and the Canucks fell 4-1 to Dallas in their last outing on Sunday night. Derek Forbort scored his first goal of the season and his first goal in more than two years. The last time the stay-at-home defender put a puck in the net was February 16, 2023, when he was with Boston. Forbort will be wearing an ‘A’ as an alternate captain for the first time tonight.

The Canucks have been held to three goals or fewer in 14 straight games and 23 times in their last 24 outings. The team has a total of 32 goals in those 14 games – 30 of them in regulation time and a pair of overtime winners.

The team’s morning skate started with both power units getting in some early work ahead of the group.

JP2.png




Tonight marks Teddy Blueger’s 400th NHL game. Today is Conor Garland’s 29th birthday.

The opponent​


The Canadiens have been off since a 1-0 loss in Calgary on Saturday night. Jakob Dobes made 23 saves in the team’s fourth shutout loss of the season.

The team had won five straight before a 3-2 overtime loss in Edmonton and the loss in Calgary to start a four-game road trip. Montreal will be in Seattle tomorrow night.

Cole Caulfield leads the Habs with 31 goals, while Nick Suzuki is their top point-getter with 65 in the season. Defenceman Lane Hutson leads all NHL rookies with 49 points, including 45 assists. He is the only first-year skater in the league to average more than 20 minutes of ice (22:23).

Former Vancouver Giant stalwart and Delta native Brendan Gallagher has 15 goals and is on pace for his best season since 2019-20 when he scored 22 times.

After serving as the backup on Saturday, Sam Montembault gets the start in goal tonight. He is 4-0-1 in his last five outings.

Montreal is in the thick of the Wild Card chase in the East. The Canadiens enter the night four points back of Columbus for the final wild card spot in that race.

The Habs beat the Canucks 5-4 in overtime on January 8th at Bell Centre. Nick Suzuki scored the winner on a 4-on-3 power play. The Canucks held a 3-1 lead halfway through the hockey game.

Tonight’s referees: Tom Chmielewski & Chris Lee

Tonight’s broadcasters: John Shorthouse & Ray Ferraro

What we heard​


Rick Tocchet on the progress Quinn Hughes is making: “I don’t know about his status tomorrow, but it was a good day for him. He obviously did a little bit more than he has done, so he looked pretty good. But we didn’t have contact drills and stuff like that. So it’s hard to evaluate him. He felt really good yesterday, so we’ll go from there.”

Tocchet on players responding to his post-game comments Sunday about earning their ice time with better performances: “Well, if you want to change culture and want a winning organization, you have to earn it. That’s the way it is. You can’t hand stuff for (things) in the past. Let’s face it, we’re trying to become a winning club. Everybody has to earn their way. I hate the word entitlement. There is no entitlement around here. Listen, if we’re going to go anywhere those guys have to play. Don’t get me wrong. They’ve got to play and they’re going to get played tonight and hopefully they respond.”

Brock Boeser on team needing to find ways to score: “I think we’ve talked about that for a while now that we haven’t generated much offence and I, personally, think that when we’re getting some shots we’re not having much net front traffic and enough guys around the net getting those greasy goals we’ve talked about. That’s where a lot of the goals are scored in this league so we’ve got to get our noses a little dirty tonight.”

Boeser on adjusting to playing with others after spending past few seasons primarily with JT Miller as his centre: “It’s definitely a lot different when you play with a guy for two years, a guy to that degree of how good he is and how good a passer he is and how well he creates space. So, yeah, it’s definitely an adjustment and I feel like I’m trying to understand that it’s going to be different and that I’ve got to play a little different with other guys. I can definitely shoot the puck more and get net front and find those greasy rebounds.”

Make sure to join the Rink Wide Vancouver postgame live stream immediately following tonight’s game. Rink Wide will provide a full breakdown and comprehensive coverage of the Canucks game. When the final buzzer sounds, be sure to log onto Rink Wide and join the YouTube live chat to discuss the game with other Canucks fans. Subscribe to the Rink Wide YouTube channel and never miss an episode.

Sponsored by bet365


Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/scenes...s-shake-up-4-forward-lines-montreal-canadiens
 
The Stanchies: Canucks spiral continues in 4-2 loss to Canadiens

If the Vancouver Canucks are going to make the playoffs, they are going to have to start winning games, it’s as simple as that. Greasy wins, ugly wins, and random 13-1 victories where Tyler Myers gets eight goals wins; whatever form they come in, they need to get them.

Which is why at the end of the day, the Canucks latest 4-2 loss to the Montreal Canadiens is a failure. It doesn’t matter how high that “Deserve to Win” meter favours the Canucks, they need to find start escaping these games with two points.

And in many ways, the Canucks probably played at the height of their capabilities against Montreal. It was the same dreadful hockey for the majority of the game, but at least the effort level was there. This group has yet to show that it has a higher level of hockey in them, so until Quinn Hughes returns, this game is probably as good as it gets.

Which means that until Quinn Hughes returns, this team needs to continue playing with this kind of effort and then hope they start getting some more bounces to go their way. Is that the kind of plan that motivates a fan base? Probably not. But it’s the hand you were dealt, so this is most likely how it’s going to go.

And if you’re looking for good news, Elias Pettersson had another really good game on Tuesday night. He was dominant at 5-on-5 and also scored a goal, so you don’t have to scream “Little things!” at him when he crosses the street.

Rick Tocchet also mentioned that Quinn Hughes is a possibility to play tomorrow as well, which would obviously be a massive boost to this team. Even Quinn Hughes with missing limbs brings up the chances to win considerably for the team.

But for fans who have watched this team all season, Tuesday night was a lot more of the same. It was a team that played defensively responsible, if not tedious, hockey. It was a team whose entire offensive plan still seemed to revolve around shots from the point into traffic. It was a team that failed to secure a third period comeback, something they haven’t been able to do all season long.

It was a team that couldn’t score when it mattered, yet again.

So, in terms of entertainment value, this game was absolutely brutal through two periods. Were it not for the third period comeback attempt, I most likely would have passed out in my seat. I can only take so many games where Derek Forbort is the elite offensive threat coming from Vancouver’s side of the ice before I wonder where we went wrong in all of this.

That being said, the playoffs are still possible. And as much as I don’t have a lot of faith that this team has a Stanley Cup run in them, I at least want to see how that plays out by seeing them get into the post-season.

Which means tomorrow’s game against Calgary is absolutely a must-win situation for this club. No excuses, no moral victories, no guy in a hot dog suit wondering who did this; they must win that game no matter what.

Time is no longer a luxury for the Vancouver Canucks. It’s time to put up or shut up at this point.

Unless they want more media scrums where we ask in a zombie-like fashion about what a loss like this means to the team.

Don’t make us do that, Rick.

Please.

Best setting expectations early

When do playoff tickets go on sale? #canucks

— Scarbacon (@scarbacon) March 12, 2025

Much to the happiness of the many, many Montreal fans in attendance, their team got on the board almost immediately after the puck was dropped:

Brock Boeser could not have gotten off to a worse start in the “Earn your ice time” era if he tried, as his no-look pass along the boards ended up being stolen by Montreal.

And apparently, Cole Caulfield and Nick Suzuki are pretty good at this whole hockey thing? I have been told this by a few people at least. One of them was really drunk and screaming at me about how good Carey Price was, but I still trust my source.

