Canucks 4 - 2 Avalanche
Last night was an excellent return to form for Vancouver, who did something they haven't done in ages: they won a game with sound defensive play and sustained offensive pressure. The stat sheet tells us that Colorado outshot Vancouver 23-19, but it doesn't tell the whole story: the puck spent far more time in the Avalanche zone than it did the Canucks' end. The Canucks were leaps and bounds better 5-on-5. It was nice to see the Sedins cycle return, and it was nice to see all three members of the second line looking dangerous and sharing some chemistry. The line juggling appeared to be a success, as the new-look trios all did a good job of maintaining momentum and keeping the puck out of their zone. Here's hoping they stay together awhile.
But enough looking ahead. This series is about dwelling on the very recent past. You see, not too long ago, I watched this game:
- The sustained offensive pressure meant diminished pressure on the defense corps, which played better, but still looked shaky. Hammy and Hips are still trying to find their legs, but everyone else was solid last night. Edler was jumping into rushes smartly, Ehrhoff was carrying the puck out of his zone and starting them with regularity, and Andrew Alberts' work on the penalty-kill was top-notch. In one late 2nd-period kill, he blocked two shots, hit everything in sight, and downright picked on Matt Duchene and John-Michael Liles. AV justified sitting Rome over Andy Alby by pointing to Alberts' penalty killing, and we saw it on display last night.
- That said, the best defenseman on the ice was Kevin Bieksa. It's strange to say, especially in a game that featured two potential Western Conference all-star d-men in Edler and Liles, but Bieksa really was at the top of the heap. He scored his first goal of the season on a beautiful tip-in after smartly going to the net on a delayed penalty. He made some other dangerous offensive rushes as well, and he always seemed to be the first man back when the Canucks got into a spot. If he played like this every game, he'd be a fan favourite.
- Through his first ten games, Alex Burrows had looked a little off. He scored a goal (above), factored into another, and caused his special brand of positive disarray in the offensive zone all night. Last night he looked a little on. This is a good sign, and it is entirely possible that he will soon be a lot on. Eventually, with a little luck, he might be full on, all the way across the sky.
- Yes, the triple rainbow line was, as it should be, the Canucks' best line. A spoonful of wizardous sedinerie led to 2 points for each linemate and a plus-6. A good recipe for success: score twice and don't get scored on. I've personally found that if you score and the other team doesn't, you'll win most of the time. When won't you? Collecting abstinence pledges.
- That said, Burrows' second assist was bogus. Daniel centered the puck for him and he missed it. Henrik pick it up on the half-wall, then pulled off the slap-pass play with his brother. During that give-and-go, Burrows never touched the puck. So why does he get an assist simply for being nearby? I'm happy for the guy, but, let us please try to protect the sanctity of the second assist before some idiot suggests we abolish it. This ain't no Russian hockey league.
- It's not always readily apparent what Jannik Hansen brings to this team. We know it's not hands, which are a bit like the Swedish Chef's in that they're never quite in sync with the rest of him. Upon hearing that he was bumped down to the fourth line, opinion vacillated between Good, he's only got four points this season, and Why Hansen? He was playing really well. The truth is that Hansen's best asset is his skating. Often we talk about skating like it's just top-end speed, but there's more than that. Hansen is a master at puck tracking--he skates fast, but he can also change directions and get back to a high speed better than anybody else. Since nobody expects the fourth line to score, Hansen's team-best skating ability can stand on its own while he's down there.
- During one of the intermissions, the Sportsnet ticker told us the final score of the FC Kobenhavn vs. Rubin Kazan UEFA game. It read: RUB -1 FCK - 0. Take from this what you will.
- My favourite moment: Jeff Tambellini, waiting for the referee to reverse the decisions on Ryan Kesler's disallowed goal. Tamby was visibly pumped when the puck went in, and you could see him waiting breathlessly for it to count. When the referee came away from the booth, the camera catches Tamby mouthing "Come on, you motherf... come on." Hilarious and sweet. I love his elation when the call goes his way.
