Vancouver Finishes Up Season Series Against Sharks Thursday Night In San Jose

VancouverCanucksCANUCKS BANTER     By Andrew Chernoff    MARCH 30, 2016

The Vancouver Canucks (27-36-13)  face the San Jose Sharks (43-28-6)  in the second of two consecutive games between the two teams, on Thursday night at the SAP Center in San Jose, to finish up their 5-game season series against the Sharks.

VANCOUVER, BC - MARCH 29: Joe Pavelski #8 of the San Jose Sharks and Brendan Gaunce #50 of the Vancouver Canucks watch the puck in front of Tomas Hertl #48 of the Sharks during their NHL game at Rogers Arena March 29, 2016 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. (Photo by Jeff Vinnick/NHLI via Getty Images)

VANCOUVER, BC – MARCH 29: Joe Pavelski #8 of the San Jose Sharks and Brendan Gaunce #50 of the Vancouver Canucks watch the puck in front of Tomas Hertl #48 of the Sharks during their NHL game at Rogers Arena March 29, 2016 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. (Photo by Jeff Vinnick/NHLI via Getty Images)

San Jose has won three of the previous four games this season between the two Pacific division rivals.

The Sharks won at Rogers Place on Tuesday night with a 4-1 victory, with Logan Couture breaking a 1-1 tie, and scoring three consecutive goals, for his first career hat trick. Joe Pavelski had the other San Jose goal and James Reimer made 23 saves.

VANCOUVER, BC - MARCH 29: Logan Couture #39 of the San Jose Sharks holds the puck representing his first NHL hat trick scored during their NHL game against the Vancouver Canucks at Rogers Arena March 29, 2016 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. San Jose won 4-1. (Photo by Jeff Vinnick/NHLI via Getty Images)

VANCOUVER, BC – MARCH 29: Logan Couture #39 of the San Jose Sharks holds the puck representing his first NHL hat trick scored during their NHL game against the Vancouver Canucks at Rogers Arena March 29, 2016 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. San Jose won 4-1. (Photo by Jeff Vinnick/NHLI via Getty Images)

Chris Higgins scored shorthanded and Jacob Markstrom made 27 saves for the Canucks, who have lost their last 9-games (0-8-1).

In their nine consecutive losses, Vancouver has only 8 goals for, surrendered 28 goals against, and scored only one power goal in nineteen opportunities. Their penalty kill is 6th best in the NHL in that span though, at 91.3 percent (21 for 23).

Vancouver is tied with the Edmonton Oilers and Toronto Maple Leafs for the least amount of points in the NHL.

VANCOUVER, BC - MARCH 29: Jacob Markstrom #25 of the Vancouver Canucks makes a save while Joe Pavelski #8 of the San Jose Sharks and Yannick Weber #6 of the Canucks pursue the rebound during their NHL game at Rogers Arena March 29, 2016 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. San Jose won 4-1. (Photo by Jeff Vinnick/NHLI via Getty Images)

VANCOUVER, BC – MARCH 29: Jacob Markstrom #25 of the Vancouver Canucks makes a save while Joe Pavelski #8 of the San Jose Sharks and Yannick Weber #6 of the Canucks pursue the rebound during their NHL game at Rogers Arena March 29, 2016 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. San Jose won 4-1. (Photo by Jeff Vinnick/NHLI via Getty Images)

Expect goalie Ryan Miller to be the starter against the Sharks. Miller is 1-5-1 in his last 7 game starts, with a 2.74 GAA and a .921 Sv%.

Miller is winless in his last four starts however, going 0-3-1 with 10 goals against, and is looking to bounce back against the Sharks, if he gets the start.

He has faced 147 shots, making 137 saves, for a .932 Sv%, while Vancouver has only supported him with 4 goals scored, in his four consecutive losses.

 

 

 

No Shortage Of Advice For The Canucks To Shake The Doom And Gloom Naysayers….Just Saying

By Andrew Phillip Chernoff   November 22, 2015   Just Saying….