So, on one hand, Brock Boeser turning the puck over into a goal against on his first shift? Not a great look. That’s kind of like me starting my first day on the job by drop-kicking the manager and then suplexing them through the window due to what I would later describe to HR as a “minor miscommunication error.”

On the other hand, that’s an incredible goal from Suzuki. The odds of that turnover turning into that goal feels very small, but that kind of speaks to one of the Canucks major problems right now; their margin for error feels so incredibly slim.

This is a team that has not won a single game when trailing entering the third period, so they simply cannot afford to fall behind in the score. This is not a team that has been able to generate offence when the key moment is upon them. How many times have we heard Rick talk about not having the juice this season, damn it.

And look, any team will struggle to an extent when they aren’t getting all the bounces. But with the Canucks, it feels like they are absolutely dead in the water if the Hockey Gods are having their way with them. Any small mistake ends up in the back of their net, and then it becomes a night of taking shots from the point and praying they go in.

If that doesn’t seem like exciting hockey, that’s because it isn’t. It’s dreadful. It’s the kind of hockey you would leave on the TV in the hopes of boring your sister-in-law to death so she finally heads home.

Which is why going down 1-0 against Montreal that quickly felt like a massive hill for this team to climb.

Best earn it, damn it

Earn that ice time #Canucks

— MDWhite (@White3D64197) March 12, 2025

The Canucks offence was the more of the same in this one. Not a lot of rush action, and even when they did generate some end-to-end action, they would meet their old friend the post.

Pius Suter was the latest victim of iron toxicity, as he clanged one off the post about halfway through the first period:

Aside from that, it was a lot of the low-to-high passes that ended with a defenceman throwing a puck on net, hoping for a bounce or two.

In this clip, you will watch as Tyler Myers attempts to break a man in half with a shot before Marcus Pettersson grabs the loose puck and just tosses it on net:

They key takeaway, other than trying to come to terms with cheering on wrist shots from the blue line as the high point of Canucks hockey, is Elias Pettersson keeping that puck in the zone, something he did the entire night.

Every time EP40 was on the ice, he tilted it towards the Canadiens end of things. His line was one of the only lines that was able to consistently shut down the Suzuki and Caulfield combo, and it was a situation where Elias very much earned his ice time of 19:48, leading all forwards on the Canucks.

Best Kiki Dee and Elton begged you not to

This team breaks my heart #Canucks

— Andrew (@andrewcanuck640) March 12, 2025

Montreal then made it 2-0 when a high flip pass got punched back into the neutral zone by noted local giant hockey man Marcus Pettersson, which Juraj Slafkovsky managed to scoop up and skate into the zone with some speed:

Kevin Lankinen admitted after the game that he just couldn’t track the puck, so again, credit to Juraj for taking a very well-placed shot.

Which kind of brings us back to the Canucks offensive scheme being based all around low to high point shot attempts. I know in a perfect world, they can use the GOTI system to counter-attack teams and score goals off the rush, but that just hasn’t materialized.

Instead we sit back and watch other teams generate chances off the rush, and out-counter the countering team, except they manage to create high-danger chances that actually look dangerous, and not the high-danger Vancouver Canuck special where it’s some dude slamming a rebound into a goalies pad four times in a row.

Best punching above your weight

That was called a hand pass on the Canadiens but I'm pretty sure that came off Dakota Joshua's glove. He nearly knocked the puck into his own net but it went off the post. #Canucks

— Daniel Wagner (@passittobulis) March 12, 2025

People will talk about luck a lot in this game, but honestly, the Canucks also had some luck going there way.

Best example of this? Dakota Joshua punching a puck away from the crease that ends up actually hitting the post behind Kevin Lankinen before dropping in the blue paint, just begging Montreal to cash it in:

I mean, the Canucks also had bad luck, don’t worry, we have several examples of that. But I just want you to know this wasn’t a case of “why does this keep happening to me??” for Vancouver as they got one massive lucky bounce to go their way later.

Best standard definition results

How the fuck isn’t that a goal dude???#Canucks

— Nils GOATlander (@NillsGOATlander) March 12, 2025

Speaking of bad luck, Dakota Joshua’s play has been better as of late, even if it’s still not where he wants it to be. In the post-game media scrum, Dakota wanted nothing to do with the moral victory of “playing better hockey”, as he just wants results now, which is very much understandable.

You can also see why “hey man, it looked like you almost scored, so that’s pretty cool” wouldn’t exactly fill him with joy:

Garland’s fantastic pass to Dakota Joshua looked like it was an easy bang-bang goal, but Sam Montembeault got just enough of his pad to kick it out:

File this one under the Marty Gelinas rule, where you’re pretty sure that one is in, but the ghost of Nikolai Khabibulin said no.

It’s honestly pretty hard to tell, and some angles look better than others. But at the end of the day, you can see why they didn’t have enough to overturn it. In one angle, it looks clear as day that it’s over the line, and in another one, it looks like the puck hasn’t even graduated college yet.

Best counter strike

Only 2 more periods until it’s over can’t wait #Canucks

— Trakzz (@trakzzthe) March 12, 2025

Despite Tyler Myers urging Montreal to 1v1 him on Rust, they instead chose to counter-attack with aplomb:

The Canucks, using their vaunted “dear god please let this shitty shot from the point go in” offence, end up with the puck missing the net and bouncing right back down their throats.

Defensive in nature, Elias Pettersson, he of house Defence, makes a brief pinch for the puck and then has to scramble back, which is where this play falls apart. It looks like he sees Fil Hronek sliding over to the left of the ice to cover Emil Heineman, so he goes to take Jake Evans. But then Hronek starts going back to the right side as well, which gives Emil time and space to bring the puck in with speed, which leaves both Canucks defenceman covering thoughts and prayers instead of NHL players, which allows Emil to slide in the nice pass to Jake.

Which again, luck is kind of on the Canucks side, because Montreal slides that puck wide.

And honestly, a lot of NHL teams have breakdowns like this. Not every team plays perfect defensive hockey all of the time, except for the 2014 men’s Canadian Olympic hockey team.

But when you’re the Vancouver Canucks and you’re fighting to get out of dead last in the league in scoring, these mistakes can just end up being so costly.

Which means we end up yelling at the players for making mistakes everyone makes, except here they have dire consequences. Because of the implications, you see.

Best update

Biggest story of the night @TheStanchion @LaheyHNIC https://t.co/N69XjwFa5M

— Surrey canucks (@GSurreycanucks) March 12, 2025

Richard Linklater would be proud of our journey together with this kid.

Best second biggest story of the night

Derek Forbot is your #Canucks shot leader after the first period with three.

— Adam Kierszenblat (@Adamkblat) March 12, 2025

To be fair, TO BE FAIR, Derek played pretty good hockey.

I personally think he was inspired by having a kid say he was their favourite player last game, as there were several times where he dragged the puck to the general direction of the net, something we haven’t seen a lot of from him.

He also wore an “A” on his jersey on the night, which I present without comment, lest Rick Tocchet need to give another speech tomorrow about rotating the “A”.

Best third biggest story of the night

Both of Montreal's goals were scored against the #Canucks' top-six forward lines.

In 8.3 games since the Four Nations Faced Off, Vancouver has now been outscored 14-2 at 5-on-5 in about 220 minutes with Elias Pettersson or Filip Chytil on the ice.

Tough way to live.

— Thomas Drance (@ThomasDrance) March 12, 2025

I don’t use this stat to damn Elias Pettersson in this game, because as I pointed out earlier, he was actually quite good.

