The Province

Brendan Gaunce hoping to earn the trust of Travis Green

FIRST-ROUND PICK: Green could be right Canucks coach at right time for big forward

- Ben Kuzma

Brendan Gaunce was a hotshot junior. So was Travis Green. And if you want to know why a rookie NHL head coach is so high on a 2012 first-round draft pick still trying to become a roster mainstay, take a look at their career paths.

Green had two 50-plus-goal seasons in the Western Hockey League, but needed two full seasons in the minors before he got a sniff with the New York Islanders in the 1992-93 season. Green had to reinvent himself to remain relevant and log 970 games with five teams.

Understand­ing how to play at this level meant Gaunce transition­ing from being a two-time 30-goal guy in the Ontario Hockey League to being a bottom-six grinder. He was moved from centre to left wing two years ago because his 6-foot-2, 217-pound frame and strong stride should allow him to be effective.

Gaunce knows all that and Green reminded him of it when he made the jump from junior.

“My first year in Utica (2014-15), I met with him and he told me that exact thing,” Gaunce recalled Thursday. “We did the exact same things and have the same qualities. You have to tailor your game to what the team wants. I accepted that and feel very comfortabl­e playing that way.

“I also know he trusts me defensivel­y and it was just a step to take.”

There was a time when some in the organizati­on weren’t sure that Gaunce had a game that could translate to the highest level. He was a natural centre, but a move to wing was made to get more aggression in his game and take advantage of his size and skating.

“He has to play a heavy game to be responsibl­e,” said Green. “He’s a young guy still trying to find his way, but he’s smart and he can kill penalties.

“We’ve got to push him to be the best player he can be and we’re not sure what that is yet. I’m convinced that he has it in him, but it’s up to him.”

With Markus Granlund sidelined by an upper-body ailment, Gaunce meshed seamlessly with Brandon Sutter and Derek Dorsett in his season debut Tuesday in Calgary during a 5-3 victory. He logged 16:54 in ice time, had two hits, two blocked shots and a shot on net.

“The first period I was pretty excited and wasn’t focusing on anything but getting my feet moving,” recalled Gaunce. “But when I was out (injured), I watched games and looked at how Sutter and Granlund were playing and who they played against and how we have to play against top lines.”

It only stands to reason that Gaunce may generate offence from being in a system that frustrates elite players who don’t like to play in their own zone. Good pace and a pounding forecheck is why Dorsett had seven goals after 15 games and why Sutter has played to his shutdown strengths.

“Just little plays off the wall in our zone with the winger going and if you’re strong on the boards, you’re going to get chances for yourself and your linemates,” said Green. “That’s enticing for players like us.”

Gaunce had left-shoulder labrum surgery in April following a season in which he played 57 games and didn’t manage a goal. After five games on a conditioni­ng stint with the Utica Comets in which he scored twice, Gaunce was recalled Monday and played Tuesday.

If Granlund, who had just two goals, is eventually reunited with Henrik and Daniel Sedin to rekindle some offensive chemistry, Gaunce may have found a roster home.

“Some guys can get to the NHL very quickly and others take time,” reasoned Gaunce. “I understand how Travis wants the team to play and he understand­s how I can play.

“It’s good that we went through a successful year together (2015 Calder Cup final) because of how he coached and how I played big moments in the playoffs.

“He knew what I can bring.”

SLAPSHOTS: Defenceman Chris Tanev has returned to Vancouver with an upper-body injury and will not rejoin the team for the remainder of the road trip.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Brendan Gaunce sees similariti­es in his game to when Travis Green was a full-timer NHLer, something the Canucks head coach has shared with the forward.
— GETTY IMAGES FILES Brendan Gaunce sees similariti­es in his game to when Travis Green was a full-timer NHLer, something the Canucks head coach has shared with the forward.
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 ?? — GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Brendan Gaunce found some quick chemistry with linemates Derek Dorsett and Brandon Sutter in Tuesday’s 5-3 Canucks win over the Calgary Flames, logging 16:54 in ice time with two hits, two blocked shots and a shot on net.
— GETTY IMAGES FILES Brendan Gaunce found some quick chemistry with linemates Derek Dorsett and Brandon Sutter in Tuesday’s 5-3 Canucks win over the Calgary Flames, logging 16:54 in ice time with two hits, two blocked shots and a shot on net.

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