Canucks Open 3-Game Home Stand Monday After Mixed Results On Road Trip

By Andrew Phillip Chernoff

CANUCKSBANTER February 12, 2023

The Vancouver Canucks (21-28-4=46 pts, .434, 26th NHL overall, 6th Pacific Division) are back home on the West Coast after going 1-2-1 on their recently completed East Coast road trip.

The Canucks defeated the New York Islanders and ex-Canucks Captain Bo Horvat for their only win 6-5; losing in OT to the New Jersey Devils 5-4; and losing in regulation to the New York Rangers and Detroit Red Wings 4-3 and 5-2 respectively.

Vancouver gets a chance to save face for the Detroit loss tomorrow tonight in the first game of a three-game homestand, which will also see the New York Rangers ( February 15) and Philadelphia Flyers (February 18) visit the Canucks at Rogers Arena.

Vancouver is 10-13-1 at home this season and 11-15-3 on the road after this past weekend’s loss to the Red Wings.

REVIEW OF CANUCKS UNDER HEAD COACH RICK TOCCHET

Since Canucks Coach Rick Tocchet took over as Head Coach with added new Assistants Adam Foote and Sergei Gonchar, Vancouver is 3-3-1, .500 with the 15th-best record over that period.

As for how the players have responded:

Time On Ice Results Under Head Coach Rick Tocchet

As for how the Canucks coaching staff has utilized the players with time on ice, you can see below a 7-game sampling since Head Coach Rick Tocchet took over and former Head Coach Bruce Boudreau’s last 7 games.

As for Time On Ice under Head Coach Rick Tocchet (first 7-games):

TOI Under Head Coach Rick Tocchet Source: nhl.com

Time On Ice under Head Coach Bruce Boudreau (last 7-games):

TOI Under Head Coach Bruce Boudreau Source: nhl.com

My Thoughts

Both present and former Head Coach utilized the same top 10 players: Hughes. Myers, Ekman-Larsson, Elias Pettersson, Miller, Boeser, Garland, Schenn, Kuzmenko. Ethan Bear has replaced Bo Horvat.

Anthony Beauvillier should receive more minutes as he earns more minutes creating value plays, and could move into the top 10 TOI with somebody losing minutes, a trade, or is hurt.

Canucks Army columnist David Quadrelli wrote this in his article after the Canucks loss to Detroit on Saturday, taking exception to Andrei Kuzmenko playing fewer minutes than any Canucks skater:

Whatever the opposite of a new coach bump is, that’s what’s happening with Andrei Kuzmenko right now since Rick Tocchet has come to the Canucks. Kuzmenko’s ice time has been incredibly limited in the games since, and today was no different. It seems a bit strange, but Tocchet clearly wants players to play a certain way in order to get top line minutes.

David Quadrelli, Canucks Army, 02.11.23

Hockey columnist Justin Bourne wrote when Rick Tocchet was hired by the Canucks:

The play past the “new coach bump”

We have to start by acknowledging the “new coach bump” teams often get. That’s a product of a return to training camp-like effort, where you know the person who will decide your opportunity is watching closely and deciding who should get what, for coveted minutes and line mates. A good show over the next few games can mean increased opportunity, stats and a career boost going forward.

So we can start by judging the team when it gets past the next few games, and into the way we really expect them to look long term.

Justin Bourne, Sportsnet, 01.25.23

Perhaps what Quadrelli is describing is the result of Head Coach Rick Tocchet and his coaching staff watching closely and deciding who should get what for coveted minutes and linemates.

Just saying…Until next time.

SIHR Spotlight | Former Trail Smoke Eater, Sydney Millionaires: Alex Birukow

Alexander Daniel Birukow

SIHR Spotlight

Position Forward/Defence

Shoots Right

Height 5′ 5” / 165.1 cm

Weight 145 lbs / 65 kg

Born Jun 21, 1927

Died Dec 07, 2017 (Age: 90)

Birthplace Fort William, Ontario, Canada

Gender Male

Source: Society International Hockey Research

Source: SIHR

Birukow was inducted into the Nova Scotia Sport Hall of Fame in 2000 as part of the 1948 Sydney Millionaires hockey team.

1948 Sydney Millionaires

The 1948 Sydney Millionaires had good young players on their way through the system, blended with strong outside influences, which included Memorial Cup winners from the previous year’s Winnipeg Monarchs. The Millionaires played in the Cape Breton Senior Hockey League, with Glace Bay, and North Sydney (one of the best leagues in Canada at the time). The Millionaires knocked off the Halifax St. Mary’s club on their way to provincial and Maritime titles, before disposing of the Pembroke Lumber Kings to advance to the Allan Cup Eastern Canadian final against the mighty Toronto Marlboros.

The Marlies were overwhelming favourites in the best-of-five series to played entirely in Maple Leaf Gardens. Sydney shocked the Marlies 1-1 in the first game after a scoreless 10-minute overtime. The Marlboros won the second game 5-3 and the Millionaires tied the series with a dramatic 5-4 overtime-win in game three. The Marlies prevailed in the remaining games, with a 4-2 score in game four and a 5-4 overtime-win in game five. The tournament was a remarkable performance by a Millionaire team that was not expected to be a serious contender, but which came close to pulling off one of the major upsets of the era.

Members of the 1948-49 team: Johnny Arundel, Alex Birukow, Maurice Dowling, Doug Fritz, Jack Fritz (coach), Bruce Gallagher, Jackie Gibson, Bernie MacDonald, C.A. MacDonald (club president), Ray MacDonald (equipment manager), Jim MacInnis, George McCabe, George McDougall, Don McRae, Lou Medynski, Ernie Moore, Johnny Myketyn, Ron Nelson, Joe Petit, Paul Platz (captain), Cliff Roach, Ed Tucker, Joe Watts, Don Whalen.

Facts:

• Won the Provincial Title
• Won the Maritime Championship
• Won the Maritime Championship
• Made it into the Allan Cup Playoffs

Source; Nova Scotia Sport Hall Of Fame

Trail Commercial Hockey League, Bella Tire: (L-R) Top row: Alex Birukow, unidentified, B. Siemen, G. Derosier, B. Bonin, F. . Bottom: Al Cronie, B. McIntyre, unidentified, Ross Saundry, unidentified. Source: arcabc.ca.

Rossland Warriors- 1957 Source: arcabc.ca