Friday, February 7, 2014

Pacioretty Tricks the Canucks; Two Penalty Shots; Henrik Update


Why does it all end up becoming the same game?  It feels like a consistent rerun television show.  The Canucks have now lost six in a row and are 0-4 on the current roadtrip.  Vancouver dropped their latest decision 5-2 to Montreal on Thursday night. 

Vancouver was slow out of the gates, which has become a regular occurrence in recent months.  Montreal's first goal came off the stick of Max Pacioretty, who ended up netting a hattrick on the evening.  Ryan Kesler was sent to the penalty box because of a hooking infraction (or a Plekanec dive, whatever you want to call it) which put the Habs a man up.  It was rather fluky as P.K. Subban shot the puck from the point and it went off Pacioretty's thigh and into the net.  A little over a minute later, there was a scramble in front of the net and Roberto Luongo lost track of the puck.  Ryan White was able to put the Habs up 2-0.

The second period was one of the best periods the Canucks have played all season - this is really saying a lot.  Two and a half minutes into the period, Chris Higgins deflected a Jason Garrison shot on the powerplay which cut the Habs lead in half.

Two Penalty Shots

How often do you see a player get a penalty shot?  How often do you see the same player get two penalty shots, both in the same period?
Habs forward Max Pacioretty received two penalty shot attempts in the second period, which he failed on both tries.

Examing both attempts, it is my opinion that neither of these should have even happened.  On the first attempt, Max Pacioretty only had a partial break to the net.  Raphael Diaz managed to catch up to Pacioretty and skated stride for stride with him.  Was there a hook on the play?  Yes, there was a hook.  It should have been a two minute hooking penalty, but not a penalty shot.  By rule, if the defender is skating stride to stride with the offensive player and does not have a clean break to the net, no penalty shot should be rewarded.

On the second attempt, Pacioretty had a clean break toward the net as he split the two defenders.  However, Canucks forward Alex Burrows ended up catching up to Pacioretty and made a last second dive at the puck.  Burrows' stick hit the puck FIRST as he slid down on the ice.  Burrows' stick did not hit Pacioretty's skates first, which would have been more of a blatant infraction.  By rule, if the stick makes contact with the puck FIRST, there is no penalty shot or penalty on the play.

Ultimately, these penalty shots did not matter as Pacioretty missed them both.  Feel free to interpret them any way you would like.  These are just my observations and what I see on the replay.

The Canucks had a big territorial advantage in the second period.  They outshot the Canadiens 15-8 in the period and had lots of quality scoring chances.

The dreaded third period was as advertised for the Canucks.  Just under five minutes into the third, Max Pacioretty netted his second goal of the game.  A hard working shift in the Canucks defensive zone ended up with a defensive breakdown in front of the net.  Pacioretty was left alone and received a nice pass from David Desharnais in the crease area.  A little over three minutes later, another Canucks defensive breakdown led to a 2 on 1 rush down the ice.  Credit Alex Edler with the assistant on Tomas Plekanec's goal as the puck went off his skate in the crease into the net.  Alex Edler would respond on the powerplay four minutes later, but it was not enough to get the Canucks out of their hole.  Pacioretty added an empty netter near the end of the period to complete his hattrick.

The Canucks struck twice on the powerplay against the Habs.  I guess you could say this is a positive from the game.  The second period was good for the Canucks, but they once again had no jump in the third period.  The Canucks let the Habs dictate play in the third and did not take the play to the Habs.

P.K. Subban led all skaters with 25:28 icetime.  Alex Edler led all Canucks skaters with 23:47 icetime.  Carey Price was really good in the net for the Canadiens stopping 42 of 44 Canucks shots.  Roberto Luongo had a good game for the Canucks stopping 24 of 28 Canadiens shots.

Henrik Update
Henrik Sedin is really bummed about missing the Sochi Olympics.  It is completely understandable.  He hopes to be ready after the Olympics are over.  Sedin says that the Vancouver Canucks come first though, which is a kind statement.

The Canucks head to Toronto to take on the Maple Leafs on Saturday night.  Hopefully they can salvage this roadtrip by getting a win at the ACC.

Until next time, stay classy! -George

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Canucks Limp to Montreal; Henrik Shut Down For Sochi and Roadtrip; Diaz vs. Weise

February has not started the way the Canucks have wanted.  The goal heading into the month was to have a fresh start and face a tough road trip to try and get back on track.  It has not happened.  The Canucks are still the same team who were crippled in January.