- That was, by the by, Ryan Kesler's 100th career goal. Congratulations are in order. And now, here they are: congratulations.
- But seriously, the fact that his goal was legal is ridiculous. Here's why the puck goes in: Tambellini whacks Budaj in the side of the head with his stick. As Budaj recoils from being bludgeoned, he actually butts the puck with the other side of his head and it falls into the net. Apparently, you're allowed to do that. Tamby, on the whack: “I pulled a Keith Ballard there [...]" Hilarious.
- Reason to sigh: now some people are complaining that the Canucks powerplay is bad. Oh, shut up, some people.
- And speaking of Budaj, poor Craig Anderson. For the second straight game, he had to leave the game with an injury suffered in the warm-up. Anderson can't catch a break, save the part of his body that does exactly that whenever he comes to town. Even the NBA is laughing at his problems with Vancouver.
- Joel Perrault is a forgettable guy, ain't he? I forgot he was even playing last night, and apparently, so did Alain Vigneault. Perrault logged a team low 5:15, and I don't remember hearing his name once. I don't think I've ever missed Alex Bolduc so much and, all things considered, I likely never will again.
- In the faceoff circle, the Canucks were very good and the Avalanche were a gallon of fail. Vancouver won 34 of the game's 52 draws, led by an 11-for-15 showing by Manny Malhotra that included 6 out of 6 in the defensive zone. Faceoff goat? Paul Stastny, who only won 6 in 21 tries. Sidenote: having coined the term "Faceoff goat" I am now envisioning a live goat who takes faceoffs. And now, I'm envisioning the classic John Woo movie, Face/Off. But with goats.
- I really like the way the Canucks do the Ring of Honour tributes. Short, sweet, and classy. Apart from a terrifying moment where the tarp professed its love for the plaque beneath it and refused to leave it behind, it was a perfect pre-game ceremony.
- And finally: I thought today about what a ridiculous idea Fin is. An anthropomorphic killer whale who playfully tries to murder fans by biting their skulls open? Not awesome. You know if his teeth weren't made of foam, Brody, Quint, and Hooper would be looking for him.
I don't know Budaj being bludgeoned and recoiling, but I think that tap of the stick did stun him. Maybe it goes in otherwise, or maybe he reacts? Who can say. Greasy goal regardless.
ReplyDeleteHE WAS ASSAULTED
ReplyDeleteThey may as well have taken an electric turkey carver to his ankles and had the puck go in when he fell backwards into the net.
Burrows gets the second assist because he hacks the puck to Daniel and then misses the return pass.
ReplyDeleteHenrik passes to Ehrhoff, Ehrhoff shoots, hits the crowd in front of the net, Burrows hacks at it, goes to Daniel, Burrows misses the return pass, Henrik picks it up and slap passes it, Daniel tips it in.
33 -> 5 -> 14 -> 22 -> 33 -> 22
Thanks - this was good for a great laugh. I'm glad they won too, but this blog gets the style points!
ReplyDeleteYes, nic, but if the puck goes 22 > 33 > 22, then the scoring play is just a give-and-go. You shouldn't get a second assist for not being a part of a give-and-go. Otherwise, Jeff Hornacek, the third scoring option on the 1990s Utah Jazz, got absolutely robbed.
ReplyDeleteYou shouldn't, but that's the way the NHL scores it. I don't have any video references at the moment, but let's say Luongo makes a blocker save, the puck bounces to Daniel. Henrik and Daniel go up the ice passing between each other 10 times without anyone else touching the puck and then score. Luongo would get the second assist.
ReplyDeleteWell, it's just plain stupid. *crosses arms*
ReplyDeleteHere's an example from last year:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=txAJ5uJqsog
17 -> 23 -> 36 -> 23
Offical Boxscore:
17:32 VAN Alexander Edler (1) Wrist Shot - Assists: J. Hansen (1) & R. Kesler (5)
The Kesler goal was allowed because you can't review goaltender interference. It was determined that the goal wasn't off of a high-stick, not that it should have been a goal. The goal had been disallowed for coming off of Tambellini's high stick, not for the goaltender being interfered with. Trust me, the Altitude announcers would NOT let this go.
