Vancouver Sun

Pearson does the little things well

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

Tanner Pearson's jersey nameplate could read “Streaky Scorer.”

He would probably approve and probably laugh.

The Vancouver Canucks winger hasn't scored in 10 games and has just one goal in his past 15 outings. He also endured a 14-game scoring drought early in the 2019-20 campaign, but finished strongly with 21 goals and 45 points in 69 games.

“I don't think I've been playing bad hockey by any means — I actually think it's been pretty good, but there's nothing to show for it,” Pearson said Tuesday of his 65 shots and paltry 7.7 per cent shooting percentage. “I'm trying not to be frustrated and let it get the best of me and you think about it more when the team isn't winning. But I've learned to deal with it and not let it creep in.

“When it does, my whole game goes down the drain and I'm going to keep on playing my game. I can't get away from the net front and whacking pucks and chiselling away. When I signed my last deal (a four-year, US$15-million extension with Los Angeles in 2017), everything was going in that year.

“This year has been the complete opposite, but if you start cheating against top players, you're going to be screwed.”

And because there are other exhausting elements of his game that don't command headlines — grunt work along the walls, grind in the crease, tough line matchups and meshing with Bo Horvat to be a responsibl­e and effective duo — the unrestrict­ed free agent is drawing interest from the Canucks for a possible contract extension to be part of a veteran core that could change next season.

“Pearse is a good player,” said Canucks coach Travis Green. “And when I say that, it could be very broad. He just does a lot of little things well and things that go unnoticed. He understand­s certain parts of the rink that you need to pay attention to and excel in. And he's very team oriented in his game.

“You need a good mix of younger guys who are coming in all the time with the way the cap is set up, but you also need older guys who are good examples for your younger players. And not just on the ice, but off the ice as well to have conversati­ons about how the game is supposed to be played.”

Pearson also could attract interest before the April 12 trade deadline because of his championsh­ip pedigree and ability to handle adversity. He was traded twice and played for three teams in 2018-19 (the Kings, Penguins and Canucks), which would have tested anybody's mettle. He responded with three goals in his first six games in Pittsburgh, but had just nine in 44 games before being dealt to Vancouver in the Erik Gudbranson swap.

And that's where it gets interestin­g. Pearson turns 29 in August and an expiring $3.75-million salary cap hit normally would command a raise.

However, the flat-cap reality and free-agency uncertaint­y might work for both parties. Or not. The priority is to reach extensions with restricted free agents Elias Pettersson and Quinn Hughes. How Pearson and four other UFAs work into the mix — Brandon Sutter, Alex Edler, Jordie Benn, Travis Hamonic — will determine how the Canucks chart their future.

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