 

Just-saying

The Vancouver Canucks returned from a disappointing seven game road trip, arguably their toughest road trip of the entire 2015-16 season.

Many people had their opinions as to what went wrong and what needed to be done to salvage the rest of the season, where competition is stiff, and very few points can be given up in a short period of time and still make a successful season. What is a successful season? Well, for the Canucks, it would be making the playoffs.

The Canucks have not had so few wins after 20 games since the 1997-98 season. The Canucks started 4-13-3 that season under former head coach Mike Keenan and finished the year with just 65 points. Brad Ziemer,Vancouver Sun, Nov 20, 2015

Media covering the Canucks, as well as Jim Benning, Ryan Miller, Daniel Sedin, Henrik Sedin, wasted little time in making their opinions known November 19-21.

Some key things for the Canucks remainder of the season according to those that voiced their thoughts include:

  • Play inspired, not intimidated.  A visit from the defending Cup champs usually brings out the best in a team wanting to use the game as a measuring stick. The Canucks might not be feeling too confident lately but they still should be fired up and wanting to show they can be competitive against the league’s best. Canucks website, Nov 21, 2015.
  • Prust brings some life. Brandon Prust may not be the guy you’re counting on for goals and points, but when it comes to energy he brings it every night. The Canucks have sorely missed the veteran winger and his expected return tonight should galvanize a team that desperately needs something positive right now. Canucks website, Nov 21, 2015.
  • You need to manage the puck properly,” Benning said. “I think in some instances we haven’t been focused on managing the puck, getting it out at our blue line and making sure when we get to their blue-line, not losing the puck and getting it in and chasing after it. BRAD ZIEMER, Vancouver Sun
  • Need to get the big goal when they need it. Offensively, the Canucks can’t seem to get a big goal when they need it most. Radim Vrbata, who had a team-high 31 goals last season, has just three despite being tied for seventh in the NHL with 74 shots on net. BRAD ZIEMER, Vancouver Sun
  • Need to close—–finish. Whatever spin you choose to summarize a sobering 1-4-2 road trip — including losing two one-goal games in regulation and two more in overtime to sink to 0-for-6 in the new 3-on-3 format — one thing is clear after 20 games. The Vancouver Canucks are good enough to keep games close, they just can’t close. Ben Kuzma, The Province
  • Ryan Miller needs to maintain focus and reduce distractions. He was rightly feted in his long anticipated return to Buffalo and understandably upset following an overtime loss in New Jersey.Willie Desjardins loves that his starter rarely gives up rebounds, has a high level of compete and studies the game like a professor. That’s where the smarts kick in and that’s where Miller can be better. . Ben Kuzma, The Province
  • Horvat has to step up against better opposition. Even before training camp, Bo Horvat spoke of and was well aware of the sophomore jinx. He knew players who went through it, knew what to expect.Really? He’s only 20. Add power-play and penalty kill responsibilities this season and it shouldn’t be that surprising that the centre has two goals through 20 games after 13 as a rookie.Is he pressing and missing great scoring chances? Absolutely. Has he been anxious to get in transition and not been as diligent in his own zone or the faceoff circle? Probably. And with Brandon Sutter injured, Horvat has to step up against better opposition and it’s a long way from being a fourth line rookie centre with limited expectations and even-strength minutes.He’s gone from 12:15 of average ice time and a 51.4 per cent faceoff efficiency to 16:20 and 49.2 per cent in the circle and a minus-9 rating. That’s a lot to shoulder. . Ben Kuzma, The Province