ReplyDeleteWhich brings me to another point: Other teams' announcers say stupid things. I took some notes.
-"This game is sort of a measuring stick for both teams." How so? I don't think I heard any Canuck fan say they'd judge the team based on this game. Moreover, who judges the team based on games in the middle of streaks? The Avs were on a winning streak, the Nucks a losing one. If the Avs had won, both streaks would have continued by one and the game would have been entirely forgettable. Why are announcers allowed to say these stupid things?
-"Torres is a bowling ball of a hockey player." That's hardly an apt comparison. If you're going for the bowling ball comparison, say it of Patrick Kane, who spends ample time in the gutter. Drunk. That said, Torres is weird so I know Bulies will enjoy the odd comparison.
-I'm not kidding about this. In the middle of the game, the announcers took over a full minute to talk about how many hot dogs they could eat in a single sitting. The game was going on and neither of them seemed to be paying any attention. There was no context that led into eating hot dogs, it was related to nothing. It was surreal.
-Names being mispronounced bugs all the time, but one that specifically grates on me is "Ryan Kezzler." Probably because Kesler's been in the same division for years and it's hard not to hear the correct pronunciation. Also because it's a counterintuitive way to read the name.
-Down 3-2 in the third, the announcers observed "The Avalanche may have Vancouver right where they want them." They then observed that the Avalanche are a league-best 3-6-0 when trailing after two. First of all, if you were to poll the Avs on "where do you want the Canucks," I guarantee "In a game with us leading after two periods" would not be their response. Second, since when is 3-6-0 impressive? I guess I got spoiled by last season's Canucks, who refused to play real hockey until the 3rd period and seemed to come back every other night.
-The 4-2 goal "Was finished by a hard shot by Budaj." It's not that they made a mistake. It's that they said it with confidence, and never noticed. It's almost as if Budaj usually scores goals on them.
-I know the Kesler goal was weird, but listening to the Avalanche announcers, you'd think the goal was the OT game-winner in a game 7 and that the referee had missed a throat slash with a skate. They simply would not shut up about it. They showed how the same thing happened last time the Avs were in Vancouver -- Henrik Sedin banked a goal off of the back of Budaj's head. But the best thing they said, that had me laughing, was with about 3 minutes to go in the third: "This will be on every highlight reel in the hockey world." What can be said about that?
To clarify: I know why the Kesler goal counted, but it was still a crazy-blatant high-stick. Frankly, I think it should have been a goal AND a penalty. Has that ever happened?
ReplyDeleteNic, I understand, but it's still really dumb.
Qris, I'd love to rag on Colorado's announcers, but John Garrett says some pretty off things too.
But everyone rags on John Garrett. It's only bad if Garrett gets a pass.
ReplyDeleteYeah, I know it's dumb. That's why you always hear people complaining about second assists inflating stats, especially during Art Ross races.
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure if there's ever been a goal and penalty at the _exact_ same time. According to the rules, if a penalty _causes_ a goal, the goal does not count. (if the ref saw the penalty) For example, if the Avs had an empty net and Duchene is skating towards his net trying to go around it and is high-sticked badly by one of the Canucks causing him to drop his gloves and stick and fall to the ice and the puck slides off his stick into the net without any Canucks touching it, it won't count.
But in this case, the puck might have already be heading into the net off his head even without the high stick to the head. So who know what would have happened.
The Canucks had a goal and a penalty at the same time in a Phoenix game. A guy had a delayed penalty called against him, and with the empty net, knocked the puck off of Shane O'Brien's stick where it went to the empty net.
ReplyDeleteBut even absent these circumstances, it's quite possible. If a fight happens away from a play just as a goal is scored, for instance.