Vancouver Sun

Alien scores overtime winner in goalie duel

Goaltender­s keep scoresheet clean until Pettersson pots the overtime winner

- PATRICK JOHNSTON pjohnston@postmedia.com Twitter.com/risingacti­on

VANCOUVER 1 CAROLINA 0 (OT)

The Vancouver Canucks have mostly been known for scoring goals this season. So have the Carolina Hurricanes.

So of course neither team managed to score in regulation on Thursday night at Rogers Arena, a game won by the home team 1-0 in overtime off a spectacula­r backhand shot by Elias Pettersson.

The happiest person, no doubt, about Pettersson’s goal, which came after he collected the puck that had caromed off a loose stick, was Jacob Markstrom, who made 43 saves to record the shutout.

We don’t talk much about the Hurricanes here in Vancouver, but we really should.

“You say they’re not a high-profile team, but they’re really good,” Canucks defenceman Jordie Benn said pre-game.

He put strong emphasis on “really good.”

The Hurricanes move the puck when they have it, which is most of the time, and when they don’t, they make it really hard to get to the middle of the ice.

On offence, they’re in constant motion, every player seemingly deft moving the puck through traffic, forcing the defence to endlessly react.

On defence, they make it hard for their opponents to break out, they make it hard for their opponents to carry the puck through the neutral zone with control and in their own end, they are masters at driving the play to the boards and into the corners.

The way they’re playing hockey, which has them somehow fourth in their division — oh wait, they’ve got the Capitals and Islanders and Penguins in as hot a division as you can find — this is the kind of team the Canucks aspire to be.

Here’s what we learned ...

FORTRESS MARKSTROM

Jacob Markstrom never looked bothered.

He made 42 saves through the end of regulation, but nearly every one looked easy, that’s how dialed in he was when looking at Carolina’s shooters.

More than once, the crowd roared with “Mark-y Mark-y” in praise of their netminder.

There are plenty of examples where teams would be nowhere without their goaltender; this was a game that no matter the result, the Canucks will be able to point to one of the finest examples of their goalie giving them their best chance to win.

HURRICANE DAMAGE

The Canes came into the night with one of the league’s most dominant offences, getting roughly 15 more shot attempts per game than their opponents.

As expected, the visitors attacked the offensive zone with vigour, turning pucks over left and right, making life miserable for the Canucks in their efforts to break out.

At one point, the Canucks’ second power play unit struggled to break out from their own end, needing four attempts just to get the puck to centre ice and that was because Jake Virtanen simply flipped the puck out.

In the first period, the Canucks generated just six shot attempts on Hurricanes goalie Petr Mrazek.

The second wasn’t much better, as the stifling Hurricanes forecheck made life difficult for the Canucks’ attempts to break out.

The Canucks managed just seven shot attempts at even strength in the middle frame.

The Hurricanes, on the other hand, got 22 shots on net in the second period alone.

The Canucks’ breakout continued to struggle in the second, once again having moments of difficulty, exemplifie­d by turnovers on the side boards from Elias Pettersson and Quinn Hughes.

Those are rare sights.

POWER FAILURE

Despite a trio of first-period power plays, the Canucks couldn’t connect.

The Hurricanes didn’t have any better luck in the second period, when they had three power plays of their own.

They were unlucky not to have tallied a goal on a delayed penalty that came right after their second power play had expired as Sebastian Aho, who has 15 goals since the beginning of November, 18 on the season, whacked a loose puck past Markstrom and into the Canucks’ net, but the referee had already blown his whistle in anticipati­on of a Canuck gaining control of the loose puck moments before.

STAND STILL

The puck bounce wasn’t fair for Tyler Myers nine minutes into the first.

He thought he was going to fire it on the Hurricanes’ net.

Instead, the puck fluttered over his stick and the Canes’ Julien Gauthier accelerate­d away the other direction, leaving Myers waving at dust.

Gauthier moved from left to right on Markstrom, but the Canucks’ netminder was cool as a cucumber, snatching the puck out of the air with his glove.

FIRST NATIONS CELEBRATIO­N

It was First Nations Celebratio­n night Thursday, which made some fine pre-game pageantry with representa­tives from the Musqueam, Squamish, Tlowitsis and Tsleil-Waututh First Nations forming a drum line and then taking part in a ceremonial faceoff.

Gino Odjick was also part of the ceremonial faceoff, which of course drew a huge roar from the crowd. Here’s an idea: recognize that this is the land of the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh peoples before every game.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Canucks forward J.T. Miller and the Carolina Hurricanes’ Lucas Wallmark watch as the puck goes wide of the goal in front of goalie Petr Mrazek during the first period on Thursday night at Rogers Arena. Mrazek held the Canucks off the scoresheet until overtime.
DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Canucks forward J.T. Miller and the Carolina Hurricanes’ Lucas Wallmark watch as the puck goes wide of the goal in front of goalie Petr Mrazek during the first period on Thursday night at Rogers Arena. Mrazek held the Canucks off the scoresheet until overtime.

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