The Province

Bolts jolt Canucks with shock and awe

Boeser racks up another goal but team in general remains soft, suffering its third straight loss

- Jason Botchford jbotchford@postmedia.com

The Tampa Bay Lightning are one of the best hockey teams in the world and the Canucks are not.

That was never more evident than Thursday.

The Lightning danced their way to a four-goal lead and cruised to what looked to be an easy 5-2 NHL victory against the Canucks, who dropped their third straight game and went 0-for-Florida on this four-game road trip.

This is what we learned:

The Canucks were soft, again

It’s not just that the Canucks have no push back. It’s they don’t have anyone who seems regularly interested in physical hockey.

At least, that was the case Thursday night.

Tampa is the team that has drafted a string of highly skilled players. They’ve been willing to take chances on small forwards and Russians. They’re not really known as one of the big, bad Western Conference teams.

They still dummied the Canucks. Daniel Sedin got pushed around. Brock Boeser got steamrolle­d. And Tampa scored each of its first two goals like they were skipping through a meadow in the middle of the ice.

It’s not so much the Canucks needed to respond to something. It was the stark contrast between a team that was willing to play the body, and another, the Canucks, who were not.

Brock Boeser scored

It doesn’t have the same cachet it did two months ago, but just it case you forgot, Boeser is still really good at hockey.

He scored on a third-period power play, using a one-time slapper on an Alex Edler feed. The puck hit a Tampa player and was redirected into the net, but that hardly matters.

The Calder Trophy race is still on for rookie of the year and now Boeser has 26 goals. Man, just where would the Canucks be without this rookie?

Thomas Vanek going quiet at a bad time

Playing Vanek with the Sedins at even strength hasn’t been a source of great success for the Canucks. But head coach Travis Green keeps going back to that well.

The three of them failed to generate any offence in Tampa.

The Canucks didn’t roll over

Out-gunned at just about every position, it would have been easy for the Canucks to check out after an excruciati­ngly bad end to the second period.

They did rise, a little, in the third period, scoring a couple of goals and nearly turning a 4-0 deficit into a game.

Bo Horvat just missed on a breakaway, which could have changed the dynamic. After Boeser scored, Horvat set up Sven Baertschi to make it a 4-2 game.

Canucks have an issue with Anders Nilsson

The backup goalie was put in an impossible situation at Amalie Arena.

Nilsson’s last start was a good one, a 1-0 loss in Winnipeg. It may have been his finest hour of the season.

He went 17 days without starting again. And then he got the Lightning assignment.

Playing Tampa here is no easy task for any goalie. The Lightning may be the fastest, most skilled team in hockey.

Nilsson made it out of the first having surrendere­d only one goal, but the wheels fell off in the second. Part of that, was the way the Canucks struggled to defend and keep up with the Tampa forwards.

But the Canucks desperatel­y need big saves and they didn’t get enough.

This is starting to look like a Willie Desjardins’ team

Tampa has big, imposing defencemen and they kept the Canucks to

the outside all game.

But the way the Canucks backed up, trying to play safe and conservati­ve, looked more like the way they played last year than it did in October.

Loui Eriksson missed an open net. And stud goalie Andrei Vasilevski­y had to make a couple nice saves, including one on Jake Virtanen.

It wasn’t close to being enough and the Canucks played like they had no interest in pushing the tempo.

Darren Archibald may help, but he’s no saviour

Archibald is expected to play Friday against the Hurricanes. He can add something to this group. Maybe he can even inspire some of the larger guys they have in the lineup to do more.

Virtanen peeled off when he had a couple of opportunit­ies to hit and none of the defencemen did a good job clearing the front of the net.

Lightning rookie Yanni Gourde scored the second goal, working the puck directly in front of Nilsson. Erik Gudbranson was close enough to breathe on him but couldn’t, or didn’t, move him. Gourde is 5-9.

The one time the Canucks got physical, Ben Hutton took a penalty.

Injuries are catching up to the Canucks, again

Brendan Gaunce has a fractured foot. Sam Gagner, a sprained ankle.

At different times Thursday, Chris Tanev and Edler left the game. For Tanev, it was a blocked shot and for Edler it looked like a head injury after his face was bounced off the glass.

Both players returned, but Markus Granlund did not. Along the boards, he had his left knee and ankle bent over like it was cardboard.

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Canucks goaltender Anders Nilsson makes a pad-save on a shot by Tampa Bay Lightning centre Vladislav Namestniko­v, centre, during the second period on Thursday in Tampa, Fla. Canucks defenceman Christophe­r Tanev looks on.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Canucks goaltender Anders Nilsson makes a pad-save on a shot by Tampa Bay Lightning centre Vladislav Namestniko­v, centre, during the second period on Thursday in Tampa, Fla. Canucks defenceman Christophe­r Tanev looks on.
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