Times Colonist

For Hutton, Stecher, less is more

- GAME DAY: CALGARY AT VANCOUVER, 7 P.M. BEN KUZMA

VANCOUVER — Indifferen­t play. A mumps scare. A hand injury.

You name it, and Ben Hutton experience­d it last season. He never meshed with Erik Gudbranson, struggling to handle major minutes and indecision in his game that smacked of a sophomore slump.

Still, Hutton managed five goals on a back end that couldn’t stay healthy and couldn’t find the net, with just a collective 23 goals. And he never lost his trademark, glass-half-full approach to the game and to life.

“There wasn’t a lot of time where you were playing 10 or 15 games with the same partner,” Hutton recalled Thursday. “I learned you have to make chemistry with every player and there are going to be nights when you’re feeling it and the puck is always on your stick and you’re making great plays.

“And there are other nights when you just have to play a chess game, chip [the puck] out when you can, because there’s not always going to be a play. It’s give and take.”

Hutton finished second in rookie blueliner assists (24) and was third in points (25) in 2015-16, while Troy Stecher is coming off a 24-point rookie season in which he also had ample power-play time.

“We’re both mobile and can jump up and move the puck. But one of us needs to lay off a little bit. Our chemistry is getting better and we’re learning each other’s tendencies, and it can only get better from here.

“It’s today’s game. You watch the highlights and it’s defencemen jumping up and making a 2-on-2 a 3-on-2, or a 3-on-3 a 4-on-3, with more options. That’s going to create a lot more offence for us.”

Yet, that’s where it’s going to get interestin­g defensivel­y as a third pairing.

Fewer minutes can mean more effectiven­ess when you’re still learning the game and don’t have a seasoned National Hockey League partner to lean on and feed off. Hutton logged 17:09 and 17:13 in his first two regular-season outings, a far cry from the 23:09 and 20:00 he played in the first two games a year ago.

Stecher played 13:40 and 12:41 in the first two games this season, compared to 22:35 and 19:49 in his first two games last year after being recalled from the AHL’s Utica Comets and becoming a fixture with Alex Edler on the first pairing.

The challenge for Hutton and Stecher is to be as good in their own zone as they have the potential to be out of it. Against the Ottawa Senators, who forecheck ferociousl­y and employ the 1-3-1 trap, Hutton tried to play the puck behind his own net in a crucial third-period sequence. He was stripped and it resulted in the tying goal en route to a 3-2 Senators shootout win.

“We knew it wasn’t going to be a pretty game,” said Hutton. “They set the trap and sit back and wait for you to make mistakes.”

Canucks coach Travis Green is a believer in the high-risk, high-reward approach because it forces the opposition to play in its own zone. And if Hutton and Stecher can take care of business in their end, it won’t be a chess match trying to move the puck because they both skate so well.

“They can both defend well and Hutton has worked on his defensive game,” added Green. “A young player gets eager when he’s playing less than he’s used to. And when things don’t go well, he presses a bit. Hutton and Stecher are capable of defending hard enough to win puck battles.”

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