But overall, yes, he’s let you down personally and is not interested in your continued happiness.

Best parental tutelage

I wonder everyday why I’m still a fan…and then I remember what my dad told me. He said…in his infinite wisdom…I don’t deserve good things. A Canucks fan was born that day. Thanks dad. #canucks

— JS87 (@joshuaseinen) March 12, 2025

Dads know best; what can I say?

And it sure felt like that way when the Canucks offence just could not get going in the second period.

I will say that the Canucks at least tried to generate their own luck on this night, as Nils Höglander in particular was forechecking hard and trying to force Montreal into mistakes.

And early in the second period, Nils bounced on a loose puck in the slot after his line kept forcing Montreal into having to make quick decisions with the puck:

But it was also still a lot of offence generated around the idea of putting a puck on net with traffic.

Even the Canucks power play was at its most effective when it was Conor Garland throwing a puck in the general direction of Brock Boeser and Jake DeBrusk and hoping for a tip or bounce to go their way:

It just feels like it’s been eons since we’ve seen the Canucks score a goal that you might consider nice enough to bring home to meet your family. The kind of goal where they make multiple passes that end up with a nice tap-in to finish it off.

The type of goal like this:

Once again, Montreal’s top line delivered, this time with a quick counterattack that was created when Dakota Joshua went for a line change at an inopportune time, which then saw Tyler Myers make an ill-advised pinch.

The end result was you had Conor Garland trying to cover on defence while Marcus Pettersson stared down both men and wondered what he did to deserve this kind of treatment.

It’s a really nice goal, one that has the kind of killer instinct we don’t see much around these parts anymore. A goal generated out of purpose, not just “ok seriously, please let this point shot somehow find its way into the net, we’re all out of ideas.”

Best the grind will continue until the morale picks up

I’ve never screamed so much at my TV.. worst game I’ve seen since the Boudreau era. #Canucks

— Joe Cooper (@TheJoeCooper) March 12, 2025

And that was kind of how the second period went. Just get the puck on net, and maybe you get a greasy one in.

Kiefer Sherwood tried his best to bang in a loose puck in the slot on an expiring power play:

And then you had plays where, yeah, this team? They were working hard. They just couldn’t generate a goal or even much of a good look on net:

So I appreciate Brock Boeser winning the race for this puck, and I appreciate him winning the board battle and getting the puck to the point, and damn it, it’s nice to see Elias Pettersson find a loose puck near the faceoff dot and get a shot on net, and holy hell, I am here for Drew O’Connor getting several whacks at a potential rebound.

It’s just, they rarely seem to go in.

Montreal was up 3-0 and seemed content to park their own bus on this one, which meant the Canucks had to find a way to score a goal that didn’t involve mostly praying.

Best sometimes prayer works

Snorting grade A despair. Hoping to dilute it with some apathy. It's not helping. #Canucks

— Michael Paweska (@mrpaweska) March 12, 2025

Can I interest you in a random point shot that goes in?

After having watched several periods of the Canucks just throwing sh!t on net, this time it finally worked.

Filip Hronek almost seemed surprised when it went in, as he was just going through the usual motions of getting the puck near the crease and seeing what would happen.

Pius Suter does a fantastic job of taking away Sam’s eyes, and Hronek, you know what, that’s a perfect shot, my dude.

So hey, credit where credit is due: they managed to score off their one-set play.

Best turning of the luck tides

Pettersson moved his feet before taking that shot. Remarkable how more effective that is. #Canucks

— Kerry Banks (@bad_kicker) March 12, 2025

#Canucks have scored on 2 of their 3 shots in third period. A few more shots and they can win this thing going away

— Jeff Paterson (@patersonjeff) March 12, 2025

The Canucks second goal of the game occurred when luck also went their way after the officials called a penalty because Suter got hit with the puck:

In real time, the officials assumed David Savard had slashed Pew Pew at some point, but nope, the joke’s on you officials, that was Hronek beaming his own guy with the puck.

The Canucks then used that bit of luck to have Elias Pettersson load up his shot on the power play and dial in from long distance, ending in a hilarious clip of Marty St. Louis shaking his head in disgust:

Again, I might not love long-distance shots, and I might not love this offensive scheme based around point shots into traffic, but I will happily take EP40 unloading that shot all day, every day. The more he shoots, the better this team will be.

And like I said, Elias Pettersson’s defence was dialed in, as he was constantly shutting down the Canadiens attack, as he does in this clip, batting down a pass in his own zone:

It was a good game from Elias, even if after the game his eyes didn’t have the same twinkle they did after Minnesota.

Best last gasp

Thought the offense was there – a lot of chances created – the finishes still seem to elude them in this stretch. #Canucks

— MDWhite (@White3D64197) March 12, 2025

But the problem with greasy goals is a lot of it relies on hard work and luck, which the Canucks just haven’t gotten enough of this season.

Their best chance at tying this game was a point shot off the draw that Jake DeBrusk got a couple of whacks at before Brock Boeser comes into frame and appears to go full Charlie Brown mode as he looks at the rebound he can’t get to:

Montreal would then get the empty-netter despite Elias Pettersson’s best attempts to bat it out of the air:

And that was the ball game. Another night, another loss.

It’s kind of hard to pump up the good parts of this game because we are clearly no longer in Moral Victory Season. So, all we can do is wait to see what happens against Calgary. I can only write about so many games where I go, “Hey, they did a couple of things good but ultimately lost,” before we all lose respect for each other.

The thing is, this team got two goals on three shots in the third period without changing up its process whatsoever. It’s hard to watch that and go, “Well, Bing Pot, this team managed to turn things around!”

No, at the end of the day, they still just threw the puck on net and hoped something good would happen. Which, when you look at the amount of star power on the teams in the West and East, it’s hard to imagine how effective that will be come playoff time.

If there is a playoff time.

Best trust it

EP40 Tonight: 1 Powerplay Goal, Chances: 25-2, High Danger Chances: 8-1, Shots: 12-1, 93.4 xGF%, 68.4 Faceoff% spread the word #Canucks

— proogle. (@o128965) March 12, 2025

Look, it’s not a moral victory damn it. But it is a process that, if repeated, should lead to better results.

Again, not a moral victory.

Best changing it up

5v5 Zone Entries for the #Canucks vs the Habs

41 Controlled Attempts (35 Successful)
28 Uncontrolled Attempts (3 Successful) pic.twitter.com/25uTNT17rX

— Hamalytics (@Hamalytics) March 12, 2025

The Canucks looked far better with the puck than they have at many times this season. Far fewer dump-ins and far more control with the puck.

WHICH AGAIN, I MUST REPEAT, IS NOT A MORAL VICTORY. I am must pointing it out.

Sponsored by bet365

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/stanch...-spiral-continues-4-2-loss-montreal-canadiens
 
NHL odds, betting preview (March. 12): Canucks vs. Flames predictions

The Vancouver Canucks will play their most important game of the season when they faceoff against the Calgary Flames Wednesday evening.

The Canucks sit one point back of the Flames for the final playoff spot, having played one more game. A regulation win in this matchup would offer a four point swing in the standings, and put the Canucks back in the driver’s seat in the playoff race.

Vancouver will be playing night two of a back-to-back and started number-one goaltender, Kevin Lankinen, in Tuesday’s matchup. They could receive a massive boost as Captain Quinn Hughes is expected to return after a four-game absence.

