Vancouver Sun

Shooting Stars another perfect playoff prep test

Mission will be to ground high-flying Dallas offence and retake lead in West

- BEN KUZMA bkuzma@postmedia.com

Dallas Stars (45-19-9) at Vancouver Canucks (45-19-8)

When: Today, 7 p.m.

Where: Rogers Arena

TV: SN Pacific

Radio: Sportsnet 650

The buzz: Another perfect playoff preparatio­n against another formidable foe.

The Dallas Stars are a point ahead of the Canucks atop the Western Conference and shining with an offence ranked second at 3.66 goals per game. A five-game win streak features 23 goals, with Canucks nemesis and Victoria native Jamie Benn on a heater with goals in five consecutiv­e outings.

If that isn't enough to grab the Canucks' attention to defend with determinat­ion, the shooting Stars have enviable depth. They don't have a player in top-20 scoring, but boast seven with at least 20 goals and a power play rated ninth.

“Now is the time where there's not much more fine-tuning,” Benn said Tuesday after scoring in a 6-3 win at San Jose. “You've got to be feeling good and on top of your game going into the playoffs.”

Benn always felt good facing the Canucks. Among active Stars, the captain ranks first in goals (16) and second in points (34) in 40 career games. He also shares first in game-winning goals (four) and has an overtime effort.

For the Canucks, it's another mission to hone a defensive game that has been a foundation for success.

They're ranked fourth in goals allowed (2.64) and the vastly improved penalty kill has been sensationa­l. Those dark depths of a 67.7 per cent struggle a year ago now seem like so long ago.

A commendabl­e run of 18-for20 efficiency in the last 10 games equates to a 90 per cent kill rate, and has allowed the overall penalty kill to climb into the top half of NHL ratings. The Canucks' clears are crisper than they were earlier this season.

“If a guy has it (puck) on his stick, it's got to go 200 feet,” Tocchet said of a penalty kill staple. “And if a guy knocks it down, it better hurt. You better break his hand. You can't just flip it out, you've got to rip them down.”

The return of Joshua: Timing is everything. The Canucks need big winger Dakota Joshua to dial in his forechecki­ng game before the playoffs. He missed 18 games with a hand injury suffered in a scrap with MacKenzie Entwhistle. Joshua is having a career season with 26 points (13-13) in 53 games. The return of Tanev: The Stars sent a 2024 second-round pick, prospect Artem Grushnikov and a 2026 conditiona­l third-rounder to Calgary on March 6 for fearless 34-year-old shot-blocker Chris Tanev. The Flames retained half and New Jersey another quarter of Tanev's expiring US$4.5-million salary. The swap included the Stars flipping a 2026 fourth-rounder to the Devils for prospect Cole Brady.

The Stankoven effect: Diminutive winger Logan Stankoven was recalled Feb. 24 after 57 points (2433) in 47 AHL games. He then scored five goals in a five-game span. The Kamloops native was a WHL standout with the Blazers and had 104- and 97-point seasons. The history: Canucks won 2-0 at home on Nov. 4 as Pius Suter and Elias Pettersson scored, while

Thatcher Demko made 27 saves. The Canucks lost 4-3 in overtime at Dallas on Dec. 21 as Matt Duchene scored with 10 seconds left. Joshua, Brock Boeser and Conor Garland scored.

The hope: Canucks press and find their game early. They lead the NHL in first-period goals (87) and are 34-11-4 when striking first. They've also surrendere­d the fourth-fewest goals in the opening frame (48).

The fear: That nagging lack of a complete game effort — can't sit on a lead, can't play on their heels and can't stop forcing the offensive issue. Pedal to the metal will get it done.

The top gun: J.T. Miller has 20 points (9-11) in his last 16 games and has surpassed the 90-point mark for the second time in three seasons with 91 (34-57). He has nine game-winners and is 10th in league scoring.

The wounded: Canucks: Demko (knee, week to week, LTIR), Elias Lindholm (undisclose­d, day to day). Stars: Alexander Barbanov (undisclose­d), Tyler Seguin (undisclose­d, day to day), Evgenii Dadonov (lower body, IR), Jerad Rosburg (undisclose­d, IR).

The quote: “Hard-fought game and a good one for us to realize. We have to make sure we go to spots to score.” — Rick Tocchet following a 3-2 loss to the Kings on Monday The lineup:

Hoglander-Pettersson-Garland ■

Joshua-Miller-Boeser

Mikheyev-Blueger-Lafferty

Podkolzin-Suter-Aman

Hughes-Hronek

Soucy-Myers

Zadorov-Cole

The prediction: The Canucks turn up the grind and gut one out for a 3-2 victory.

Fan forum: Do you have a specific question for a player? Pass it along to @provincesp­orts and we'll get it in a future edition.

 ?? TOM PENNINGTON/GETTY IMAGES ?? Veteran Dallas Stars forward Jamie Benn, a Victoria native, has 16 goals and 34 points in 40 career games against the Canucks, including four game-winning goals and an overtime marker.
TOM PENNINGTON/GETTY IMAGES Veteran Dallas Stars forward Jamie Benn, a Victoria native, has 16 goals and 34 points in 40 career games against the Canucks, including four game-winning goals and an overtime marker.

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