The Province

Keeping Hughes rested part of the plan

Workhorse defenceman must learn to pace himself through compacted 56-game sprint

- BEN KUZMA bkuzma@postmedia.com twitter.com/@benkuzma

Quinn Hughes had a no-practice maintenanc­e day on Sunday.

That qualifies as news because it's hard to keep the Calder Trophy runner-up off the ice in his relentless resolve to keep taking his electric game to another level. Through three games, the Vancouver Canucks defenceman led the club in points (three), shots (11) and average ice time (24:27).

He also leads in moxie, breaking his stick on Ryan Nugent-Hopkins after the Edmonton winger blindsided Brock Boeser with a high hit in the season opener.

Hughes is also an early candidate for pass of the year. In that same game, he somehow shovelled a blind backhand pass to Boeser sitting on his butt to spring his teammate for one of his two goals.

And because Hughes is going to be a top target, he took a high stick from Mikael Backlund on Saturday in Calgary to give the Canucks a 5-on-3 power play advantage.

All this could cause concern that Hughes is trying to do too much. Should he be pushing himself this hard in a compacted 56-game season, where rest and recovery are going to be as important as goals and assists? The answer from Hughes would be yes. The answer from his coach is more pragmatic.

“He's such a talent that you kind of have to be careful,” Travis Green said Monday morning. “We have to be careful in stifling him. He's a smart player and certain players figure things out on their own in what they're capable of doing and what they're not.

“We try to teach him things defensivel­y that will help his game. And from the offensive side, we show him the structure of how our team wants to play. But we still let him be creative because he has a special talent and we have to let him use it. He looks like he's progressin­g as a player and in his maturity.”

Hughes had been paired with Travis Hamonic and occasional­ly with Nate Schmidt, depending on game tempo and the scoreboard. It gives Green options to deploy the traditiona­l set of a stay-athome blueliner paired with a puck-mover, or two guys who can get up in the play and make something happen.

“You have to step back and look at the team game and separate wins and losses when you're looking at individual play, and keep in mind that Hamonic hasn't had a camp,” said Green. “He's still finding his best game and has been pretty good on a new team.

“And when you see players north of 24 minutes (like Hughes), they're going to be with different partners and it's not a slight, it's coaching to win. It's finding ways to get Quinn out there to give us an advantage.”

VIRTANEN'S LINE DANCE

Jake Virtanen has had his top-six looks, but looks destined to be a third-line constant.

The return of J.T. Miller from COVID-19 quarantine and the early emergence of rookie Nils Hoglander have set the top two lines.

Green likes his fourth line of Jay Beagle between Tyler Motte and Brandon Sutter — a shutdown trio that has combined for 15 shots and scoring chances through three games — so Virtanen could align again with Adam Gaudette and Antoine Roussel in place of Zack MacEwen.

Virtanen has also taken twirls on Bo Horvat's line.

“We have good chemistry and have played with each other a lot,” Virtanen said of the third line. “We know how each other plays and we're going to make it simple, get pucks to the net, and outwork the line we're playing — if we play together. We'll be ready.”

And if Virtanen needs extra incentive, he can always look to the continuing mentorship he's getting from Miller.

“He's meant a lot to me,” said Virtanen. “He brings a special energy and I'm just super excited to have him back.”

Green is deploying more set lines to get combos up to speed with 11 games in 18 days this month, including three sets of back-to-backs.

“In the playoffs, we were very dialed in, and I feel right now some of the details in our game are still coming together and we've got some new players,” said Green. “I've tried to stick with lines longer and I wanted to keep Hoglander with Horvat and (Tanner Pearson) from Day 1, to make him feel comfortabl­e, and also spot him on other lines because he's played so well.”

How well? Miller has noticed.

“He's looked awesome,” said the veteran winger. “He's super strong for a little guy, but super fast and super skilled. Those are three deadly combinatio­ns and he's going to get better. We're just breaking the seal with him. I tried to pick his brain a bit with what I saw and he was super receptive.”

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Quinn Hughes fights to get the inside track on Dillon Dube of the Flames as they pursue the puck during NHL action last week in Calgary. Through three games, Hughes leads the Canucks with three points, 11 shots and an average of 24:27 per contest in ice time.
— GETTY IMAGES FILES Quinn Hughes fights to get the inside track on Dillon Dube of the Flames as they pursue the puck during NHL action last week in Calgary. Through three games, Hughes leads the Canucks with three points, 11 shots and an average of 24:27 per contest in ice time.

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