I’ll detail the relevant game notes, as well as outline my favourite betting angle below.

Canucks vs. Flames odds​

Canucks Moneyline+133
Flames Moneyline-143
Puck LineCanucks +1.5 (-201), Flames -1.5 (+175)
TotalOver 5.5 (+109), Under 5.5 (-123)

Odds courtesy of Pinnacle and are subject to change. Use promo code: Puck @ sign-up.

Vancouver Canucks


While losing to the Montreal Canadiens is far from ideal, the Canucks can make amends for last night’s disappointing performance if they win this game in regulation. The Canadiens held a 4.09 to 3.09 edge in expected goals, while Vancouver held a 17-16 edge in high danger scoring chances.

We touched on it in yesterday’s guide, but it’s hard to overstate Hughes value to the Canucks right now. They have scored 2.90 goals per game with Hughes in the lineup this season, compared to 1.93 goals per game with Hughes out of the lineup. Hughes ranks 10th among all NHL skaters with 1.20 point-per-game average this season, despite being a defenceman playing on a team with nobody else sitting close to a point-per-game.

While Hughes has been incredible offensively, he also holds a +5.2 xDef rating (per EvolvingHockey). The Canucks Captain obviously won’t be at 100% if he does play in this matchup, but he’s been highly effective at other points this season while playing through injury.

At the time of writing, it is currently unclear whether head coach Rick Tocchet will opt to start Kevin Lankinen in both legs of a back-to-back, which has become almost unheard of in today’s NHL, or roll with backup Arturs Silovs. Silovs holds a -9.7 GSAx rating and .858 save percentage in nine appearances this season.

Elias Pettersson took another step in the right direction last night and offered a good example of why plus/minus can be such a flawed statistic. With Pettersson on the ice the Canucks held an 11-2 edge in scoring chances, and an 8-2 edge in high-danger scoring chances.

🚨CANUCKS GOAL🚨Elias Pettersson scores on the power play! It's a one goal game! 🎥: Sportsnet | NHL#Canucks | #GoHabsGo

CanucksArmy (@canucksarmy.bsky.social) 2025-03-12T04:31:23.176Z

Pettersson once again looked more keen to shoot the puck, as he lead all Canucks with four shots on target, and had seven shot attempts. It’s another point that has been made often, but Pettersson needs to continue being more shot-minded given the quality of both his one-timer and wrist-shot.

Over the last 10 games the Canucks hold an expected goal share of 50.24%, and have generated 3.17 xGF/60. Actual goals continue to be hard to come by, as they have scored only 2.10 goals per game in that span, which ranks 31st in the NHL.

Calgary Flames


While it seems pretty crazy to think the Canucks have hung around in the Wild Card race while scoring so few goals, they have still been better offensively than the Calgary Flames. The Flames rank 32nd with a goal per game average of 2.56 this season, yet have a good chance of stealing a playoff berth.

Dustin Wolf enters tonight’s matchup priced at +1200 to win the Calder Trophy. Based on recent data points, oddsmakers aren’t necessarily wrong to think the Flames’ goaltender won’t be named Rookie of the Year, either.

However, it seems that voters reluctance to vote a goaltender as goalie of the year, and perhaps some Eastern bias, are preventing Wolf from getting the credit he deserves. Wolf holds a +14.7 GSAx rating and holds the fifth-best save percentage in the league among goaltenders to make 20 or more appearances.

While I’m not a big believer that players need to be on playoff teams in order to be considered for individual awards, Wolf’s play has helped his team more than any other rookie this season, and if the Flames make the playoffs, that should be clear.

Betting odds are another testament to just how greatly the Flames have overachieved based on Wolf’s play. In Wolf’s starts, the Flames are 22-16 straight up and hold a +8.2% ROI. In backup Dan Vladar’s starts, the Flames are 8-17 straight up and hold a -21.2% ROI.

Given the importance of this game, it would be shocking to see Wolf not be offered the start, though he has not yet been confirmed as the starting goaltender.

Over the last 10 games, the Flames hold a 42.96% expected goal share. They have allowed 28.82 shots against per 60 in that span and allowed 3.28 xGA/60.

Joel Farabee and Morgan Frost look to be solid acquisitions for the Flames, who could raise the team’s offensive floor moving forward. Farabee enters this matchup off of his two best performances as a Flame, netting two goals, including a beauty versus the Dallas Stars.

Best bets for Canucks vs. Flames


The Flames are obviously catching the Canucks in a favourable scheduling spot here, and have offered a legitimate home ice advantage this season. If tonight’s goaltending matchup is ultimately Wolf versus Silovs, Calgary will hold a significant edge in goal.

The Flames opened at -120 favourites in this matchup and have now moved all the way to -148. There no longer looks to be any value fading the Canucks as a result, especially if Hughes is to make his return to the lineup.

There does look to be value in backing Pettersson to record over 1.5 shots on goal at -145, which is the same prop we used in yesterday’s piece. While Pettersson poured four shots on goal from seven attempts in yesterday’s game, the price is still identical. It’s been visibly apparent that Pettersson is looking to shoot more, and the stats agree, as he has 21 shot attempts over the last four games.

Best bet: Elias Pettersson Over 1.5 shots on goal -145 (Pinnacle, Play to -150)

Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/nhl-od...-vancouver-canucks-calgary-flames-predictions
 
The Stanchies: Elias Pettersson legacy game in Canucks’ biggest win of the season vs. Flames

30 tries.

It took 30 tries for the Vancouver Canucks to comeback and win a game they were losing after two periods, and it couldn’t have come at a more crucial time than Wednesday in Calgary against the Flames.

Is it a coincidence that it came on a night that I got the backup call from Wyatt, with my personal 5-1-0 Stanchies record and a 4-game winning streak on the line? I think not!

From the first time these rivals linked up on opening night in a chaotic 6-5 Canucks loss, it snowballed into a battle for the eighth and final playoff spot in the Western Conference. With Calgary holding a game in hand and the Canucks reeling from a bad loss to the Montreal Canadiens Tuesday night, this game was as must win as they get.

With their backs against the wall, the Canucks did what so many strong Vancouver teams of seasons past have needed to accomplish: they clawed back from behind against the Flames – at the Saddledome, no less – and found a way to win.

Granted, they did give up an overtime point in the end, putting both teams at 71 points with the extra game for Calgary still lingering. But the character-building of a come-from-behind win, for a team that’s searched for one all season, can’t be overstated. And it came on the back of vintage performances from Elias Pettersson, who notched the late tying goal, and Quinn Hughes, returning from injury to play an absolutely pivotal 30 minutes of ice time amidst new injuries on the blue line.

That’s why this win could be nothing short of the biggest one this season. Whether or not it benefits the Canucks to go for a playoff spot and a matchup with Winnipeg or Vegas at this stage is up for debate. But let’s be honest with ourselves; taking a playoff spot away from Calgary would be one of the best possible feelings as a Canucks fan.

I say let it ride.

Best Hughes we go again
the plan is back on the season is saved https://t.co/IqHNTtA5fX pic.twitter.com/wvNpMKsLT7

— tatiana🏒 (@tatituzzi) March 12, 2025

That move down the wing and pass across the crease by Quinner is a good sign…#Canucks

— Dragon Was Slayed (@522IntoOvertime) March 13, 2025

If I had a nickel for every Quinn Hughes comeback game I’ve been on writing duty for, I’d have two nickels, which isn’t a lot, but it’s weird that it’s happened twice. And thank goodness he was here because Tyler Myers was ruled out of tonight’s game after taking some stinging blocks in the Montreal game on Tuesday.

