Saturday, May 18, 2024
ADVT 
Sports

Canucks set to face Predators in first playoff appearance since 2020

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Apr, 2024 03:01 PM
  • Canucks set to face Predators in first playoff appearance since 2020

Expectations for the Vancouver Canucks were not high heading into the season.

Asked in September if he expected the team to make the playoffs, president of hockey operations Jim Rutherford hedged.

“To be very to the point, the changes that we made, we have a playoff team if everything goes right,” he said.

Things did go right.

On Sunday, the Canucks will host their first home playoff game since 2015 when they kick off a first-round matchup against the Nashville Predators.

Vancouver has been one of the big surprises of the NHL season. The team went 23-9-3 ahead of the Christmas break and consistently hovered near the top of the league standings before capturing the Pacific Division title with a 50-23-9 record.

“I think if someone told us where we would be this time (of the) year in the summer, obviously we’d take it," said captain Quinn Hughes. "It’s different when you're building something every day and you're living it. But we knew we had some good pieces in here and we’ve got a great staff, and management did a really good job with putting pieces together.

"And it hasn't been easy, but we did everything we were supposed to do."

Players arrived in Vancouver well ahead of training camp last fall, trading their late-summer plans for group skates.

Brock Boeser, the team's longest-tenured player, says it feels "amazing" to see the hard work result in a playoff spot and division title.

“Obviously, we were sick and tired of losing," he said. "And that’s why we came here early to try and set that standard, set those expectations. I think we had that great start to the year and just built off it. We’ve had our ups and downs, but I think we’ve learned a lot.”

Several of the Canucks' top players shone throughout the season, putting up career-high numbers.

Hughes led all NHL defenceman with 92 points. Boeser hit the 40-goal mark. Three Vancouver players were among the league's top-20 scorers, including forward J.T. Miller with a team-high 103 points. Even after missing a month with a knee injury, goalie Thatcher Demko finished with a 35-14-2 record, a .918 save percentage and five shutouts.

Point totals and division titles don't count in the post-season, noted winger Conor Garland.

“It’s nice, but once Game 1 comes around, it’ll all be meaningless," he said. "We give ourselves a chance getting into the playoffs. It really doesn’t matter if you’re the eighth seed or the No. 1 seed, everybody has a chance. And that’s what everybody fights for all year.”

Head coach Rick Tocchet preached the importance of having a "day-to-day mindset" throughout the season. That won't change come playoffs, he said.

“I think for our group, we just have to worry about Game 1," he said. "You can’t look at the big thing, ‘What if?’ or ‘You’ve got to win a series,’ all that stuff. I think it’s dangerous when you think that way.

"I think, honestly, we’ve got to prepare for that first period against Nashville and be ready to play from that first shift. … I think when you think big picture, that’s when you get nervous.”

NHL playoff experience is one thing many of Vancouver's stars lack. The Canucks' last playoff run came in the Edmonton bubble during the COVID-abbreviated 20219-20 season.

“That was different. That was tough," said Garland, who played for the Arizona Coyotes at the time. "Our games were at like, 10 in the morning. So I was eating pasta at 8 a.m. It wasn’t the most fun I’ve had in my life.

"This year is different. I’ll find out.”

Six current Canucks played for Vancouver in the bubble, including Boeser. Playoffs this year will be completely different, he said.

"I think we’ve just got to look at it as our first time," Boeser said. "Just with the fans and the momentum shift and all that, it’s something new to us and something I think we’re going to have to embrace."

The Canucks swept their season series against Nashville, but all three games took place before Christmas and the Predators were one of the NHL's hottest teams coming out of the all-star break. Nashville took points from 18 straight games across February and March, and finished the regular season fourth in a ultra-competitive Central Division.

The late-season push doesn't scare Canucks winger Dakota Joshua.

“I feel good about facing anybody," he said. "I think this group is a confident one."

The results of the Vancouver-Nashville season series will help going into the playoffs, Joshua added.

