AHL Seems Inevitable for D Troy Stecher

Sep 28, 2016; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vancouver Canucks defenseman Tony Stecher (51) skates against Edmonton Oilers in the third period during a preseason hockey game at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Peter Llewellyn-USA TODAY Sports

Vancouver Canucks prospect defenseman Troy Stecher has been a pleasant surprise so far in training camp, but that doesn’t mean he gets to stay.

by Janik Beichler

October 2, 2016

The Vancouver Canucks‘ defense was all but set heading into training camp. Seven players are waiver-eligible, Ben Hutton is a lock despite waiver exemption, and Nikita Tryamkin has a European assignment clause. With that, at least one player needs to go to the American Hockey League through waivers no matter what.

But what about guys like Troy Stecher or Olli Juolevi?

Stecher was always a stretch to make the team out of camp. But in a 5-3 win over the Edmonton Oilers, he displayed the ability to distribute the puck and quarterback the power play, which makes him the kind of defenseman the Canucks have been craving for.

Nevertheless, he can’t make the NHL roster out of training camp. Well, he could. But the Canucks shouldn’t make that old mistake again.

Last season, the Canucks were in a very similar situation, as Hutton surprised everyone and cracked the roster in his first pro season. Vancouver had to make a decision and, after trading Adam Clendening to the Pittsburgh Penguins, they attempted to send Frank Corrado to the Utica Comets through waivers.

It didn’t work out. Corrado got claimed by the Toronto Maple Leafs and the Canucks lost a 22-year-old right-shot defenseman for nothing.

When the season started, the Canucks had a decent D-group nonetheless. It was nothing special, but it was acceptable — until the injury bug started to bite.

Canucks blue liners Alex Edler and Dan Hamhuis missed significant time with injuries, and they weren’t the only ones. Because of that, Vancouver was forced to play veterans like Matt Bartkowski and Yannick Weber in way more games than they should have. In addition, they iced Comets D-man Alex Biega in 51 games and Andrey Pedan in 13. Had they not signed Nikita Tryamkin late in the season, they might have had to bring Taylor Fedun in for more than just one game.

This time around, Vancouver’s D-group looks deeper and better, despite letting go of Hamhuis. But injuries will happen again, and the Canucks will be happy to have several backup plans.

If they waive Pedan and Biega and lose one or both of them, they could struggle mightily once injuries happen — and injuries will happen.

The easiest solution to the problem would be to leave Stecher in the AHL as an injury call up — he would be back soon enough. That way, the Canucks could keep eight defensemen on their roster and would only be forced to waive one of Pedan and Biega.

If they ended up keeping Stecher and waiving both Pedan and Biega, and both got claimed, they would have to use guys like Jordan Subban and Tom Nilsson as their first call ups.

Stecher is having a strong preseason, which is great to see. But that doesn’t guarantee a roster spot — unless the Canucks haven’t learned from last season.

Source: Vancouver Canucks: AHL Seems Inevitable for D Troy Stecher

Gudbranson-Hutton pairing will be key for Canucks

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Ben Huttondynamic_resizeErik Gudbranson

By Jason Brough  September 27, 2016

There’s a long list of things that have to go right for the Vancouver Canucks if their playoff hopes are to be realized.

One of the biggest is for new addition Erik Gudbranson to form a cohesive second pairing with sophomore Ben Hutton. If that happens, and if Alex Edler and Chris Tanev can stay healthy, the Canucks should have a reliable top-four defense, and that’s something they rarely, if ever, had last season.

Gudbranson, a big stay-at-home type, and Hutton, a puck-mover, have been skating together at training camp. The Canucks believe the pairing has great potential, with each defenseman’s strengths complementing the other’s.

“I want to get his feet moving and hit him in stride and get him up the ice with the puck as soon as possible,” Gudbranson said, per The Province. “I think we’re going to be a good partnership. We’re both on the same page. We’re both excited to play with each other and grow as a unit.”

Vancouver’s third pairing remains to be seen. Luca Sbisa with Philip Larsen is the most likely at this point, though Nikita Tryamkin and Andrey Pedan on the left side, and Alex Biega and Troy Stecher on the right, could make things interesting. Jordan Subban is another wild card. Olli Juolevi too, though he’s a long shot and will likely end up back in junior.

The Canucks were decimated by injuries to their best defensemen last season. Edler only played 52 games, Dan Hamhuis 58, and Tanev 69. Other teams with more depth could survive that, but Vancouver floundered.

That’s why health is another big thing that has to go right for the Canucks. Another injury-filled season and it’s hard to picture them staying in the playoff race.

Vancouver opens its preseason schedule tonight in San Jose.

Source: Gudbranson-Hutton pairing will be key for Canucks