  • A team is only as good as its goalie. Vancouver shot out of the gates on the back of Miller, who started the team’s first 10 games until Richard Bachman spelled him off on Oct. 30. Miller had a 2.16 goals-against average and a .923 save percentage in those 10 games. Not surprisingly, the Canucks went 4-2-4 and were tied with the Los Angeles Kings for first in the Pacific Division.Since then, however, Miller — unsurprisingly — has come back to earth. He has been, well, less than stellar in six starts so far in November, with a 3.04 GAA and an .892 SP, and the Canucks have gone just 1-4-1 in those six starts. Perhaps the most telling statistic is that he has allowed three goals or more in 10 of his 16 starts. Ronnie Shuker, The Hockey News
  • Eliminate the silver-platter scoring chances they are presenting (Iain MacIntyre, Vancouver Sun). Keep it simple. Stick to basics. No need to be flashy. Have the shot, shoot. Go to the net. Don’t have the shot, look for somebody. Put the puck on net, good things can happen.
  • Get better on special teams play. Need to finish around the net on the power play. Need to be more disciplined on the penalty kill.
  • Get points, get points, and get points!!! The Canucks are home, but their schedule isn’t getting easier. After spending two weeks on the road, Vancouver plays the Chicago Blackhawks and New Jersey Devils back-to-back, Saturday and Sunday at Rogers Arena, then travel again for games in Minnesota, Dallas, Anaheim and Los Angeles. November could decide their season.Iain MacIntyre, Vancouver Sun
  • Leave no points on the table.No team has left more points on the table than the Vancouver Canucks have this season. “It could be a big part of defining our season,” Vancouver GM Jim Benning told The Province. “Because last year, in games that went to overtime and the shootout we were (12-5). That’s the difference between making the playoffs and not making the playoffs.” Jason Brough
  • You create your own breaks. Positives are not results. Raise the intensity level. Attention level to detail has to go up. Mistakes need to go down. Gotta have confidence and bring it. “We keep saying we’re close,” said Miller, who made 30 saves. “We’ve got to make the turn here. It’s not ideal mentally for this group to be really close [in] games. We’ve got to park it. We’ve got to find a way to keep coming with energy and believe it’s going to turn. The only thing you can do in this situation is work hard and believe that hard work will translate. ” Daniel Sedin found some positives with the road trip but admitted that the Canucks need results. “I think we’ve got to turn it around now,” he said. “We need some wins. But at the same time, I think we need to look at the big picture. We’re playing better than we were before. That’s a good sign. But right now we need a win.” Henrik Sedin concurred. “I don’t think you can question the way we battled, but our intensity has to go up, and our attention to detail needs to be there,” he said. “It’s a game of mistakes. We’re still making a few too many to win the close games.” Patrick Williams NHL.com
  • Play with urgency in the moment. You can’t do anything about what has past. The future is yours to write. So excel in the moment. Andrew Chernoff, andrewchernoff.wordpress.com