"You know you can beat them," he said. "But at the end of the day, you start off 0-0. They were a pretty hot team here down the stretch, so they’re feeling probably a lot better than the times we played them during the season. And it should be a great series.”

TALE OF THE TAPE

Regular-season series: Vancouver 3-0

Goals per game: Vancouver — 3.40 (6th); Nashville — 3.24 (10th).

Top scorers: Vancouver — J.T. Miller, 103 points; Nashville — Filip Forsberg, 94

Starting goaltender: Vancouver — Thatcher Demko, 35-14-2, 2.45 GAA, .918 save percentage; Nashville — Juuse Saros, 35-24-5, 2.86 GAA, .906 save percentage

Power play percentage: Vancouver — 22.7 (11th); Nashville — 21.6 (16th)

Penalty kill percentage: Vancouver — 79.1 (17th); Nashville — 76.9 (22nd)

The Big Stat: Vancouver went 17-12-4 after the all-star break while Nashville was 21-7-3.

MORE Sports ARTICLES

Surrey's Arshdeep Bains gets AHL MVP honour

Surrey's Arshdeep Bains gets AHL MVP honour
Surrey's very own Arshdeep Bains gets AHL MVP honour. Bains scored the game winner to lead the Pacific Division over the Atlantic Division 3-2 in the Championship game. Bains had 2 goals and 3 assists in the game. 

Surrey's Arshdeep Bains gets AHL MVP honour

Vancouver to host World Cup games in 2026

Vancouver to host World Cup games in 2026
Vancouver is set to get a tourism boost from hosting World Cup games in 2026, but experts say fans and planners should not be overly optimistic in their projections. Destination BC is already projecting the tournament could generate 1-billion-dollars for the province's tourism sector, factoring both the games in Vancouver and the impact in the following five years. 

Vancouver to host World Cup games in 2026

Police chief in London, Ont., apologizes to complainant in hockey sex assault case

Police chief in London, Ont., apologizes to complainant in hockey sex assault case
Nearly six years after a woman alleged she had been sexually assaulted by five then-members of Canada's world junior hockey team, the police chief of a southwestern Ontario city apologized Monday for how long it had taken for charges to be laid in the case, but offered no explanation for the delay.  London, Ont., police Chief Thai Truong said he could not reveal much about why the police investigation that began in 2018 was initially closed without charges in 2019, before being reopened three years later. 

Police chief in London, Ont., apologizes to complainant in hockey sex assault case

Whitecaps FC sign 17-year-old Jeevan Badwal of Surrey to professional contract

Whitecaps FC sign 17-year-old Jeevan Badwal of Surrey to professional contract
Vancouver Whitecaps FC announced on Thursday that the club has signed Whitecaps FC BMO Academy midfielder Jeevan Badwal to a professional contract with Whitecaps FC 2 (WFC2). The product of Surrey, BC first joined the Whitecaps FC BMO Academy as a 13-year-old in 2019, and becomes the 12th Canadian teenager to be signed to a professional contract since WFC2 began play in MLS NEXT Pro in 2022.

Whitecaps FC sign 17-year-old Jeevan Badwal of Surrey to professional contract

Vancouver Canucks debut shiny brand new helmets for tonight's game

Vancouver Canucks debut shiny brand new helmets for tonight's game
The Vancouver Canucks are debuting shiny new helmets tonight -- for a good cause. They say on social media that tonight's game against the St. Louis Blues is the first of two games were players will sport the flashy metallic blue helmets. 

Vancouver Canucks debut shiny brand new helmets for tonight's game

5 members of Canada's 2018 junior hockey team to face sexual assault charges

5 members of Canada's 2018 junior hockey team to face sexual assault charges
Carter Hart of the Philadelphia Flyers, Dillon Dube of the Calgary Flames, Michael McLeod and Cal Foote — both of the New Jersey Devils — and former NHLer Alex Formenton, who is now playing in Switzerland, all have been granted indefinite leave over the past four days.  

5 members of Canada's 2018 junior hockey team to face sexual assault charges