And Hughes almost immediately made stuff happen, getting to the front of the net to set up Drew O’Connor if not for an errant Flames stick.

He’s such a breath of fresh air every time he gets back on the ice. It’s like seeing an invincible hockey god amongst men.

Best Undercooked Beef
I can’t bear the whole “playoff feel” rhetoric around this game. The reason this game is so big is these two teams are having a mid-off and can’t fucking score

— Anna Forsyth (@aforsyth03) March 13, 2025

We may have to have a discussion about whether or not either of these teams would even be fun if they made the playoffs

— Josh Elliott-Wolfe (@ElliottWolfeJ) March 13, 2025

I won’t kid you, this game was far from a fun watch early on, as more and more Canucks games seem to be. The third period got a lot more interesting, but the first 50 minutes were an exercise in sloppy play, futile scoring chances, and so, so many uncalled penalties. But that’s kind of what you get when you put two very anemic offences up against each other at the wrong time.

I won’t bore you with a bunch of failed dump-and-chase entries that both teams tried. But just know I could!

Best ‘It’s true, but he shouldn’t say it’
this broadcast team is making me miss john shorthouse #canucks fans are fucking spoiled

— kwïn hüz (@riotsurvivor) March 13, 2025

Why must we listen to Calgary’s play by play/colour commentary #Canucks

— Pucknucksaga (@pucknucksaga) March 13, 2025

This was a nationally televised Wednesday Night Hockey game, so when the Flames broadcast crew was handed the keys to the press box, you knew people in Vancouver were going to be upset. Now I’m not going to sewer former Canucks play-by-play man Jon Abbott one bit, considering he had to call some of the most terrible games in the Jim Benning era. But this was a strange assignment to give a regional broadcast crew.

For a March game with so much on the line, the Saddledome crowd sounded a lot more library-like than you’d expect from this fanbase. Maybe it’s Flames fans not really caring about making the playoffs, or maybe it’s Sportsnet’s sound mixing consistently turning down the crowd volume at every arena in the league for some weird reason. I’m going to pretend it’s the former.

The Canucks fans in the building did make their presence known. Props to anyone who made the trip.

Best Costco Guys Impression
D Petey lowers the boom on Kadri. Great open ice hit.

— Rob Williams (@RobTheHockeyGuy) March 13, 2025

EPjr says sit down #Canucks boom 💥

— whites at home cw (@vanleygoodtakes) March 13, 2025

Elias “Junior” Pettersson brings the BOOM like he’s always grabbing chicken bakes and double chunk chocolate cookies at the Costco on Expo Boulevard. (For anyone not up to date on their TikTok personalities, don’t Google this. It’s time you’ll never get back.)

The hit Junior flattens Nazem Kadri with is a good hockey hit! It’s right through the body; no head contact is made, and it does its job of knocking Kadri off the puck. And to his credit, Kadri is already shaking it off and going back to playing right before Connor Zary decides to take an absolute cheap shot in response.

Zary drills his arm and elbow right through the side of an unsuspecting Pettersson’s head and jumps on top of the fallen Canuck rookie for good measure.

Somehow, this bush league sh!t was only worth a two-minute penalty in the moment, and it ended up cutting EP25’s night short, keeping him out of the final two periods with an obvious injury. But hopefully, it’ll take Zary out of the lineup for a lot longer once the Department of Player Safety takes a look at this replay on Thursday morning. Absolutely pathetic “retribution” for a clean hit.

Best Pew Pew
SUTER THANK YOU #Canucks

— MDWhite (@White3D64197) March 13, 2025

Suter with a double shooter!!🔥🔥🔥🔥 #Canucks

— Snowstar444 (@snowstar444) March 13, 2025

Before the game, we got some excellent foreshadowing. While waiting to go out for the warm-up, Sportsnet’s cameras caught Marcus Pettersson and Pius Suter doing a little dap up in the Saddledome tunnel before heading out onto the ice.

So it shouldn’t come as a surprise that these two linked up for the opening goal of the game right as Zary’s penalty expired. Suter’s first shot didn’t get through the skate of Joel Hanley, but on his second attempt, he made no mistake, putting it over Dustin Wolf’s shoulder.

Suter’s insane scoring bender has been a sight to behold, and if the Canucks make the playoffs at all he’ll be a surprisingly big reason why.

Who says 28 is too late to find out you’re actually a bona fide sniper?

Pius Suter has the same number of goals as Conor Bedard this season.

Pius Suter has more goals than Jared McCann, Mika Zibanejad, Quinton Byfield, Elias Pettersson, Dylan Cozens and many more big names. #Canucks

— Noah Strang (@noahstrang_) March 13, 2025

Oh, and JT Miller should be on Noah’s list, too, but who’s counting?

Best Touchdown run
Where tf was the defence there? #Canucks

— Cam (@CJC1499) March 13, 2025

D petey and M petey needed to be more alert on that one #canucks

— Pucknucksaga (@pucknucksaga) March 13, 2025

The Flames would respond before the period was out, thanks to a defensive breakdown that would put even the worst NFL defence to shame. All Rasmus Andersson had to do was wait for both Junior and Dragon to split and cover checks on either side boards, leaving all the room in the world for a pass to Nazem Kadri through the middle.

With both Petterssons’ parting for the Red ‘C’, Kadri skates right up the gut and dekes around Lankinen, who bites too hard on the poke check attempt and leaves the net wide open.

Best F*** Around
DONT TOUCH HUGHES YOU WEIRDO #Canucks

— ari (@ariltlworld) March 13, 2025

Lomberg, you are now my enemy.

— Daniel Wagner (@passittobulis) March 13, 2025

And you thought the Flames’ dirty play stopped with Zary in the first period! Oh no.

After Quinn makes a set-up pass to Kiefer Sherwood at the red line, noted villain Ryan Lomberg cross-checks him away from the puck, knocking Hughes over and getting the ref’s attention for a delayed penalty. When the whistle goes, Lomberg decides to gaslight himself into the idea that Hughes flopped, skating right over and cross-checking him in the chest.

Lomberg keeps on jawing at Hughes from the comfort of his cellblock, not knowing what a colossal mistake he’s making waking up the bear they call Huggy.

Best Find Out
Let’s Goooo DeBrusk!!!

💙💚💙💚💙💚 #Canucks

— David 〽️ays (@CanucksWontWin) March 13, 2025

Please tell me someone got a clip of Quinn’s evil laugh on the bench

— Anna Forsyth (@aforsyth03) March 13, 2025

Sometimes, revenge is a dish best served quickly.

The Canucks top power play unit has struggled a lot this year, but talk about a clutch appearence in this game. With the Flames’ penalty kill collapsing back to the slot area, EP40 feeds Hughes the puck at the blue line, and he has all the time he needs to rip it. DeBrusk waits paitently in front of Wolf and gets one of the most deftly tipped goals a Canuck has scored all season and celebrates like it.

Hughes opts for an out-of-character celly approach: a fly-by past Lomberg in the penalty box, followed by some chirping with Rasmus Andersson that follows all the way to the benches.

You know how you can tell Hughes is jacked up? He actually flashed a devilish grin on the bench!

