Vancouver Rallies In Final Period To Defeat New York 2-1

CANUCKS BANTER     By Andrew Chernoff    December 9, 2015

CANUCKS PUSH BACK,

SEDINS CONTINUE TO DOMINATE

The Vancouver Canucks (11-11-8) started off well against the Rangers (18-8-3) with their first few shifts but once New York got into the game, the opening period became dominated by the Rangers in a scoreless period. New York out shot Vancouver 15-7, as they possessed the puck the majority of the time in the Canuck end.

Miller made great saves and the Canucks received a power penalty opportunity at 18:10 of the period when Ranger Ryan McDonaugh went off for holding Henrik Sedin. Hits were even as both team had 4 each, led by Brandon Prust with two hits. In the face-off circle, New York dominated, winning 11 of 17. Henrik Sedin was 3 for 6; Bo Horvat 2 for 5; Jared McCann, 1 for 4; Adam Cracknell, 0 for 2.

In the second period, Vancouver stepped up their game as the third and fourth lines took their game to the Rangers, but neither team could find the back of the net, and game was still scoreless after two periods.

Vancouver was much better at breaking out of their own end and gaining puck possession time in the Rangers end in the middle period.

Both teams were 0-2 with the man advantage. Jared McCann stopped sure goal with his left skate near the right goal post of the Canuck net late in the period.

Rangers out shot Vancouver 8-7. Hits were 5-5 each.

In the face-off circle, Vancouver won10 of 17. After two periods, Henrik Sedin was 6 for 10; Bo Horvat, 6 for 12; Jared McCann, 4 for 8; Adam Cracknell 0 for 4.

The final period was not anything like the first two, plenty of action and plenty of interesting calls, including a penalty shot.

It all started when Vancouver killed off their third short handed situation of the night. Dominic Moore was called for hooking Henrik Sedin at 1:32, putting Vancouver on their third power play of the night.

With time running out on the Vancouver man advantage, Jarret Stoll was called for delay of game at 2:57 when he covered up the puck with his hand, putting the Rangers down two players, and a 5-3 advantage for the Canucks.

Twenty-two seconds later, Vancouver scores with the two-man advantage, as Alex Edler (6) puts a wrist shot past Henrik Lundqvist at 3:19, assisted by Henrik Sedin (19 and Daniel Sedin (20).

The intensity between the Rangers and Canucks continued and so did the penalties. Rangers  receive an unsportsmanlike penalty after the Canucks scored, with Chris Krieder serving the bench penalty, keeping Vancouver on the power play.

Forty seconds later, Ryan McDonaugh is sent to the penalty box for high sticking Alex Burrows at 3:59, adding more intrigue to the Canucks man advantage, now 5 on 3, for 80 seconds.

With Alex Burrows still upset at getting high sticked, he takes a penalty 44 seconds later.

Once it all settled down, both teams were back at full strength after the Burrows penalty was killed, and it looked like things would get back to playing hockey.

Wishful thinking.

At 8:54, New York was awarded a penalty shot when Chris Tanev covered up the puck in the Canucks goal crease. Dan Boyle took the shot for the Rangers, scoring to even up the game at 1-1. It was his first career penalty shot goal.

Response from Vancouver was quick and swift, as Vancouvers top line took to the ice and scored 30 seconds later to give the Canucks the lead, 2-1. Daniel Sedin (13), on a wrist shot, buried the puck past Lundqvist, assisted by Alex Edler (11) and Henrik Sedin (20) at 9:24.

There would not be anymore goals the rest of the game. Vancouver would kill one more penalty. And both teams would battle hard the rest of the way, but Vancouver would hang on.

Dan Hanhuis got hit in the face with a slap shot, and had to leave.

CANUCKS JOTTINGS

  • Ryan Miller recorded his 4rth win in his last 11 starts tonight, making 32 saves for a .970 SV%.
  • Vancouver’s penalty kill was 5 for 5 tonight, and did not allow a power play goal against on their 4 game home stand, going 12 for 12; and are 19 for 21 in their last 7 games.
  • The Canucks were 1 for 6 on the power play for the second straight game. They have 21 power play goals on 111 opportunities this season in 30 games; 11 power play goals in 53 opportunities at home in 14 games.
  • Alex Edler had 1 goal, on the power play; 1 assist; 6 shots; and 2 block shots.
  • Derek Dorsett and Radim Vrbata led Canuck forwards in shots with 3 each.
  • Canucks fourth line of Prust-Cracknell-Dorsett had  5 shots, 4 hits and 3 block shots.
  • Henrik Sedin had 2 goals and had a plus/minus of +1.
  • Daniel Sedin had 1 goal and 1 assist; had a plus/minus of +1; 2 shots and 1 block shot.
  • Chris Tanev had 3 block shots.
  • In the face-off circle: Henrik Sedin was 11 for 22: 50%; Bo Horvat, 8 for 16: 50%; Jared McCann, 5-9: 56%; Adam Cracknell, 2 for 6: 33%; Jannick Hansen, 0 for 1.
  • Canuck defenseman had 9 block shots; the forwards had 7 block shots.

NEXT GAME UP:  AT CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS  SUNDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2015

GAME REVIEW

FireShot Screen Capture #295 - 'New York Rangers at Vancouver Canucks - 12_09_2015' - canucks_nhl_com_gamecenter_en_boxscore_id=2015020420 FireShot Screen Capture #296 - 'New York Rangers at Vancouver Canucks - 12_09_2015' - canucks_nhl_com_gamecenter_en_boxscore_id=2015020420

CANUCKS AT A GLANCE

vandec9

FireShot Screen Capture #297 - '2015-2016 Wild Card - Vancouver Canucks - Standings' - canucks_nhl_com_club_standings_htm_season=20152016&type=WC

CANUCKS PLAYER STATS

FireShot Screen Capture #298 - '2015-2016 Regular Season Stats - Points - Vancouver Canucks - Statistics' - canucks_nhl_com_club_stats_htm

Statistics courtesy of the NHl and the Vancouver Canucks, with thanks.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Just Saying….Vancouver Canucks 2015-2016 Preview & Prediction

Just-saying    October 6, 2015         Andrew Chernoff

Young Canucks Inherit The Future Helped By Current Leaders

The second full season of the Canucks under the leadership of Trevor Linden, President of Hockey Operations; Jim Benning, General Manager; and Willie Desjardins, Head Coach, gets underway tomorrow (October 7, 2015) when they open up their 46th NHL season.

Out from last season are Kevin Bieksa, G Eddie Lack, F Zach Kassian, F Nick Bonino, D Adam Clendening, F Shawn Matthias, F Brad Richardson. In are F Brandon Sutter, F Brandon Prust and D Matt Bartkowski.

What is more significant are the young Canucks that have made the roster for Vancouver’s inaugural game of the 2015-2016 season against the Calgary Flames on Wednesday night.

Jake Virtanen, age 19; Ben Hutton, age 22; and Jared McCann, age 19, “the three Musketeers”, were rewarded for their exceptional training camps, resulting in Vancouver Canucks General Manager Jim Benning on Monday, placing forward Linden Vey and defencemen Frank Corrado, Alex Biega on waivers  with the intention of assigning them to the Utica Comets.

PROJECTED DEPTH CHART

Forwards
Daniel Sedin – Henrik Sedin – Brandon Sutter
Sven Baertschi – Bo Horvat – Radim Vrbata
Alex Burrows – Jared McCann – Jannik Hansen
Brandon Prust – Adam Cracknell – Derek Dorsett
Jake Virtanen/Chris Higgins (injured)

Defensemen

Alexander Edler — Chris Tanev
Dan Hamhuis — Matt Bartkowski
Ben Hutton — Luca Sbisa
Alex Edler

Goaltenders

Ryan Miller
Jacob Markstrom

The Canucks are trying to do what the Detroit Red Wings have being doing for years and add in players into the line-up without skipping a beat, staying competitive and being among the top four teams in their conference, making the playoffs for the second straight year.

While that could be a challenge for the Canucks this season, the Canucks are steadfast in believing that the youth movement and promoting from within is the way to go, and are hoping that the young Canucks will inherit the future helped by the current veteran leadership that includes Daniel and Henrik Sedin (both 35),Ryan Miller (35), Radim Vrbata (34), Alex Burrows (34), Dan Hamhuis (32) and Brandon Prust (31).

Along with Brandon Sutter (26), Matt Bartkowski (27), sophomore Bo Horvat (20), Luca Sbsia (25), Chris Tanev (25), and Jacob Markstrom (25), Canucks management are hoping and are optimistic that they are on the right track.

The young players on the Canucks believe they definitely deserve the opportunity that they have earned and would like sufficient time to develop the chemistry with the veteran mix, to craft that future. McCann and Virtanen will both receive their 10 game look before the Canucks will have to decide whether to keep them or send them back to their respective junior teams.

This should be good news all around as the Canucks that did not make the team will provide the Canucks farm team with excellent depth should any injuries happen with the NHL team.

Head Coach Desjardins likes knowing when the Canucks go on the ice what each player will give him as it reinforces his confidence in that player and confidence that the game plan that the team was prepared to execute will result in a win and two important points in a division that missing out on too many points will result in a long summer.

On the other hand, Desjardin also knows the only way his confidence in a player can be developed and reinforced is by giving the players a chance to play, which could result in mistakes, including the possible loss of the game, and there’s the rub: without the chance, there is no experience, no mistakes, no learning, no proving you have learned your lesson and earned the confidence of your coach, your teammates and the organization.

PREDICTION

The Canucks had 101 points last season and it went down to the final few days of the season before the Canucks placing in the standings was known and they made it into the playoffs.

They will need at least that many points to make it into the playoffs in 2016 and they do not have a tested backup goaltender like Eddie Lack was when Miller got hurt late last season and the Canucks rode Lack’s coattails into the playoffs. And there will be no goalie in Utica that the Canucks can be confident in like Lack, if Miller gets hurt late in the season.

The youth movement is needed. There is no right time to start it. So, might as well go with it now. Saying that, there may be some games that the Canucks should win, that they lose.

I believe the Canucks will need at least 107 points to make the playoffs in 2016.

Most likely the Canucks will finish with 93 points, due to the youth movement and an unproven backup goaltender; and their inability to score timely goals. Also, of concern is their depth upfront to move players in and out to deal with scoring issues. You can only change lines so often during a game; and once again, you can only look to the farm team so much if you are going to make a shake up to boost an offence that is stalling. And stall it will.

Yet, I take the high road, and make this prediction:

Canucks to finish with 107 points, making the playoffs for the second straight season.

How will it be done? Hell, all they have to do is out work, out play, out shoot, out hit, and out chance their opponent’s both at home and on the road.

Unrealistic? Ye of little faith.       Just Saying….