Times Colonist

New Canuck scores in dream debut

VANCOUVER 4 MINNESOTA 2

- PATRICK DONNELLY

ST. PAUL, Minnesota — Brock Boeser’s college career ended in crushing fashion on Friday. Scoring in his NHL debut the next day in front of his family and friends wasn’t a bad consolatio­n prize.

Boeser scored in his first NHL game a day after signing with Vancouver, Reid Boucher added two in a four-goal second period and the Canucks defeated the slumping Minnesota Wild 4-2.

Boeser was Vancouver’s firstround pick in the 2015 draft. His North Dakota team lost to Boston University in double overtime on Friday in the NCAA Tournament in Fargo. The Burnsville, Minnesota, native joined the Canucks in St. Paul in time for Saturday’s game.

“It’s been crazy — obviously a heartbreak loss there with my North Dakota team,” Boeser said. “But, you know, I had to regroup there and focus on this game.

“I definitely think adrenalin kicked in here.”

The Canucks surprised Boeser by bringing his parents into the locker room before the game. Then he went out and scored Vancouver’s third goal of the second period, scoring off a rebound on a 2-on-2 rush.

“It’s good for him,” Canucks coach Willie Desjardins said. “It’s a great story for him playing at home, and to get a goal, it was good.”

The mood in the other locker room wasn’t as upbeat. The Wild have lost seven of their last eight and are now 3-10-0 in March. They were booed off the ice after the second period by the home crowd.

“That was embarrassi­ng,” Wild coach Bruce Boudreau said of his team’s performanc­e. “I’m embarrasse­d. If I were the fans, I would be booing even more because they pay good money for this, and to see an effort like that.”

The Wild were shut out for almost 57 minutes by Richard Bachman, Vancouver’s thirdstrin­g goalie, and they were no match for a Canucks team that was 1-5-2 in its previous eight games.

“It wasn’t good enough,” Wild forward Jason Zucker said. “We’re leaving guys open. We aren’t winning battles. We’re hanging our goalies out to dry. I don’t think we’re prepared enough to start some periods and they score quick and we’re not being resilient enough to come back.”

Darcy Kuemper made 17 saves in his first start since March 12. He gave up Boucher’s power-play goal 19 seconds into the second period, then allowed three goals in an eight-minute span as the Canucks put the game away.

“We had stretches where we were good, and then we just had some breakdowns and they were capitalizi­ng on their chances,” Kuemper said. “Things snowballed in the whole building and we couldn’t get to the intermissi­on fast enough.”

Boucher put Vancouver up 2-0 with a wrist shot that appeared to hit the crossbar and ricochet off into the corner. Video replay confirmed that the puck hit the camera inside the net.

“I had no idea,” Boucher said. “It sounded like it hit the post. I saw it go out the other side, that’s about it.”

Boeser’s goal made it 3-0. Bo Horvat broke in alone on Kuemper, who stopped a backhander but couldn’t control the rebound. The puck fell at his feet and Boeser jammed it home.

Less than two minutes later, Jack Skille beat a screened Kuemper with a wrist shot from left circle.

In the game’s final three minutes, Ryan Suter threaded a wrist shot through traffic to end Bachman’s shutout bid. Eric Staal beat Bachman after jumping on a funny bounce off the end boards with 1:15 to play, but the comeback ended there.

The Canucks play at Winnipeg today while the Wild are at Detroit.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Vancouver’s Brock Boeser scores against Minnesota Wild goalie Darcy Kuemper.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Vancouver’s Brock Boeser scores against Minnesota Wild goalie Darcy Kuemper.

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