Vancouver has lost all three games on this road trip and have two games remaining before Sochi.  The Canucks head to a very tough building at the Bell Centre in Montreal trying to break a five game losing streak.

Henrik Shut Down For Sochi and Roadtrip

The Canucks continue to face more adversity as several key players remain out of the lineup.  Captain Henrik Sedin has battled in a few games with an apparent rib injury.  It was reported today that Henrik Sedin will be out of the Canucks lineup until after the Sochi Olympics and that he will end up missing the Olympics.
Diaz vs. Weise

Former Habs defenseman Raphael Diaz who was traded to Vancouver on Monday will be looking to get the best of his former club tonight.  This is also the case for former Canucks forward Dale Weise.

Raphael Diaz had a very good Canucks debut on Tuesday when he scored the lone Canucks goal against the Bruins while piling over 25 minutes of icetime.  Dale Weise played on Tuesday for the Habs against the Calgary Flames and recorded 12:45 icetime and 3 hits.

Canucks/Canadiens Preview

As mentioned, the Canucks are trying to break a five game losing streak.  This losing streak is the longest in over fifteen years.  The Canadiens are coming off a 2-0 victory over Calgary on Tuesday.

Montreal Canadiens: 57 GP: 30-21-6; 66 pts
Vancouver Canucks: 58 GP: 27-22-9; 63 pts

Despite some recent struggles, the Canadiens rank third in the Atlantic Division and fourth in the Eastern Conference.  Vancouver is ranked fourth in the Pacific Division and eighth in the Western Conference.  Montreal is 4-5-1 in their last ten games, while Vancouver is 3-7 in their last ten games.

This game can be viewed on Sportsnet Pacific, TSN-Habs, and RDS at 7:30 PM ET/4:30 PM PT.

Here are the projected lineups:

Canadiens (the bad guys)

Forwards:
Daniel Brière - Tomas Plekanec - Brian Gionta
Max Pacioretty - David Desharnais - Brendan Gallagher
Rene Bourque - Lars Eller - Brandon Prust
Michael Bournival - Ryan White - Dale Weise

Defenseman:
Andrei Markov - Alexei Emelin
Josh Gorges - P.K. Subban
Douglas Murray - Nathan Beaulieu

Goaltenders:
Carey Price (starter)
Peter Budaj

Canucks (the good guys)

Forwards:
Daniel Sedin - Brad Richardson - David Booth
Chris Higgins - Ryan Kesler - Zack Kassian
Alex Burrows - Zac Dalpe - Jannik Hansen
Tom Sestito - Kellan Lain - Jordan Schroeder

Defensemen:
Jason Garrison - Alex Edler
Yann Sauve - Frank Corrado
Ryan Stanton - Raphael Diaz

Goaltenders:
Roberto Luongo (starter)
Eddie Lack

Things to watch for - Canadiens:

P.K. Subban - the 2007 second round pick of the Canadiens and Norris Trophy Winner is having another great season.  He leads the Canadiens in scoring with 38 points this season.  The 24 year old Toronto native has a booming shot that he loves to use on the powerplay.  He plays with an edge every shift and loves to get under the opponents' skin.  Look for him to log 25-28 minutes of icetime on a game by game basis.

Carey Price - another outstanding season for the Habs netminder as he makes his way to the Sochi Olympics to battle with Roberto Luongo for the starting job as Team Canada's netminder.  The British Columbia native has a 2.37 GAA and .923 SV% this season.  He has 24 wins in 46 games played and will make a strong case to be Team Canada's netminder.

Things to watch for - Canucks:

Brad Richardson - with injuries piling up to the Canucks, Richardson has had to step in and fill a bigger role than what he is accustomed to.  He will make his return to the lineup tonight after missing the last couple of games.  He has been very good for the Canucks in the faceoff dot this season and has a 53.5% faceoff win percentage.

Chris Higgins - another player who will make his return to the Canucks lineup after missing the last game against Boston with a minor injury.  He has been one of the more consistent Canucks this season.  Higgins has 15 goals and 31 points this season and is having one of the best seasons of his pro career.  The 30 year old Smithtown, NY native has been a consistent linemate with Ryan Kesler and Jannik Hansen.

Prediction:
4-1 Canadiens (Gallagher GWG)

Hopefully we do not see a replay of this goal:

Courtesy: Darryl Dyck, CP; www.theprovince.com
Until next time, stay classy! -George 

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Gah-den Beatdown; Stronger Effort Leads to Same Losing Result

The Vancouver Canucks provided more of the same on Tuesday night against the Boston Bruins.  Limited scoring, players playing injured, players on the injury shelf, and mental fatigue have taken their toll on the veteran Canucks team.