If you’d placed a pregame prop bet on Hughes getting caught smiling in this game, you’re probably already planning how to quit your job tomorrow.

Best Calamity
What the hell was that #Canucks

— Suleiman Damji (@SullyCanuck87) March 13, 2025

A 2 on 0 shorthanded…. Yikes

— Lina Setaghian (@Linaset) March 13, 2025

Of course, these wouldn’t be the 2025 Canucks without showing us their best and worst selves in the same night. The roles of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde being played by the man advantage.

With Brayden Pachal in the penalty for running completely blatant interfence on Conor Garland, the Canucks have a chance to build on their lead. Instead, they collapse like a casino on the Vegas Strip does every couple of years when they need a new hotel theme.

After a Hughes attempt to dump the puck in gets blocked by a pair of Flames defender, the Canucks don’t pick up on the transition fast enough. As soon as the play gets turned the other way towards Kevin Rooney and a trailing Jonathan Huberdeau, Filip Chytil finds himself as the only Canuck back.

Rather than position himself for a 2-on-1, Chytil takes a flying leap at Rooney and stumbles, creating a sudden shorthanded 2-on-0 that Huberdeau buries in the back of the net with ease.

This type of defensive breakdown is usually a sign that the wheels are about to come off the bus.

Best When It Rains
wtf was Aman doing #Canucks

— F the Oilers (@KingofWhopper) March 13, 2025

they need to invent a canucks team that doesnt make me sad

— Courtney Jacobsen (@__courtneyj) March 13, 2025

Nils Åman over Jonathan Lekkerimäki was a coach’s decision. And it cost them dearly when Åman took a dumb interference penalty late in the second.

Seeing the writing on the wall, both the Flames power play and the Canucks penalty kill seemed to be going through the motions when Jonathan Huberdeau ripped a shot so hard that it got stuck in the net’s back post.

If GIFs could have audio, you’d hear Flames fans offer the most awkward, half-hearted cheer a home team’s goal has ever received. Instead, you just get to see the puck awkwardly caught on Lankinen’s water bottle.

This game – and this season – feel just about done.

Best Foreshadowing
It would be one helluva game to get your first win trailing after 2 periods tonight #Canucks

— Tyson Cole (@SpittinPicklets) March 13, 2025

Ahead of the third period, the Flames broadcast made a point to mention that the OG Elias Pettersson has a 10-game point streak going against the Flames, with a secondary assist already on the scoresheet.

Imagine if that bet paid off. Nothing would silence the haters faster!

Speaking of foreshadowing, Kevin Lankinen made a key stop on Kadri during an early third period power play that easily could’ve put the game out of reach. In another world that puck goes in, and the Canucks playoffs go with them.

Instead, we played on.

Best Running with Wolves
This is the most important power play of the season #Canucks

— G1LLZ. I'm Just Saying (@AvtarG) March 13, 2025

Dustin Wolf is frustratingly amazing! #Canucks

— Huggy🧸43 (@Huggy_Bear43) March 13, 2025

You don’t love to give opponents their flowers, but Dustin Wolf was absolutely phenomenal in the third period. At one point, the shot difference was a whopping 16-1 in favour of the Canucks, and the rookie goalie held down the fort with glove saves, scrambles in close on the power play and holding the goal line.

The Canucks power play in the third period was some of the best man advantage work they’ve done all season, but they were facing a brick wall at the worst time. There’s a reason he belongs in the Calder Trophy conversation next to Macklin Celebrini.

With 10 minutes to go, the Canucks, who haven’t come back from down a goal in what feels like a millenium, were going to have to find some magic and beat a red hot goalie all at once.

Who was willing to step up?

Best NEVER BEEN MORE BACK
Elias Pettersson: clutch. #Canucks

— Thomas Drance (@ThomasDrance) March 13, 2025

A spirited "let's go" from Elias Pettersson to Victor Mancini after that goal. #Canucks

— David Quadrelli (@QuadrelliD) March 13, 2025

The Canucks needed a hero. Their season on the line, their chance at a playoff spot slipping away.

Just when you thought he was a goner, Elias freaking Pettersson rose from the ashes like a phoenix.

This goal starts with a well-placed shot on goal from Victor Mancini of all people, who, in the absence of Myers and D-Petey, is suddenly playing top-four minutes and looking extremely good doing it. With all sorts of traffic in front, Wolf finally spits out a juicy rebound, and there’s EP40 to send the puck sailing home for his third goal in four games, punctuating it with the masculine urge to say “let’s go!” after anything good happens.

As soon as that puck went in, you suddenly had the feeling of… could it be positive vibes? I thought those went extinct months ago.

The Canucks and Flames played out the stretch with neither team willing to give up the point they’d pick up if the game went to OT. They’d leave the heart attacks for extra time.

Best Heart Palpitations
29:51 final ice time for the captain https://t.co/eeGxfqyC80

— Jeff Paterson (@patersonjeff) March 13, 2025

This is where Elon Musk’s terrible version of Twitter decided to poop out on embedding posts, so we don’t have any more quotes from you guys from here on out. I do promise there were lots of good ones!

Pius Suter over Hoglander in 3v3 is wild lol

— Cody Severtson (@CodySevertson) March 13, 2025

First, Hughes sprung EP40 and DeBrusk on a 2-on-1 where Pettersson called his own number but just couldn’t beat the arm of Wolf.

Then it was Hughes’ turn to take a rush, getting away a good shot that Wolf managed to blocker into the netting.

After Rick Tocchet took a well-placed timeout midway through the final five, both teams got their best chances on the same shift. First went the Flames, who took advantage of a stupidly executed puck drop for a 2-0n-1 chance that Lankinen shuts down.

Then, the puck immediately turns back the other way. Filip Hronek’s shot misses the net, but Pettersson corrals it and just can’t tuck it around the post and a prone Wolf.

In the dying moments of OT, snakebitten Brock Boeser hits the post, and Conor Garland can’t get the puck around Wolf’s outstretched pad.

To a shootout we go. Just the way you want a brutal battle for playoff positioning to end, right?

Best Trilogy
Wow Petey. Made it look easy. #Canucks

— Thee Lego Batman (@mstad101) March 13, 2025

Also: pic.twitter.com/RtMxHnTI9v

— Wyatt Arndt (@TheStanchion) March 13, 2025

This shootout was the story of three clutch Canucks.

The first is Kevin Lankinen, who stopped three of the four Flames shooters with a balance of patience and refusing to give the slightest bit of real estate in close.

The second is Elias Pettersson, who makes Wolf look completely human with a, dare I say, J.T. Miller-esque(?) shootout approach.

Guys, Petey’s never been more back.

The final act is Conor Garland’s. He didn’t have his loudest game of the season on Wednesday, but when his number was called in the shootout, he came back to the bench a conquering hero.

I’m no lip-reading expert, but during his winning celebration, Conor seems to say, “LET’S F***ING GO F***ING HOME!!”

Put that quote on a statue when the Canucks make the playoffs and inevitably go on a run we’ll remember our entire lives. That’s how legends are born.

Best asking the right questions
Love how they kept pressing after the tying goal. Who is this strange team? pic.twitter.com/dQCfMYDc8F

— Aaron 🇨🇦 (@canuck5551) March 13, 2025

The third period of this game was the most fun the Canucks have looked in a long, long time. It’s not surprising that when the Tocchet-coached Canucks are forced to abandon the defence-first mindset and not rely on dump and chase hockey, they’re just so much more fun to watch. It only resulted in one goal this time around, but it’s obvious that entertaining hockey sells so much better than a low-event game does.

