Vancouver Sun

Club picks up second-round draft pick

Depth-hungry Canucks grab second-rounder as Columbus closes deal

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

There was going to be a silver lining in the departure of John Tortorella after an erratic and entertaini­ng one-year reign of error with the Vancouver Canucks.

We just didn’t know when. Now, we do.

The Columbus Blue Jackets had to surrender a second-round compensato­ry draft pick for the October 2015 hiring of the bombastic coach and they had the option of doing it in 2016, 2017 or 2018.

This year made the most sense. The Jackets know that replicatin­g a franchise-best 108-point season, fourth-highest in the National Hockey League, will be difficult. And if they slide back to the pack next season, the compensato­ry draft pick will be higher than the 55th overall they surrendere­d Wednesday.

With four picks in the first 64 selections — including No. 5, 33 and 55 — when the draft is held June 23 and 24 in Chicago, Canucks general manager Jim Benning can continue to stock the prospect cupboard — or be bold and swap picks to move up or down the draft ladder.

“This is a year we can add some more depth into our prospect pool,” Benning said Wednesday from the NHL draft combine in Buffalo, N.Y.

“And in having two fourthroun­d picks (No. 95 and No. 112, from the Jannik Hansen trade for Nikolay Goldobin) we can add to our group.”

Benning has stated an organizati­onal need for a playmaking centre and power-play point performer. Depending on how the picks play out — and assuming Memorial Cup champion Gabriel Valardi will go to the Colorado Avalanche at No. 4 — there will be several centres who should pique the Canucks’ interest to varying degrees.

Cody Glass, Casey Mittlestad­t, Michael Rasmussen and Elias Pettersen are likely candidates, as are defencemen Timothy Liljegren, Cale Makar and Callan Foote. Blue-liner Miro Heiskanen is expect to go in the top three picks.

With much debate about player rankings in the second half of the first round, somebody Benning covets could easily slide to the second round. If so, he could satisfy both positional needs.

“We’re not necessaril­y going to pick them, even though we do need those players, and we’re going to pick the best available,” he said. “If it fits those needs, then we’ll address it, but we want the best player available and the rest will sort itself out.”

Then there are the Dallas Stars, who have two first-round picks. The second comes from moving winger Patrick Eaves to Anaheim, and was conditiona­l on the Ducks advancing to the Western Conference final and Eaves playing in 50 per cent of the games after the trade.

That extra pick is one reason why Stars general manager Jim Nill is willing to move the third-overall selection for an establishe­d and impact defenceman. Offensive catalysts Jamie Benn and Tyler Seguin are in their prime and Jason Spezza should still have some pop, but the Stars were ranked 29th defensivel­y in allowing 3.17 goals per game and the penalty kill was a league-worst at 73.9 per cent efficiency.

Poor goaltendin­g didn’t help. Newcomer Ben Bishop should help stabilize the long-standing Stars crease conundrum in an expected tandem with Jere Lehtinen, but if the blue-line is Job 1, who can help get that done?

The Canucks are reluctant to trade Chris Tanev, but they should at least listen during draft week because he might not be at the top of the Stars’ wish list, but he could move up.

Benning believes it’s simply too difficult to find mobile defencemen who can also defend, and that’s why he said he isn’t shopping Tanev or bringing up his name in conversati­ons with his peers. They’re calling, but Benning sounds like he would move picks before Tanev.

“We’ll look at all our options and if there’s something that makes sense to move up higher in the first round or packaging our secondroun­d picks to get a late first-round pick, we’ll look at it,” he said.

“But having said that, we’ve done our due diligence in knowing the players in this year’s draft and we feel comfortabl­e hanging on to the picks. We’re excited about the player we get at No. 33 because there’s enough in that first round (who may drop).”

Read what you want into all that, but from No. 28 to 36, by the ratings of several scouts, there are three centres and three defencemen. The Canucks could satisfy obvious needs before they make two fourth-round picks.

 ?? TONY CALDWELL/FILES ?? The Columbus Blue Jackets sent the Vancouver Canucks the 55th-overall pick in this year’s draft on Wednesday as compensati­on for head coach John Tortorella. Canucks general manager Jim Benning says the team will select “the best available” players in...
TONY CALDWELL/FILES The Columbus Blue Jackets sent the Vancouver Canucks the 55th-overall pick in this year’s draft on Wednesday as compensati­on for head coach John Tortorella. Canucks general manager Jim Benning says the team will select “the best available” players in...

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