The Daily Courier

EXPERIENCE

CANUCKS IN TOUGH AGAINST BLUES

- By DONNA SPENCER

Feeling somewhat more seasoned in playoff experience, the Vancouver Canucks are now facing an opponent with loads of it.

Vancouver opened their first-round, bestof-seven series late Wednesday in Edmonton against the defending Stanley Cup champion St. Louis Blues. The winner’s second-round opponent will be the victor of the series between the Calgary Flames and Dallas Stars.

The Canucks are a playoff team for the first time since 2015.

Ten Canucks, including goaltender Jakob Markstrom, had zero NHL post-season experience prior to beating the Minnesota Wild in four games in a best-of-five qualifier.

After dropping the opener, the Canucks won three straight game to advance.

“It was great for us, a great learning experience because there’s a lot of us playing our first NHL playoffs,” Canucks forward Elias Pettersson said.

Vancouver rides the confidence that comes with three consecutiv­e victories, while the Blues have yet to win a game since their arrival in Edmonton.

St. Louis kept its 2019 Cup roster intact and topped the Western Conference this season. But the Blues went 0-3 in the round robin of the conference’s top four teams to determine seeding.

St. Louis defenceman Alex Pietrangel­o is aware his team needs to summon urgency for an eliminatio­n series that opens with three games in five days.

“Our minds will be really dialled in here,” the captain said. “We’ve had a lot of down time in this qualifying. They gave us a probably a little bit too much time to sit around.”

The penalty box will be a factor given the potency of each team’s power play units. St. Louis ranked third in the league with a man advantage (24.3), marginally ahead of Vancouver in fourth (24.2).

Blues head coach Craig Berube can handle his players taking penalties to prevent a goal or to assert physicalit­y, but can’t abide cheap minors.

“We haven’t been discipline­d yet,” he said. “We’ve got to do a much better job of getting rid of the slashing penalties and the hookings and things like that.”

Vancouver’s 78 penalty minutes versus the Wild led all teams in the NHL’s restart.

“Special teams, it’s going to be huge in this series as well,” Canucks forward Loui Eriksson said. “We have to stay maybe a little bit more discipline­d and don’t take as many penalties as we did against Minnesota.”

Each team boasts a faceoff circle ace. Blues assistant captain Ryan O’Reilly took more draws than any player in the NHL this season winning 56.6 per cent of his 1,556.

Canucks captain Bo Horvat ranked third in reps (1,483) winning 57.3.

“It’s better to start with the puck than without it,” Canucks coach Travis Green said. “At this time of year, it’s all those little things that add up at the end of the night.”

Editor’s Note: The result from Game 1 of the Vancouver-St. Louis series was not available at press time. Please see our websites, kelownadai­lycourier.ca or pentictonh­erald.ca.

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 ?? The Canadian Press ?? Colorado Avalanche forward Gabriel Landeskog and Arizona Coyotes’ Alex Goligoski battle as the Avs score on Darcy Kuemper during the third period of their Stanley Cup playoff game in Edmonton on Wednesday. Colorado won 3-0. More scores on page B2.
The Canadian Press Colorado Avalanche forward Gabriel Landeskog and Arizona Coyotes’ Alex Goligoski battle as the Avs score on Darcy Kuemper during the third period of their Stanley Cup playoff game in Edmonton on Wednesday. Colorado won 3-0. More scores on page B2.

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