If every game the Canucks played were like the third period, you’d have people lined around the block to pay 20% more a year for half and full season ticket packs. You wouldn’t need to cut 11-game packs to force more people onto the ones with bigger financial commitments. And you certainly wouldn’t have people balking at the $100+ it currently requires just to attend one freaking game.

Put a fun product on the ice, and you’ll never have an empty seat again. This team did it in the final 20 minutes of their second game of a back-to-back on a different time zone.

Just imagine what they could accomplish with that kind of effort in a full season.

Best Do You Believe in Miracles?
Despite entering tonight's meeting with VAN owning an NHL worst 2.56 goals per game, the #Flames have used a superb defensive structure to reside in a playoff spot. If they remain 32nd of 32 teams, they'd join this list going back 9+ decades (with just 2 others coming since 1971) pic.twitter.com/8vXdmyL7ri

— StatsCentre (@StatsCentre) March 12, 2025

I sure do.

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/stanch...ver-canucks-biggest-win-season-calgary-flames
 
Which Canucks contracts will age well alongside the NHL’s impending cap increases?

It seems like a fine time for a dose of positivity.

At the tail-end of weeks of inconsistent results, the Vancouver Canucks won their most important game in a while, and in dramatic fashion, to boot. The club defeated the Calgary Flames in a shootout on Wednesday night to put themselves back in a playoff spot.

We wouldn’t be selling tickets quite yet. But it was still a meaningful win. For now, the talk of the 2024/25 Canucks’ untimely demise can be put to the side.

There has also been a lot of somewhat negative talk around Canucks contracts of late. Both in the sense of contracts not signed – the trio of pending UFAs that the Canucks held onto at the Trade Deadline – and in discussions of what free agents the team might pursue this summer, and the exorbitant deals said free agents are expected to sign.

It all has something to do with a trio of impending increases to the salary cap ceiling, set for each of the next three offseasons. This summer, the cap will go from $88 million up to $95.5 million, then up to $104 million for 2026, and up to $113.5 million for 2027.

And that, as much as anything, is why negotiating with soon-to-be-UFAs is difficult right now and why landing actual UFAs will be an intense experience in the summer of 2025. There’s more cap space to go around, which means more money to go around, which means a greater demand for a share of that money from the players.

But there’s a positive flip side to all this. A sunny side, or a silver lining, if you will. And that’s the notion that, with so much inevitable leaguewide inflation on the way, those contracts already on the books should, conversely, begin to look better and better in context. In other words, some of the contracts signed prior to the cap increases are set to age particularly well now, and that definitely includes some of the contracts currently on the Canucks’ books.

Like these ones:

(Note: We’ll avoid the obvious inclusion of any entry-level contracts here and just stick to the veteran deals.)

Marcus Pettersson

Under contract until 2031
2025/262026/272027/28
Cap Hit$5.5 million$5.5 million$5.5 million
% of Cap5.7%5.3%4.8%
Base Salary$6 million$4.5 million$3.5 million
Bonuses $2.5 million
ClausesNMCNMCNMC

We start with a contract that almost feels like cheating to include here because everyone kind of knew Marcus Pettersson’s extension was a bargain the moment it was signed, regardless of any cap increases on the way.

An AAV of $5.5 million sounds perfectly reasonable for what Pettersson brings in the current moment. And it only gets better from here, especially when considering it from the cap percentage perspective. If the cap is at $95.5 million, as it will be next season, a team that spends to the cap should spend some $4.15 million per player on average ($95.5/23 players). That average will continue to go up as the cap rises.

Which means that Pettersson starts out his contract barely making more than the average defender, but by Year 3, he will probably be making quite close to average. Thus, so long as Pettersson remains an above-average defender, he’ll continue to return excellent value on this contract.

Jake DeBrusk

Under contract until 2031
2025/262026/272027/28
Cap Hit$5.5 million$5.5 million$5.5 million
% of Cap5.7%5.3%4.8%
Base Salary$3 million$4.5 million$3 million
Bonuses$3 million $3 million
ClausesNMCNMCM-NTC (15)

Let’s keep those percentages in mind as we move on to Jake DeBrusk, someone with an identical cap hit to Pettersson.

However, there are typically more forwards on an NHL roster, and the distinction between them is greater. An average NHL salary should belong to someone playing somewhere in the middle-six, naturally. Yet, starting as soon as next year, DeBrusk himself will be making not that much more than the average, and – like Pettersson – he’ll work his way closer to league average as the contract ages.

DeBrusk, on pace for close to 30 goals this season, is a borderline first line but definite second line talent. From next year onward, he’ll be making lower-end second line money at best. So long as there is not an enormous drop in production, he’ll continue to return value throughout.

Nils Höglander

Under contract until 2028
2025/262026/272027/28
Cap Hit$3 million$3 million$3 million
% of Cap3.1%2.9%2.6%
Base Salary$2.8 million$2.9 million$2.3 million
Bonuses$1 million

Höglander had a tough start to the career, and one of the all-time great slumps in Canucks history. But outside of that stretch, he’s been producing much the same as he did last year, and that’s a level of production that is definitely worth $3 million.

As we continue to talk averages, Höglander should start next season with a below-league-average contract. By Year 3, he’s down to just a 2.6% share of the cap, which might actually be closer to a league-minimum contract than it is a league-average contract.

In other words, Höglander starts out with bottom-six money and ends up with what might be considered fourth line money by 2027/28. It’s hard to imagine he’s not worth it, slumps and all.

Filip Hronek

Under contract until 2032
2025/262026/272027/28
Cap Hit$7.25 million$7.25 million$7.25 million
% of Cap7.6%7.0%6.3%
Base Salary$5 million$6.75 million$4.4 million
Bonuses$4 million $4 million
ClausesNMCNMCNMC

Few players stepped up in Quinn Hughes’s recent absence more than Hronek. Which probably makes Canucks fans feel a lot better about dubbing him their true #2 defender. And if he’s that, he’s definitely worth the $7.25 million AAV he continues to be signed for.

By Year 3 of this deal, Hronek will have slipped all the way down to what will have to be considered second pairing money. His $7.25 million in 2027/28 will be the rough equivalent of a player making $5.5 million today.

The Canucks don’t even need Hronek to be as good as he’s been lately to earn that share of the money – though they probably wouldn’t complain.

Kevin Lankinen

Under contract until 2030
2025/262026/272027/28
Cap Hit$4.5 million$4.5 million$4.5 million
% of Cap4.7%4.3%4.0%
Base Salary$2.5 million$4 million$3 million
Bonuses$2.5 million $2 million
ClausesNMCNMCM-NTC (15)

Whether Lankinen is considered the starter or the 1A, he’ll start his new contract extension with about a league-average cap hit and a decidedly lower cap hit than the average leading goaltender. Then, it just gets better from there.

To borrow our comparison from the Hronek section, that 4% of the cap that Lankinen is scheduled to take up in 2027/28 is the equivalent of a goalie making $3.5 million today. That’s borderline backup money. As long as Lankinen stays as good as he’s been for his entire career, there will be no issues with his compensation.