The Canucks had a strong first period and generated some okay scoring chances.  Bruins goaltender Tuukka Rask was up to the task and remained poised in the net.  It was the Bruins who struck first a little over five minutes into the first as Vancouver native Milan Lucic and David Krejci teamed up on a 2 on 1 opportunity.  Jason Garrison got caught up the ice and out of position which led to this Bruins odd man rush.

The sequence of the game came in the second period.  Vancouver was on the penalty kill, and Daniel Sedin was able to steal the puck at the Bruins blueline for a breakaway attempt.  Sedin shot the puck, but Rask answered the bell and made the big stop.  The Bruins took the puck off Rask's big save and Jarome Iginla was able to score his sixteenth goal this season from a nice cross ice pass from Zdeno Chara.  If Daniel was able to score, it would have tied the game for the Canucks.  This play summed up the entire night and pretty much resembles the Canucks entire season. 

Three and a half minutes later, Yannick Weber in his Canucks debut scored his first goal of the season with a wicked slapshot from the point.  The final dagger for the Canucks came courtesy of Daniel Paille who managed to score on a breakaway with 2:54 left in the second period.  Frank Corrado and Yann Sauve got caught up the ice and were too late getting back to defend Paille.

Vancouver faded off in the third period and did not generate much of anything.  This has been a consistent story for several games this season.  The third period has not been kind to the Canucks.  Vancouver is a slow team and they get fatigued real early in games.  This is something that is going to have to be addressed with the supposed "youth movement" in the future.

Canucks star players Roberto Luongo along with Daniel and Henrik Sedin took full responsibility for the Canucks' recent struggles:
I appreciate Luongo taking a bullet for the team, but this game was not lost because of his play.  The Canucks had 28 shots on net, but not many quality scoring chances.  Vancouver is not shooting enough in the offensive zone and have become a very passive team.  I do believe the effort was there (at least in the first two periods).

Newcomer Raphael Diaz had the lone Canucks goal last night and he led all skaters with 25:26 icetime.  What a way to kick off his Canucks career with a goal and getting rewarded with lots of icetime on a depleted roster.

David Booth had a strong game for the Canucks.  He registered six hits and was bumping bodies with Bruins defenseman Johnny Boychuk all night long.  Booth finished with 15:39 icetime and was a -2 on the night.

Canucks Captain Henrik Sedin was laboring all night long.  He is playing with a significant injury in the ribs area.  I would not be surprised if he is actually playing with a broken rib.  He had 20:30 icetime last night, but did not contribute anything to the scoresheet.  Henrik is a warrior, but I believe he needs to take his pads off because he is not doing the Canucks or himself any favors.

Bruins defenseman Johnny Boychuk led all Bruins skaters with 24:04 icetime.  Tuukka Rask stopped 27 of 28 Canucks shots.  Roberto Luongo stopped 29 of 32 Bruins shots in the 3-1 loss.

The Canucks head to Montreal with their depleted lineup and will face off against the Habs tomorrow at 7:30 PM ET/4:30 PM PT.

Until next time, stay classy! -George

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Motor City Meltdown; Shippin' Up to Bahston Gah-den

The Vancouver Canucks had no jam against the Detroit Red Wings.  The returns of Captain Henrik Sedin and head coach John Tortorella did not reflect in any change of life for the slumping Canucks as they fell to the Red Wings 2-0.

This game was the definition of a snoozefest.  There was not much back and forth action as the game was played mainly in the neutral zone.  This was a grind it out game which the Canucks could not take advantage of a team who had played the day before.

The first goal of the game came in the second period a little over one minute in.  Red Wings forward Justin Abdelkader found some open space above the top circle and shot a little wrist shot that deflected past Eddie Lack.  Lack had no chance on this puck due to failed block attempts by Daniel Sedin and Alex Burrows.  They provided the screen that Abdelkader needed to score the goal.

The second Red Wings goal was also scored by Justin Abdelkader at the end of the contest.  Alex Burrows took a late penalty which killed the Canucks 6 on 5 chance at the end of the game.  This goal was an empty netter on the powerplay which sealed the deal for the Red Wings victory.

Eddie Lack played another outstanding game for the Canucks stopping 28 of 29 Red Wings shots.  Jimmy Howard entered the game in relief of Jonas Gustavsson in the second period because Gustavsson was having some dizziness after the first period ended.  Gustavsson stopped 8 Canucks shots in the first, while Howard finished the game off and stopped 16 shots in the second and third periods.