The game on Saturday night against the defending Stanley Cup champion Chicago Blackhawks provided Vancouver with a perfect opportunity to pull a true Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and show a side of themselves that was reminiscent of the start of the season when they were firing on all cylinders and looking like they were going to be a playoff contender in the Western Conference. Not a pretender.

The leaders—–the Sedin brothers, Ryan Miller, Jannick Hansen, Alex Edler, Chris Tanev, Brandon Prust, Alex Burrows, Chris Higgins, to speak of a few; the youth—–Bo Horvat, Jared McCann, Jake Virtanen—–reminded the coaches, the general manager, the president of the Canucks, and all Canuck fans…..how this team could actually play if inspired, focused, disciplined and able to fight off distractions and stay with the game plan.

The result was there last night against the Blackhawks, a 6-3 victory that ended a four game losing streak, but one game does not make a season or make up for the points left on the table.

Great individual efforts such as exhibited by Daniel and Henrik Sedin, are to be praised in the moment and used for inspiration, for future upcoming games.

The team had the confidence and brought it. They raised their intensity level, created their own breaks, reduced their mistakes and were rewarded for it all.

There are 61 games left, including tonight against the New Jersey Devils and the upcoming four game road trip.

The Canucks have not had so few wins after 20 games since the 1997-98 season. The Canucks started 4-13-3 that season under former head coach Mike Keenan and finished the year with just 65 points.

Vancouver, more now then ever, have to turn up their game as they did against Chicago, and sustain it for the rest of the season, if they are going to seriously compete against the leading Western Conference teams and achieve their goal of making the playoffs next Spring.

Standings seldom alter to a great degree after U.S. Thanksgiving. Catching teams after that date is one thing, passing them is another. And with Brandon Sutter, Luca Sbisa and Radim Vrbata injured to varying degrees, the climb will be more arduous if areas of considerable concern aren’t immediately addressed. Ben Kuzma, The Province, Nov 20, 2015

Canucks have to play with urgency in the moment. You can’t do anything about what has past. The future is there to write. So excel in the moment….Just Saying….

Miller, Burrows, Vrbata Help Canucks Stay Unbeaten On The Road As Vancouver Defeats Anaheim In Shootout 2-1

 

ANAHEIM — Alexandre Burrows scored the decisive shootout goal and the Vancouver Canucks spoiled the Anaheim Ducks‘ home opener with a 2-1 win at Honda Center on Monday.

In the first 3-on-3 overtime for the Ducks, they had an advantage when Corey Perry drew a hooking penalty against Canucks defenseman Alexander Edler at 2:42. But they failed to convert on the ensuing power play.

Ryan Miller made 28 saves for Vancouver, including three during the penalty kill in overtime. His poke-check on Perry’s shootout attempt sealed the win.

“It’s a tough building and it’s a good team,” said Vancouver coach Willie Desjardins. “I think there were parts where they cycled real well, but we kind of held on and Ryan was real big again for us today.”

Miller had a long layoff after injuring his knee last season. He’s worked back to everyday goaltending duties physically, but there was a mental component he wanted to work towards as well.

Through three games, he’s happy with his progress.

“My goal was to be at a certain level to start the season,” Miller said. “I’m still addressing a few certain things, but the main thing I want to do is compete. I think that’s been pretty good in these first few games. I’m still trying to hold on tight to that mindset.”

Miller hasn’t been ruled out to start again Tuesday at the Los Angeles Kings. He’s confident that he can handle back-to-back games, and Desjardins says he’s played well enough to warrant the start.

Sami Vatanen scored the first goal of the season for the Ducks on a slap shot from the point at 1:56 in the second period.

But Canucks forward Adam Cracknell tied the game on a sharp-angle shot at 8:38. Jannik Hansen‘s shot from the right circle was denied by Ducks goalie Frederik Andersen, but the rebound went right to Cracknell and he put it over Andersen’s shoulder.

“We want to attack the net on these guys,” Cracknell said. “We want to get pucks and bodies to the net. That’s something that we’ve been working on. It went in. We just threw it on net. We wanted to create as many opportunities as we can by doing that.”

Shawn Horcoff had a golden opportunity to put the Ducks back in front midway through the third period when he broke through the defense and let go a wrist shot from point-blank range that was denied by Miller.

“I pushed over to get a good lane and he got separation,” Miller said. “Seeing he got separation, it kind of stopped my route and made that play. He got a shot and I still had time to be there.”

Anaheim has struggled with the power play in recent seasons and it continues to be problematic. The Ducks are scoreless in four tries with the man advantage, and the 4-on-3 overtime power play was viewed as a key opportunity missed.

“We just watched it again,” said coach Bruce Boudreau. “When you get those things, you can’t force plays. I think we tried to force plays into areas that weren’t there and when that happens and they get to clear it, it builds their momentum up and tears ours down and you get tired and you have to go back and get it all the time. It’s not a good thing. We’ve got to get back to the drawing board when it comes to the 4-on-3s.”

Monday was the first time Ducks defenseman Kevin Bieksa faced his former club since the June 30 trade that sent him from Vancouver to Anaheim. Bieksa logged 24:25 of ice time, second to partner Hampus Lindholm, who led the Ducks with 25:08.

