Times Colonist

Canucks’ start to season is pure gravy

- ED WILLES

VANCOUVER — Detroit Red Wings’ GM Ken Holland was the first man to identify American Thanksgivi­ng as a watershed moment in the life of an NHL season.

The Holland Theorem, which has since morphed into The Thanksgivi­ng Day Playoff Principle, asserted that teams have played one-quarter of their schedule by the end of November and, therefore, have a good idea of where they stand in relation to the rest of the league.

Some accountant­s then took Mr. Holland’s opus one step farther and calculated that, since the salary cap era began in 2005-06, a full 78.4 per cent of the teams that occupied playoff spots on American Thanksgivi­ng went on to the post-season.

The Vancouver Canucks currently occupy the first wild-card spot in the Western Conference and were percentage points behind third-place Calgary in the Pacific Division. This can only mean one thing — the parade must run down Georgia Street.

Let’s, however, move beyond the question of the Canucks’ playoff viability because in a conference where Chicago, Minnesota and Anaheim still sit below the playoff bar, a lot of things can happen between now and April 7.

Instead, let’s examine the team that has brought us to this place, what we like about it and what scares us all while keeping one thought in our head.

The Canucks occupy a playoff spot on American Thanksgivi­ng.

What we like

1. The Boeser Effect

These Canucks aren’t the offensive juggernaut of popular imaginatio­n. They’re averaging 2.78 goals a game which, in the West, is ahead of only San Jose, Edmonton and Arizona.

The difference is, in the past two seasons, scoring goals for this team was harder than solving pi. Last season they averaged 2.2 per game. The year before that 2.3.

Does half a goal per game mean that much? In a word, yes. The mere fact that it no longer takes a convergenc­e of the planets for the Canucks to score a goal has taken so much pressure off this team. They have a bona fide sniper in Brock Boeser. They have a first line that drives the play. In Thomas Vanek they have an individual who produces offence on his own. And the Sedins haven’t fallen off the grid just yet.

The Canucks even have the makings of a power play — they sit 15th in the NHL after going 7-for-15 over their last five games.

But the story here is the impact this production has had on the Canucks. Maybe it’s a chicken and egg argument — are they playing freer because they’re scoring more goals, or are they scoring more goals because they’re playing freer?

Whatever the case, the end result is the same. They play fast. There’s a purpose to their game. And, finally, there’s a bottom line. 2. The-coach-of-the-quarter year

OK, Jon Cooper in Tampa or Gerard Gallant in Vegas might be more deserving at this stage, but Travis Green has created something in this team that, try as he might, Willie Desjardins could never find.

There is a clear identity and philosophy. The 12 forwards, six D and both goalies are all vital cogs in the machine and all are contributi­ng.

Aside from Boeser, there isn’t one Canuck producing at an unexpected level this season but, somehow, the whole has been greater than the sum of the parts. Credit Green for that. 3. Deep thoughts

The Canucks have been without Chris Tanev, maybe their most indispensa­ble player, for the last seven games, regular blue-liner Troy Stecher for 14 games and now Derek Dorsett may be out for a significan­t stretch.

The point is injuries killed this team the last two seasons. This year they have the organizati­onal depth to withstand them. It’s unclear what the contributi­ons of Michael Del Zotto and Anders Nilsson (one year left on their contracts) and Derrick Pouliot and Thomas Vanek (both up at the end of this season) will be in ensuing years but they’ve been key figures this season.

Now, here’s reality calling. We’ve seen this movie before.

Last season, the Canucks were two games over .500 on Jan. 6 and in the thick of the playoff race before they fell into a void. The year before they were two games over .500 on Jan. 17. The Torts’ tire-fire season, you ask? They were 23-11-6 on Dec. 29 before they lost their minds.

Given that track record, it can fairly be asked if their current pace is sustainabl­e. Can they continue to hold off Anaheim, Chicago and Minnesota in the West?

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