Henrik Sedin played 21:22 in his return to the Canucks lineup.  He was 0-4 in the faceoff dot and looked only noticeable on the pathetic Canucks powerplay.

Alex Edler led all skaters with 25:25 of icetime.  Niklas Kronwall led all Detroit skaters with 24:46 of icetime.

Canucks/Bruins Game Preview   

There is no sugar coating it.  There is still hatred and rivalry between the Bruins and the Canucks.  Brad Marchand is at the center of it all.  Could this be a game where the Canucks play like world beaters and play motivated?  Could this game end disastrous and be the turning point for the Canucks organization?  Either scenario could happen.

Canucks Recall Pelletier 

It looks like the Vancouver Canucks may have more injured bodies that have not been officially reported yet.  Henrik Sedin did not look 100% in his return and did not look comfortable, so I would not be shocked if he missed some future games.  Chris Higgins played the whole game last night and did not leave with any kind of injury.  Higgins has looked the same on the ice while Henrik still does not look healthy.

Boston Bruins: 54 GP: 35-16-3; 73 pts
Vancouver Canucks: 57 GP: 27-21-9; 63 pts

Boston is coming off a 4-0 victory on Saturday against the Edmonton Oilers.  Vancouver has lost four straight games.  The Bruins are ranked first in the Atlantic Division and second in the Eastern Conference.  The Canucks are ranked fourth in the Pacific Division and eighth in the Western Conference.  Boston has won seven of their last ten games, while the Canucks have only three wins in their last ten games.

This game can be viewed on Sportsnet Pacific or NESN at 7 PM ET/4 PM PT.

Here are the projected lineups:

Bruins (the bad guys)

Forwards:
Milan Lucic - David Krejci - Jarome Iginla
Brad Marchand - Patrice Bergeron - Reilly Smith
Chris Kelly - Carl Soderberg - Loui Eriksson
Daniel Paille - Gregory Campbell - Shawn Thornton

Defensemen:
Zdeno Chara - Johnny Boychuk
Matt Bartkowski - Kevan Miller
Torey Krug - Dougie Hamilton

Goaltenders:
Tuukka Rask (starter)
Chad Johnson

Canucks (the good guys)

Forwards:
Daniel Sedin - Henrik Sedin - David Booth
Alex Burrows - Ryan Kesler - Zack Kassian
Pascal Pelletier - Zac Dalpe - Jannik Hansen
Tom Sestito - Kellan Lain - Jordan Schroeder

Defensemen:
Jason Garrison - Alex Edler
Yann Sauve - Frank Corrado
Ryan Stanton - Raphael Diaz

Goaltenders:
Roberto Luongo (starter)
Eddie Lack

Things to watch for - Bruins:

David Krejci - one of the most underrated centres in the entire NHL.  The 27 year old Czech Republic native leads the Bruins with 46 points in 54 games.  He has 2 goals and 7 points in his last 5 games.  He is strong on the puck and pretty good in the faceoff dot.

Brad Marchand - I have to hand it to the guy.  He is good at what he does at providing agitation.  He actually has produced some highlight reel goals to back up his play.  The young 25 year old from Halifax, Nova Scotia was drafted in the third round back in 2006 by the Bruins.  He is a thorn in the Canucks side and always will be.

Things to watch for - Canucks:

Roberto Luongo - the Canadian starter for the Olympics and public harassment figure in the City of Boston.  Luongo is having another stellar season for the Canucks posting a 19-13-9 record.  He has a 2.30 GAA and .920 SV%.  The TD Garden in Boston has been a house of horrors for the Canucks netminder.  Canucks fans can only hope that this trend for their slumping team does not continue.

Raphael Diaz - the new acquisition from the Montreal Canadiens should be making his Canucks debut tonight on the blueline.  The 28 year old Swiss had 11 points this season with the Habs in 46 games and has a -4 plus/minus rating.  He is a right handed shot defenseman and will provide the Canucks with some point help on the powerplay.

Prediction:
5-0 Bruins (Marchand GWG)

Until next time, stay classy! -George     

Monday, February 3, 2014

Slumping Canucks Head to the Joe; Trade with Montreal; Torts and Henrik Returns

It was a torturous month of January for the Vancouver Canucks.  It is a month they would like to forget.  After going 4-9-2, they are barely clinging to a potential playoff spot.  The injury list has piled up for the Canucks, which has also mixed with having a suspended head coach.

