Vancouver Sun

SEASON SLIPPING AWAY

Hapless Canucks lose ninth in a row

- BEN KUZMA bkuzma@postmedia.com twitter.com/@benkuzma

We believe we can score and we have those (scoring) guys on our team. It’s a matter of putting that first one in the net and things will get easier. Vancouver Canucks left wing Daniel Sedin

The statistic was sobering and revealing.

Dennis Seidenberg has more points than any member of the Vancouver Canucks. The 35-yearold New York Islanders defenceman has eight points — four goals and four assists — and the four top producers for the Canucks have but six points apiece. It speaks to the mantra of what this numbing NHL season has become — a hope and a prayer. It’s the hope that being harder to play against through better neutral-zone structure and own-zone awareness will spark something in transition. That’s where the prayer comes in.

And that’s where it looked like Daniel Sedin might help salvage this telling six-game road trip, but a 4-2 loss Monday matched March Madness when the Canucks also went through a nine-game losing streak.

The issue wasn’t settled until midway through the third period when goalie Ryan Miller kicked a hotshot rebound off his right pad into the high slot and Cal Clutterbuc­k snapped it up high. Less than two minutes later, Andrew Ladd was credited with a goal that was going wide, deflected off Nikita Tryamkin and past a surprised Miller to the glove side. Those goals overshadow­ed a lot of early good.

“I thought we played well the first two periods and it just turned into a frustratin­g affair,” said Miller. “Three of their goals, our guys go to block them and they end up in favourable situations.

“Just weird bounces and it’s just kind of the way it’s going. We’re going to have to find a way to get past some of this stuff and settle in. Their fourth goal, the thing is going about three- or four-feet wide and I don’t know if it even hit Ladd, it hit Tryamkin.

“We have to find ways to rise up when games unfold that way.”

Daniel Sedin not only opened the scoring, just the second time in 13 games that the Canucks have struck first, he also said after the

morning skate that he’s happy to win games 1-0 or 2-1. He has to be. The league’s lowest-scoring team was blanked in four of its six previous outings. They were also playing without Jannik Hansen (shoulder) and Chris Tanev (foot), who have returned home for further injury evaluation.

The Canucks played the recalled Michael Chaput on Monday and sat Jake Virtanen. They purposely played Miller, arguably the team’s most valuable player, who made 47 saves here last January in a 2-1 shootout win. He then made 46 saves two nights later in a 3-2 overtime loss at Madison Square Garden, so who knows how Tuesday will play out in the crease?

Miller would like some redemption, but a rested Jacob Markstrom might be the better option to keep Miller fresh for Thursday in Detroit.

The Canucks also played the brain-cramp card Monday. Locked in a 2-2 draw in the third period, Jack Skille took an embellishm­ent minor at centre ice while battling with Thomas Hickey and, on the ensuing power play, Miller was forced to make a tough toe save. Imagine if that had been the deciding goal? Image the navel-gazing? There are also other problems. Erik Gudbranson’s ill-timed slide allowed Hickey ample time to get a shot away in the slot and start a rebound, tap-in scoring sequence. More down-low woes are becoming a concern for an obvious reason. That was supposed to be the no-go zone this season, not a free-pass zone.

And with the high-octane New York Rangers, who have won five straight and scored at least five goals in each outing, awaiting Tuesday on U.S. election night, it’s not going to get any easier. It’s going to get harder. Much harder.

 ??  ??
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Vancouver’s Erik Gudbranson, right, checks New York’s Jason Chimera during first-period play at the Barclays Center on Monday in Brooklyn, N.Y. The Canucks dropped a 4-2 decision to the Islanders.
GETTY IMAGES Vancouver’s Erik Gudbranson, right, checks New York’s Jason Chimera during first-period play at the Barclays Center on Monday in Brooklyn, N.Y. The Canucks dropped a 4-2 decision to the Islanders.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada