Times Colonist

It takes a village to stop McDavid, Canucks say

EDMONTON AT VANCOUVER, 7 P.M.

- GEMMA KARSTENS-SMITH

VANCOUVER — The Vancouver Canucks accomplish­ed a first on Wednesday — they prevented Connor McDavid from getting a shot on net.

It was the first time in 55 career playoff games the superstar has failed to register a shot.

The milestone came in a game where the Canucks mounted a dramatic third-period comeback before securing a 5-4 win in Game 1 of the second-round Stanley Cup playoff series.

Corralling McDavid takes an entire team, said Vancouver captain Quinn Hughes.

“We just did a good job as a five-man unit and everyone knew what they’re doing and no one was off script,” the defenceman said after the victory. “And when everyone is on the same page, it makes it easier to defend a special player like that. So we watched a lot of film and we’ve just got to keep doing that.”

McDavid contribute­d a secondary assist on Zach Hyman’s second-period goal Wednesday and has points in all six of Edmonton’s playoff games this year. He leads the league in postseason scoring with one goal and 12 assists.

Over six post-season runs, the elite centre has amassed

30 goals and 58 assists.

The Canucks know just how dangerous McDavid can be, said blue-liner Nikita Zadorov.

“He’s one of the best players in the world, so you’re trying to limit his space and take away the scoring chances for him for sure,” he said Wednesday.

“We’ve been talking for a few days about our defensive structure, how we want to play against those guys. That’s our game.”

The Oilers are good at finding open ice where they can gather speed, and the Canucks limited that in Game 1, said defenceman Carson Soucy, who was often out against McDavid.

“I think our forwards all night just did a good job of kind of being in front of them while they’re trying to wind up their speed,” he said Thursday.

“And then in the d-zone, I think we did a good job of closing when we could, giving them their space, just kind of limit that extra breakdown.”

Shutting down McDavid was a strength for Vancouver during the regular season. In three games against the Canucks, the Hart Trophy nominee was limited to one goal and two assists, and had a -4 plus-minus rating.

Canucks head coach Rick Tocchet said he doesn’t put much stock in those numbers.

“This guy’s, he’s the best. He’s probably going to be the best ever,” he said Thursday. “You gotta remember we got [the Oilers] early start the year when things weren’t great for them. And he never played the last game. … I don’t know if we have any magic against him.”

One key to keeping skilled players off the scoresheet is to skate forward on defence, the coach added.

“I don’t like backwards skating and I think that helps us defend better,” he said. “We preach that all year.”

Vancouver isn’t expecting the exact same tactics to work for the rest of the best-of-seven series, however, Tocchet said.

They’ll have to find other ways to limit McDavid’s opportunit­ies heading into Game 2 in Vancouver tonight.

“It’s one game at a time,” he said after Game 1. “You make adjustment­s, both sides will make adjustment­s. All year, we’ve been a good defending team. And I think we have something to fall back on if things don’t go our way. That’s our foundation.”

Draisaitl ‘day-to-day’

Oilers star Leon Draisaitl is “day-to-day” with an undisclose­d injury, says head coach Kris Knoblauch.

Knoblauch says the Oilers coaching staff will decide this morning whether the 28-year-old German forward plays in Game 2 against the Canucks.

Draisaitl missed practice Thursday and appeared to be labouring late in Edmonton’s loss to Vancouver in Game 1 of their second-round series Wednesday.

He had two assists in the game but was limited to 16:43 seconds of ice time, well below the 20:41 he averaged per game in the regular season.

Knoblauch said after the game that Draisaitl was dealing with “cramping and equipment issues” that kept him off the ice.

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