The Daily Courier

Canucks look ahead to season without setbacks

- By GEMMA KARSTENS-SMITH

VANCOUVER — After a season punctuated by a COVID-19 outbreak and a grinding schedule, the beleaguere­d Vancouver Canucks are looking forward. Captain Bo Horvat believes the adversity his squad weathered will make them stronger.

“A lot’s been thrown our way this year and it seems like whatever else can get thrown at us next year and in the coming years is going to be minuscule compared to what happened to us this year,” he said Thursday. “I hope that’s the case. And we’re going to know how to handle it a lot better.”

The Canucks weathered illness, injuries and extended losing skids before capping the campaign with a 6-2 loss to the Calgary Flames on Wednesday.

Vancouver finished the year last in the allCanadia­n North Division, one point back of the Ottawa Senators, and missed the playoffs for the fifth time in six seasons.

The Canucks’ 2021 campaign got off to a shaky start with just two wins in February. Things appeared to be turning around when a COVID-19 outbreak swept through the locker room at the end of March.

Twenty-one players and four coaching staff tested positive for the virus, with many experienci­ng extreme fatigue, fever, chills and shortness of breath. Loved ones also fell ill, including wives and children.

Vancouver didn’t play for four weeks.

The Canucks’ return was pushed back a few more days in mid-April after forward J.T. Miller said players didn’t feel as if they’d had enough time to recover.

Antoine Roussel linked the knee injury he suffered on April 20 directly to recovering from COVID, saying he lost five or six pounds and was weaker than he would have been midway through a normal season.

The bottom-six winger was one of several Canucks forwards to go down with injuries late in the season.

“It seemed like our entire bottom six was depleted,” Roussel said. “As much as you need your top six to score goals, you need your bottom six for other reasons.”

Vancouver was already missing firepower up front when COVID appeared. Centre Elias Pettersson hyperexten­ded his wrist in a 4-0 win over the Winnipeg Jets. He played again the next night but the injury grew worse.

While Pettersson was initially listed as dayto-day, he did not return to the lineup for the final 30 games of the season.

The 22-year-old said Thursday that he’s been training again and is still experienci­ng some issues when he shoots the puck, but expects to be back at 100 per cent next season. Despite the disappoint­ing results, the young sniper said he liked the way his teammates fought and played hard all year.

“We didn’t have our best season, but the compete was always there,” Pettersson said. “Of course this whole COVID situation happened to us, guys played their hearts out even though the schedule and everything was tough.”

The Canucks had some success in their return from the COVID-19 pause, posting a pair of wins against the division’s top team, the Toronto Maple Leafs.

“A couple games we were going off of adrenalin and everything,” said goalie Braden Holtby, who had stellar performanc­es in both wins. “Everyone here did an outstandin­g job of grinding through, competing. I don’t think anyone could say those guys didn’t compete and try hard. It’s just that towards the end, it feels like you’re playing with a weighted vest on, just because of circumstan­ce.”

Vancouver played its final 19 games in just 32 days, with five sets of back-to-backs. The stretch was “extremely grinding” for the group, said coach Travis Green.

“And I am proud of how they’ve kind of rallied around each other and had some hard games, some tough games, some games where they didn’t play well. But they always seemed to find a way to bounce back and play better,” he said after Wednesday’s loss. “It’s hard not to be proud of your group.”

Green said he still believes good things are coming for the Canucks. Whether he’ll be in Vancouver to see the results, though, remains to be seen. The coach’s contract expires at the end of the season and there has been no word from management on an extension.

Sorting out the coaching situation is just one piece of business that Vancouver’s front office needs to handle in the coming weeks and months. Management must also make plans for the looming Seattle Kraken expansion draft and shore up a number of contracts.

Veterans like Alex Edler and Brandon Sutter are set to become unrestrict­ed free agents, while young stars like Pettersson and defenceman Quinn Hughes are about to finish their entry-level deals.

 ??  ?? The Canadian Press
Vancouver Canucks goalie Braden Holtby and Quinn Hughes crash into the net with Calgary Flames’ Elias Lindholm during third-period NHL action in Calgary, Wednesday.
The Canadian Press Vancouver Canucks goalie Braden Holtby and Quinn Hughes crash into the net with Calgary Flames’ Elias Lindholm during third-period NHL action in Calgary, Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada