Times Colonist

Green ‘ready’ to take Canucks to the next level

GAME DAY: EDMONTON AT VANCOUVER, 7 P.M.

- BEN KUZMA

VANCOUVER — Ray Ferraro is a razor-sharp analyst.

He picks up game details others often overlook. He knows where the NHL is trending on the ice and what’s happening off it. He knows who runs a bench better than others.

However, he never fathomed that Travis Green, his former New York Islanders teammate from 1992-95, would one day become the 19th head coach of the Vancouver Canucks.

What chance did he give a gifted guy, who had to first reinvent himself just to remain relevant as a player, and then have junior- and minor-league success to become a fair-but-firm rookie NHL coach in his home province?

“Zero, said Ferraro. “This is the evolution of Travis: Skilled, lazy, challenged, changed, diligent, hard working.

“Everything Travis is now is not what he was when he broke in as a player. This is why I think he has a chance to be really successful. He understand­s what a scorer thinks, because he was one. He understand­s what a guy thinks when he gets kicked in the shins because he got booted.

“He understand­s what it is to remake yourself and has travelled a wide spectrum to get where he is.

“As they get older, players appreciate when a coach is direct. It gets your attention.”

The big thing the 46-year-old Green has going for him is how he doesn’t muddle the message. Nothing is lost in translatio­n. Talk to any player and all he wants to know is what’s expected. It started the first day of camp when a drill was stopped and Green barked. It ended with a bag skate.

Tempo and pace are his buzzwords. And there’s no comfort zone.

Musical lines are proof. The latest had Loui Eriksson with Bo Horvat and Baertschi and Brock Boeser with Alexander Burmistrov and Sam Gagner. Markus Granlund was a fourth-line left-winger and Jake Virtanen was the odd man out.

“Practices have been hard,” said winger Sven Baertschi, who also played for Green in Utica and Portland. “We didn’t practise like this last year. Travis is a real competitiv­e person and he cares, but he demands a lot. His feel for players has made him successful so far and his feel for game days really sets him apart.”

The caring part showed when Baertschi arrived in Portland from Switzerlan­d to commence the 2010-11 season. It was his first time in the United States and he didn’t speak English.

“Travis actually came and picked me up at the airport because he knew it was tough for me, recalled Baertschi. “I was 16 and had no idea who he was. He took me under his wing right away and was really supportive.”

Jake Virtanen is a prime example of that mantra. But he always knew where Green was coming from. And Green knew where Al Arbour was coming from.

“Al was really hard on Travis,” added Ferraro. “We went to the semifinals in 1993 and in the second round, Travis played nose-tonose against Mario Lemieux. If anybody had predicted that three years earlier, they would have been thought to be crazy.”

Green was good but had to reinvent himself before retiring at age 37. He went from a reliable 25-goal scorer to 10-goal checker and shutdown guy. And everything he gleaned along the way caught the attention of Mike Johnston.

He offered Green an assistant position with the Portland Winterhawk­s in the 2009-10 season and the budding bench boss made his mark in 2012-13. When Johnston was suspended for WHL playerbene­fit violations, Green guided the Winterhawk­s to a 37-8-0-2 run and a WHL championsh­ip before losing in the Memorial Cup final.

That earned a four-year run with the Utica Comets and a 2015 Calder Cup final appearance that put Green on the NHL radar.

Johnston, a first-year Pittsburgh Penguins coach, thought so highly of Green that he offered an assistant position before the 2014-15 season.

Green chose to run his own AHL bench before eventually transition­ing to the NHL as a bench boss. And he was a hot commodity. There was interest in Anaheim and Denver before he eventually landed in Vancouver.

“He trusts his instincts and he has a certain approach with his personalit­y,” said Johnston. “He’s very strong in what he wants to do and is very determined and is going to get the most out of that team. And if Vancouver didn’t take him, several other teams would have.”

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