The Province

Traik-eotomy

Mismanagem­ent — not a failure to attract free agents — is the reason why Ottawa, Vancouver, Montreal and Edmonton have become NHL punch lines ... Of all the Canadian teams, Jets have best chance at hoisting Cup ... Treliving dropped ball on goalie

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Oh no, Canada. Not again.

It was two years ago when Postmedia embarked on a six-part series — No Canada: How we lost our game — that tried to explain why Canadian teams had not only gone more than two decades without winning a Stanley Cup but had also failed to qualify for the playoffs for the first time since 1970.

We looked at everything, from the sagging Canadian dollar and players’ aversion to the media fishbowl to general mismanagem­ent and a failure to draft and develop players. Everything got blamed. As a country, we seemed to be a mess.

And then we suddenly weren’t. When six of the eight teams qualified for the playoffs the following season, with Ottawa coming within an overtime goal of the Stanley Cup final, it appeared as though we might have overreacte­d. But 12 months later, the teams are back at square one.

With three quarters of the season complete, only Winnipeg and Toronto are currently locked into playoff spots. Calgary, which is a point out of the wild card, could make it three. But overall the standings aren’t pretty: four of the six-worst teams in the NHL (Ottawa, Vancouver, Montreal and Edmonton) are once again based in Canada. Once again, it’s easy to see why. Mismanagem­ent — not a failure to attract free agents — is the reason why Ottawa, Vancouver, Montreal and Edmonton have become punch lines. In a season when Vegas can enter the league and build a roster from scratch, it’s inexcusabl­e that a team with the best defenceman (Ottawa), the best goalie (Montreal) and the best player (Edmonton) cannot even sneak into the playoffs.

The question is whether any of them will be able to turn things around for next season — or whether that’s even the right move.

Rebuilds are needed in Ottawa and Montreal, who appear to be heading that way after dangling Erik Karlsson and Max Pacioretty, respective­ly, at the trade deadline. Edmonton needs to shuffle its Rubik’s Cube of a roster that still doesn’t look right. And Vancouver has to stop re-tooling and go all-in with their kids, even if it means not bringing back the Sedin twins and buying out a bad contract.

In other words, more pain could be coming.

CUP HOPES ARE WITH JETS

Will this be the year Canada ends its championsh­ip drought? That’s likely up to Winnipeg to decide. While Toronto has the goalie and the young legs to make some noise and surprise some teams, the Leafs will probably have to go through Boston and Tampa Bay just to get to the conference final. If the season ended today, the Jets would play the Wild.

FLAMES NEEDED GOALIE

If Mike Smith’s injury is the reason why the Flames miss the playoffs, fingers will (and should) pointed at GM Brad Treliving, who failed to pick up a veteran goalie such as Cam Ward, Robin Lehner or Antti Raanta at the trade deadline. The team is 3-4-1 since he got hurt on Feb. 6.

FEELING THE BLUES

St. Louis players were obviously unhappy that management traded Paul Stastny at the deadline and on Tuesday they showed it in an 8-3 loss to the Wild that looked more like a protest. Afterwards, head coach Mike Yeo practicall­y threatened to bench the entire team. “The lack of respect that we have for our goaltender­s and for the game of hockey, that’s ridiculous,” he told reporters.

GOOD THINGS COME ...

It’s somewhat surprising that it took Los Angeles Kings goalie Jack Campbell, who was drafted 11th overall in 2010 and won a world junior championsh­ip for the U.S., eight years to pick up his first NHL win. But it’s a great lesson as well. Like

Jeff Glass, who took 13 years before making his debut, not everyone’s road to the NHL is straightfo­rward. Nice to see that he never gave up.

STAAL TACTICS

Eric Staal, who tied Connor McDavid with a February-best 13 goals and 21 points in 13 games, is having a throwback type of season. The 33-year-old is tied for third in the Rocket Richard Trophy race with 33 goals and is on pace for 83 points — his best offensive season in nearly a decade.

NICO’S CASE

Somewhat lost in the Calder Trophy talk is that Nico Hischier is tied for fifth in rookie scoring with 13 goals and 41 points in 63 games. He’s one of only two players drafted in 2017 that is still playing in the league this year. Nothing against Mathew Barzal or Brock Boeser, but they were both drafted in 2015 — the same year as Connor McDavid.

TATAR TRADE A HEAD-SCRATCHER

I understand that Vegas was in a position to go for it, but nothing about the Tomas Tatar trade makes sense. Why would a young and emerging team waste a first-, a secondand a third-round pick on a 27-year-old who has scored 16 goals and 28 points this season? After all, it’s not like he’s cheap. With three years remaining on a $5.3-million cap hit, he’s now the Golden Knights’ highest-paid forward.

PHILLY IS FLYING

No one is picking the Flyers to win the Cup — or even reach the second round of the playoffs — but don’t count them out just yet. Philly, which is riding a six-game winning streak, has a better winning percentage than Washington and Pittsburgh. And they’ve also got a goalie in Petr Mrazek playing out of his mind.

COACHES CORNER

Halfway through the season, I had Gerard Gallant as the Jack Adams winner, with New Jersey’s John Hynes and Washington’s Barry Trotz as finalists. With a quarter of the games remaining, it’s still Gallant at the top but I’ve now got Flyers’ Dave Hakstol and Boston’s Bruce Cassidy right behind.

TAMPA HAS DEEP TALENT POOL

Tampa gave up two prime prospects to get Ryan McDonagh, but it was an easier pill to swallow considerin­g they still have a deep pool that includes defenceman Cal Foote (14th overall in 2017) and forwards Boris Katchouk (44th in 2016) and Taylor Raddysh (58th in 2016). All three were on the team that won gold at this year’s world juniors and are rated higher than Brett Howden (27th in 2016) and Libor Hajek (37th in 2016).

PICKS A-PLENTY

With three first-round picks, the Rangers are going to be busy at this year’s draft, but the Red Wings might be even busier with two first-rounders, as well as two picks in each of Rounds 2, 3, 4 and 6. Now, time to find another Nicklas Lidstrom, Pavel Datsyuk and Henrik Zetterberg.

THE OL’ COLLEGE TRY

Now that the trade deadline has passed, the focus now turns to college free agency where teams are trying to unearth the next Tyler Bozak or Jimmy Vesey. The player on the top of most lists is Princeton forward Max Veronneau ,a 22-year-old Ottawa native who was nominated for the Hobey Baker Award after scoring 13 goals and 44 points in 29 games.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? It’s a disgrace that even with Connor McDavid on their team, the Edmonton Oilers can’t sneak into the playoffs.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS It’s a disgrace that even with Connor McDavid on their team, the Edmonton Oilers can’t sneak into the playoffs.
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 ?? CLAUS ANDERSEN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Minnesota Wild veteran Eric Staal had one heck of a February, putting up 13 goals and 21 points in 13 games. He is on pace for 83 points this season.
CLAUS ANDERSEN/GETTY IMAGES Minnesota Wild veteran Eric Staal had one heck of a February, putting up 13 goals and 21 points in 13 games. He is on pace for 83 points this season.

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