Torts and Henrik Returns

The Canucks will welcome back head coach John Tortorella to the fray tonight in Detroit.  The Canucks went 2-4 during his 15 day absence from the club.  Here is what Torts had to say on his return:




Torts sounds completely apologetic for his actions a couple weeks ago and acknowledges the poor hockey that the Canucks have been playing.  It sounds like he is ready to get back to work and get this club securely back in playoff contention.

Canucks Captain Henrik Sedin will also make his return tonight for the Canucks after suffering injured ribs.  He has not suited up since January 18 against the Calgary Flames and has missed a total of six games this season.

Trade with Montreal

The Canucks traded tough feisty fourth line winger Dale Weise to the Habs, who are desperately wanting to become a bigger team.  In return, the Habs sent Swiss defenseman Raphael Diaz to the Canucks, who have been racking up the blueline injuries.

This trade will work for both sides.  Diaz, 28, is a right handed shooting defenseman.  He is not a top pairing guy, but can provide the Canucks with 18-20 quality minutes on the blueline.  Diaz is a smallish defenseman at 5'11" tall.  He will provide the Canucks with blocked shots, something Torts is looking for in his defensive system.
Torts and Dale Weise seemed to butt heads and had different ideas on what role Weise had with the Canucks.  Weise should help the Habs by giving them a little bit more sandpaper in their bottom six.

Canucks/Wings Preview

Vancouver Canucks: 56 GP: 27-20-9; 63 pts
Detroit Red Wings: 55 GP: 24-19-12; 60 pts

Both the Canucks and Red Wings are coming off losses.  The Red Wings lost an overtime thriller to the Capitals yesterday 6-5, while the Canucks lost last Friday 4-3 to the Jets.  Vancouver has losses in its last three games.

Detroit is ranked fifth in the Atlantic Division and eighth in the Eastern Conference.  The Red Wings are 4-4-2 in their last ten games.  Vancouver is ranked fourth in the Pacific Division and eighth in the Western Conference.  The Canucks have won just three games in their last ten contests.

This game can be viewed on Sportsnet Pacific or Fox Sports Detroit Plus at 7:30 PM ET/4:30 PM PT.

Here are the projected lineups:

Red Wings (the bad guys)

Forwards:
Gustav Nyquist - Henrik Zetterberg - Justin Abdelkader
Tomas Jurco - Riley Sheahan - Tomas Tatar
Joakim Andersson - Darren Helm - Daniel Alfredsson
Drew Miller - Luke Glendening - Patrick Eaves

Defensemen:
Niklas Kronwall - Jonathan Ericsson
Kyle Quincey - Danny DeKeyser
Brian Lashoff - Jakub Kindl

Goaltenders:
Jimmy Howard (starter)
Jonas Gustavsson

Canucks (the good guys)

Forwards:
Daniel Sedin - Henrik Sedin - Alex Burrows
Chris Higgins - Ryan Kesler - Zack Kassian
David Booth - Zac Dalpe - Jannik Hansen
Tom Sestito - Kellan Lain - Jordan Schroeder

Defensemen:
Jason Garrison - Alex Edler
Dan Hamhuis - Frank Corrado
Ryan Stanton - Yann Sauve

Goaltenders:
Eddie Lack (starter)
Roberto Luongo

Things to watch for - Red Wings:

Gustav Nyquist - coming off a hattrick against the Capitals, he has 8 points in his last 5 games.  The 24 year old Swede has found chemistry with fellow Swede Henrik Zetterberg.  He is a 2008 fourth round pick of the Detroit Red Wings and has finally broke his way into the NHL after spending some time in Grand Rapids (AHL).

Danny DeKeyser - what a nice find by Red Wings GM Ken Holland.  The Detroit native came out of college and is now playing in the NHL for his home team.  He played college at Western Michigan University and has provided the Red Wings some much needed depth on defense.

Things to watch for - Canucks:

Henrik Sedin - the Captain is back.  The quarterback of the Canucks powerplay and all around good guy Hank the Tank is back to lead the Canucks.  This will hopefully motivate brother Daniel as he has struggled to score lately, much like the rest of the Canucks.

Eddie Lack - he will make his second straight start to disappoint Red Wings head coach Mike Babcock.  Babcock.  Lack played an excellent game against the Jets, stopping 30 of 34 shots.  He only really let in one bad goal, which he eventually recovered from.  He has stood tall in the net and has tremendous poise.

Prediction:
4-1 Red Wings (Nyquist GWG)

Until next time, stay classy! -George