Vancouver Sun

Vancouver puts end to eight-game skid

- PATRICK JOHNSTON pjohnston@postmedia.com

Relief has arrived and for the 201819 Vancouver Canucks, it indeed smells like victory.

The Canucks broke an eightgame losing streak Saturday night at Staples Center in Los Angeles, beating the Kings 3-2.

For the Canucks, it was an especially impressive win, given they had played just 24 hours before against the Sharks in San Jose.

But even if they were tired, it didn’t show, as the Canucks did well to keep the Kings to the outside, preventing shots from dangerous areas and making Jacob Markstrom’s life in net relatively easy.

At the other end, the Canucks were persistent. They also took their chances.

Adam Gaudette opened the scoring 5:12 into the second, his first goal in the big leagues, one that came after a quick turnover forced by Nikolay Goldobin.

The Kings tied the game up just two minutes later, Drew Doughty ’s power-play point shot bouncing in past Markstrom after the puck hit at least two Canucks on its way toward the net.

The Canucks seized the lead at 12:18 of the second, a beautifull­y executed power-play finish for Sam Gagner, at the end of a crisp, quick three-pass sequence.

Matt Luff evened the game up again for the Kings, as he found himself forgotten by the Canucks defence at the far blue-line. He raced in alone on Markstrom and deked the Canucks goalie out of his shorts before sliding the puck in the goal.

The game-winner came in the third, a tense frame that saw the Kings push hard to win at home for the first time in more than two weeks.

Elias Pettersson was handed a gift of a turnover by Dion Phaneuf, the veteran Kings defenceman firing a breakout pass almost directly on to the stick of Pettersson, who was out at the blue-line.

The Alien raced in and wired a shot past Kings goalie Calvin Petersen.

Tyler Motte sealed the game with a long-distance, short-handed, empty-net marker.

Here’s what we learned:

GAUDY PERFORMANC­E

Gaudette’s been a quiet story in his first full season as an NHLer. He started the season in the American Hockey League, but when Jay Beagle broke his arm on the season-opening road trip, it opened the door for last season’s Hobey Baker winner to get an extended run.

Handed fourth-line minutes, he’s kept his game pretty tidy.

He’s had chances to score but hadn’t had any luck. You knew that for a guy who has spent his whole life scoring, it would have been grating a small part of him, even if he would tell you he was just happy to be in the NHL.

So when he pulled out as big a

fist pump as he could on his gameopenin­g goal, his first career NHL goal, you weren’t surprised.

It was a marvellous goal, one that was built by collective effort.

There was the disruptive forecheck from Goldobin, turning the puck over on the side boards. There was a truly marvellous pass from Jake Virtanen, a patient swat of the puck into the slot, set up perfectly for the onrushing Gaudette to hammer into the net past an outstretch­ed Petersen.

FRENCH FOR WINNING

Gagner’s first week back in the NHL has been very, very good. He’s slotted in well on Bo Horvat’s wing, and he has helped solidify the first power-play unit.

That he scored on a secondperi­od power play was really no surprise.

It was a perfect finish of a quick passing sequence, from Alex Edler up top, through Pettersson on the right wing, down to Horvat, who had smartly swung down below the goal-line and then first-timed the pass to Gagner, who was on the door step.

It was a goal that power plays diagram up. It couldn’t have been executed better.

As long as the Canucks’ power play keeps scoring, they’re going to have a chance in games.

Gaudette and Gagner are the 20th and 21st Canucks to score this season — the most players to have scored for any team in the NHL.

FEWER PENALTIES

One of the things the Canucks insisted they needed to cut down on after Friday ’s 4-0 loss to the Sharks was the number of penalties they had been taking.

On Friday, they took six. On Saturday, four.

Now, they still conceded a power-play goal and nearly another, which rang off the post instead, but the point was well taken.

As Michael Del Zotto pointed out Friday, it’s awfully hard to win when you give up three powerplay goals, as they did against the Sharks.

Job 1 was simply allow fewer opportunit­ies.

LINEUP CHANGE-UP

It was a surprise to hear Travis Green announce pre-game that Troy Stecher was going to be a healthy scratch.

The Richmond defenceman has been a solid player for the Canucks this season. Green said it wasn’t about Stecher; he just wanted to get Alex Biega into a game.

The veteran blue-liner skated alongside Edler, who was playing his first game in a month after recovering from a shoulder injury.

 ?? JAE C. HONG/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Vancouver’s Alexander Edler, from left, Elias Pettersson, Jake Virtanen and Nikolay Goldobin react to a goal by Pettersson on Saturday in Los Angeles. The Canucks won 4-2 for their first victory since beating Boston 8-5 on Nov. 8.
JAE C. HONG/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Vancouver’s Alexander Edler, from left, Elias Pettersson, Jake Virtanen and Nikolay Goldobin react to a goal by Pettersson on Saturday in Los Angeles. The Canucks won 4-2 for their first victory since beating Boston 8-5 on Nov. 8.

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