“It was a lot better than I thought it would be,” Bieksa said. “Like I said before the game, I was hoping that once the game started it would feel like just a normal hockey game and it did. There were a couple of times during timeouts you look over, and it’s a little different. But I felt like once the puck dropped and the game started, it was business as usual.”

Game recap courtesy of NHL

Miller Signing Continues Canuck Changes….Just Saying….

Just-saying By Andrew Chernoff         July 1, 2014

Since the trading deadline in the 2013-2014 season much has happened concerning Canucks management and player personnel with the Vancouver hockey club, and as demonstrated on their webpage, with the promise of  “Change Is Coming”, that change has come and continues this offseason.

I have resisted jumping to opinions and have let the process develop the way it has before taking the time to comment on my thoughts with the Canucks hockey club and whether the organization seems to be taking positive steps in making tweaks and changes to make the club not only competitive in their division but also provide excitement, security and stability for the many loyal, long serving and Stanley Cup hopeful Canuck fans.

The addition of Trevor Linden, who played 16 seasons as a Canuck and earned the nickname “Captain Canuck”,  as President of Hockey Operations for the Vancouver Canucks by team owner Francesco Aquilini on Wednesday, April 9, 2014; the hiring of Jim Benning on Wednesday, May 21, 2014, a former teammate of Linden, to be the Canucks 11th general manager; the announcement of Willie Desjardins as the 18th coach of the franchise on Monday, June 23, 2014, who led the AHL’s Texas Stars to a Calder Cup championship on Tuesday, June 17, 2014—demonstrated aggressive leadership by Canucks ownership and new management to put the club right and demonstrate to the media, fans and the league, that the Canucks are not dead or dying and are prepared to be competitive, relevant and put the pieces in place in the off season to make the playoffs in Spring 2015 after missing them this past Spring.

The trading of Ryan Kesler, before the start of the 2014 NHL Draft, ensured that Kesler would not be an issue with the Canucks moving forward and the moving of Jason Garrison which freed up cap space, continued the theme of “Change Is Coming” and reinforced my confidence in the sincerity and faith in the Canucks to do as they talk.

Linden and Benning also knew they needed to address the acquisition of a veteran goaltender that would fit the organization and the plan the Canucks are rolling out for the start of the 2014-2015 season.

And acquire they did with former Buffalo goalie Ryan Miller becoming a Vancouver Canuck on Tuesday, July 1, 2014 on a 3-year deal for 18-million dollars. A proven starter, and a veteran for Eddie Lack to learn from, without the pressure Lack faced last season when he played twenty games in a row and faced considerable attention after Roberto Luongo was moved at the trading deadline.

The 2014 draft choices the Canucks made were: left wing Jake Virtanen sixth overall, centre Jared McCann 24th overall, goaltender Thatcher Demko 36th overall, defenceman Nikita Tryamkin 66th overall, defenceman Gustav Forsling 126th overall, centre Kyle Pettit 156th overall and defenceman MacKenzie Stewart 186th overall in the 2014 NHL Entry Draft. Right wing Linden Vey from the Los Angeles Kings was also acquired in exchange for Vancouver’s 50th selection in the 2014 NHL Entry Draft.

I am excited by left wing Jake Virtanen being a Canuck. Hopeful this BC boy will be a Canuck for years to come and be to Vancouver what a former Canuck and BC boy was to Boston: Cam Neely.

The Canucks said change was coming, it definitely has, and remains to be seen how it will continue and shape the team and its fortunes for the coming season.

Whatever happens further this offseason with the Canucks, I will continue to support the Canucks as I have for over 45 years. As  the Sam Cooke song, “A Change Is Going To Come”, says:

There been times when I thought I couldn’t last for long
But now I think I’m able to carry on
It’s been a long, a long time coming
But I know a change gon’ come, oh yes it will

Just saying……………