Vancouver Sun

Canucks take tougher tack adding Archibald

- JASON BOTCHFORD jbotchford@postmedia.com

Paraphrasi­ng Erik Gudbranson, one player can’t make a team tough.

But it wouldn’t hurt to try. The Vancouver Canucks finally bellied up and signed Darren Archibald to an NHL contract after spending months rolling out a team that was a little too pliable, a little too delicate and a little too soft.

The Canucks have been making two-hand touch football look violent this season.

Archibald probably can’t change all that. Not in any significan­tly dramatic way. Heck, as head coach Travis Green pointed out, we don’t even know if Archibald is an NHL player.

We’re about to find out. After losing Sam Gagner to an ankle injury and Brendan Gaunce to a foot fracture, the Canucks recalled Reid Boucher to help their offence and signed Archibald to a contract to help their spine.

Archibald is set to join the team in Raleigh, N.C., and is expected to play against the Carolina Hurricanes today.

There may have been a couple of hallelujah­s in the Canucks’ lockerroom when that news filtered in.

Since Derek Dorsett’s forced retirement, the Canucks have obviously lacked edge, pushback and a man who hits like a one-ton truck. You know it. The players know it. Bo Horvat was asked whether the team needs this element, and midway through the question he jumped to the answer.

“I think that’s exactly what we need,” he said. “I think we have to get more hits. Even on the forecheck.

“We need to get more fear into our opponents. They need to know someone is going to come down hard on them.

“I do think (Archibald) is going to bring that to our team.”

The Canucks don’t seem so sure. If they were, they would have kept Archibald with this group at the start of the season.

He was one of Green’s favourite players in Utica, and was the Comets’ MVP last season. There wasn’t a role he didn’t excel in. He killed penalties. He was on the power play. And at midseason, Green put him on his top line and that line took off.

Archibald put up 23 goals and 24 assists in 76 games, all while he was pancaking opponents and standing up for teammates.

Green said the team didn’t consider signing and recalling him earlier in the year because when it had injuries up front and needed a player, Archibald was out six weeks withabroke­njaw.

“Every team wants a guy who is physical and can play in different situations,” Green said. “I’m not sitting here saying Darren Archibald’s ready, or is a full-time NHLhockeyp­layeryet.

“He still has a lot to prove. He knows that as well.”

Archibald is not some prospect. He’s 27 years old, and has spent the past six years shuttling between the AHL and the ECHL. He also played 16 games with the Canucks in the John Tortorella season of 2013-14.

But last season was somewhat of a watershed moment for his pro career. Something changed. For the Comets, Archibald became a complete player.

“He matured,” Green said. “He became comfortabl­e in his own skin. When I talk about players and when they fully grasp it, he’s a good example.

“When he was younger, he was torn between playing a big, heavy game while trying to score goals.

“He almost got caught in the middle a little bit.”

Since recovering from his broken jaw, Archibald has played 16 games for the Comets. He’s had five goals, six assists and even scored a shootout goal. He’s also crushed opponents regularly without taking penalties.

Could the Canucks use some of that?

Never mind — you don’t need to answer.

 ??  ?? Darren Archibald
Darren Archibald

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