Tyler Myers

Under contract until 2027
2025/262026/272027/28
Cap Hit$3 million$3 millionUFA
% of Cap3.1%2.9%
Base Salary$2.9 million$2.3 million
Bonuses
ClausesNMCM-NTC (12)

Initially, we only wanted to include contracts that lasted at least the next three seasons. But the more we looked at Myers’ contract, the more it belonged.

Starting next year, Myers is making well below league-average money. By the year after, he’s down to what could be considered bottom pairing money, and that’s good because it’s definitely hoped that someone like Tom Willander will have shunted Myers down the depth chart by then.

The fact that Myers’ salary steadily decreases and he has no signing bonuses, along with the shift to a M-NTC of only 12 teams, also gives the Canucks an easy out if Myers’ play were to fall off a cliff.

Lately, it must be noted, he’s done the exact opposite and is playing some of his best hockey ever, which bodes even better for the aging of this deal.

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/which-...ge-well-alongside-impending-nhl-cap-increases
 
The Canucks showed the recipe of finding success down the stretch: Canucks Conversation

On today’s episode of Canucks Conversation, David Quadrelli and Harman Dayal broke down the Vancouver Canucks‘ crucial 4-3 shootout win against the Calgary Flames and what the team needs to do to continue from that game to keep their playoff hopes alive as the Wild Card race tightens.

The victory snapped a troubling trend for the Canucks, who had not won a single game this season when trailing after two periods. But more than just the result, it was the way they found a way to win — led by their best players stepping up in the biggest moments — that gave a glimpse into the formula they’ll need to follow in the final stretch of the season.

“Going into the second intermission, the vibes weren’t looking good at all,” said Harm. “There was every reason to believe they wouldn’t get the job done and write them off. They had tired legs on the second half of a back-to-back, their defense core was banged up, only 12 shots through the first two periods, and most importantly, they hadn’t won a single game this season when trailing after two periods.

“In that spot, with their backs against the wall, they came back swinging — not just getting the tying goal and eventually winning in the shootout, but throttling the Flames 17-4 in shots in the third period and completely taking over the game. They played with the urgency and desperation they needed in that moment, and it was huge.

“This could really be a turning point for this team, not just because of the result or the good vibes of a come-from-behind victory — but because of who was leading the charge. Elias Pettersson. Quinn Hughes returned to the lineup as well, logging nearly 30 minutes and looking much closer to his healthy form. For your best players to look like your best players in a crucial moment, that’s a massive shot in the arm and a real statement victory.”

If the Canucks are going to make a push for the playoffs, Elias Pettersson’s resurgence will be crucial. After struggling to find his game for much of the season, his dominant third period against Calgary — where he drove play, created chances, and scored the tying goal — was an encouraging sign.

“When you needed that push in the third period, you had to go with your top guys and live and die by the sword there,” Harm continued. “[Pettersson] really came alive in the third period; he started driving play, creating chances, and pounced on that rebound goal.

“The shootout finish as well — sneaky, silky smooth. That tells me he’s starting to get some of his swagger back. To be able to slide it five-hole where there wasn’t a ton of space, and to hit that with pinpoint accuracy and make it look so easy, that’s a sign he’s getting his confidence back.

“Pettersson is a player who requires swagger to his game — that ambition to try things, to feel really good about his skillset. When he has that confidence, he’s dangling the puck off the rush, taking defenders one-on-one, hitting pinpoint targets. When he’s feeling it like that, it’s a world of difference in terms of the player he can be.”

Beyond just the points, the volume of chances Pettersson has been generating lately has been another positive indicator of his return to form.

“He’s got 12 shots in his last five games,” Harm noted. “So it’s not just him getting some points, he’s making a concerted effort to shoot the puck a lot more, and he’s getting rewarded for it.”

You can watch the full segment below:

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/vancou...ing-success-down-stretch-canucks-conversation
 
Scenes from Canucks practice: Demko joins group for first time in five weeks; Hronek and Garland take maintenance days

With a compressed schedule down the stretch, practice time is hard to come by for National Hockey League teams. The Vancouver Canucks took Thursday as a full team day off after back to back games against Montreal and Calgary. And with another set of back-to-backs this weekend against Chicago and Utah, Rick Tocchet was careful about how hard he pushed his hockey club on Friday.

The Canucks skated for about 35 minutes at the University of British Columbia.

What we saw​

video of Demko doing early drills #Canucks pic.twitter.com/cycR0poJde

— Jeff Paterson (@patersonjeff) March 14, 2025

Thatcher Demko’s first skate with the group in five weeks was the big news of the day. The plan all along was for Demko to take part in a handful of drills before leaving the ice earlier than his teammates. He’s not an option to play this weekend, but it was promising at the very least to see him involved in drills and not look like he was limited in any way.

Demko was out early along with Arturs Silovs and goaltender coach Marko Torenius. Kevin Lankinen hopped on the ice when the rest of the skaters joined the group.

Tyler Myers was a full participant at practice after missing Wednesday’s game against the Flames due to injury. And defenceman Elias Pettersson was fully involved in practice, too. That’s encouraging, given the treatment he received from Calgary’s Connor Zary that resulted in Zary being suspended for a pair of games. Head injuries are no joke, and so it was great to see that D-Petey did not suffer a concussion that would have forced him to miss key games at crunch time.

The Canucks patch-worked their lines and defensive pairings on Friday with both Filip Hronek and Conor Garland taking maintenance days. Hronek logged more than 28 minutes on consecutive nights earlier in the week, while Garland, who was seen around the rink, is dealing with the usual wear and tear that comes with the territory at this time of year. Both Hronek and Garland are expected to be available for the games this weekend. Captain Quinn Hughes also took part in Friday’s session – his first full practice with the team in a couple of weeks.

With UBC playing host to both the men’s and women’s U Sports basketball championships this weekend, the Doug Mitchell Winter Sports Centre has the hardwood down. That left the Canucks to not only skate on one of the secondary sheets of ice on campus, but they also had to use the attached minor hockey locker rooms rather than the varsity facilities they normally use to change in.

The Canucks are expected to have an optional morning skate on Saturday ahead of their game against the Blackhawks. Rick Tocchet wouldn’t reveal his goaltending plans for the weekend, but he did mention he didn’t think it was fair to ask Kevin Lankinen to play three games in four nights with Winnipeg here on Tuesday. So look for Arturs Silovs to get the call on Saturday, saving Lankinen for Sunday. Silovs’ lone NHL victory this season came against the Blackhawks on November 16th.

What we heard​


Rick Tocchet on trying to protect Quinn Hughes from punishment down the stretch: “Do I want him to take the hits? No. You can be team tough by a pack of wolves I call it. Be hard on their best players is another thing. We’re more of a pack mentality. I told our players don’t go after their best players, but play their best players hard that’s the way you’ve got to do it. We don’t want Quinn taking hits or getting taking advantage of. Absolutely not. That’s something we’ll have to address down the road.”

Quinn Hughes feeling better by the day: “I feel healthier now. I feel back to where I want to feel. Now it’s just about performing which I’m going to try to do.”

Tyler Myers on missing the game in Calgary with a lower body injury suffered late in Tuesday’s game against Montreal: “I feel pretty good. It was one of those things if it wasn’t a back to back, I probably could have gone. I wasn’t quite ready, but feeling good now. There was a possibility I could have played, but it wasn’t quite ready by the time we got close to the game.”

Watch the raw footage of Demko back at Canucks practice here:

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Source: https://canucksarmy.com/news/scenes...ve-weeks-hronek-garland-take-maintenance-days
 
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