Saturday February 25 - San Jose Sharks 4 - Vancouver Canucks 1
A battered Vancouver Canucks roster was able to stay in the game for 40 minutes but ultimately dropped a 4-1 decision to the San Jose Sharks on Saturday at Rogers Arena.
Here are your highlights:
Jones is now 4-0 in his career at Rogers Arena. All four wins have been during his time with the Sharks over the last two years, and all have come by the same 4-1 score. So maybe it didn't really matter all that much that the Canucks were missing 10 regulars last night—and lost another player to illness during the game.
I had honestly lost track. Here's who was missing from Saturday's lineup:
Forwards: Sven Baertschi, Jack Skille, Derek Dorsett, Markus Granlund, Michael Chaput, Anton Rodin Defense: Erik Gudbranson, Chris Tanev, Troy Stecher, Nikita Tryamkin
Luca Sbisa left Saturday's game at the end of the second period with what was being called the stomach flu.
Willie says the doctors said Sbisa's illness is not connected to mumps. Totally different symptoms. #Canucks
— Farhan Lalji (@FarhanLaljiTSN) February 26, 2017
Of course, there's still concern that Sbisa might also have the mumps, especially considering this bit of information:
Per @DTSN1040 on TSN1040, Luca Sbisa brought some teammates (including Tanev) to his house in California during the bye week. #Canucks
— Canucks Now (@CanucksNow) February 26, 2017
Chris Tanev is one of the players that has been quarantined, though there hasn't been any word yet on whether or not he actually has the mumps. Willie Desjardins is hopeful that Tanev and Troy Stecher will be ready to rejoin the team soon.
Desjardins: "Stecher and Tanev, I think, are passed their quarantine spot. Through the quarantine, they're done and good to come back."
— Canucks Now (@CanucksNow) February 26, 2017
The Canucks started out pretty well against a sluggish San Jose team, outshooting the visitors 30-16 through the first two periods before running out of gas in the third. The power play went 0-for-2 and the first unit looked especially solid, with a very Swedish configuration that had Loui Eriksson, Alex Edler and Brandon Sutter working with the Sedin twins.
Daniel Sedin finished the night with eight shots—all in the first two periods—and the Canucks' only goal, off a lazy giveaway by Hart Trophy candidate Brent Burns.
Here brother.
— Vancouver Canucks (@Canucks) February 26, 2017
Thanks brother. pic.twitter.com/3Obux0UZfv
Daniel's also on a four-game point streak—now at 977 career points with 21 games remaining on the 2016-17 schedule. That thousand-point milestone might be one of the few things this team still has to play for down the stretch—after Saturday's games, the Canucks remained nine points out of the second wild-card spot but had dropped to 28th overall in the league standings. They're currently tied at 58 points with Dallas, Carolina and Detroit, but now come out on the wrong side of the tiebreaker against all three of those teams.
The second power-play unit didn't look half bad last night either. That group was made up of Horvat, Boucher, Megna, Larsen and Hutton.
Of the three call-ups from Utica who took to the ice, Joe LaBate had the most impressive game. He played 9:43 and delivered a hit on Melker Karlsson in the second period that got the Sharks' attention.
Another look at the hit. LaBate absolutely crushed Melker Karlsson into the boards. LaBate providing some physicality for the #Canucks. pic.twitter.com/YAPKw7z74e
— Grady Sas (@GradySas) February 26, 2017
The hit was late, which is why he was immediately chased down by San Jose's Micheal Haley, but with Dorsett, Gudbranson and now Tryamkin missing from their lineup, the Canucks are very much in need of a player who can provide that physical edge.
Melker Karlsson definitely looked woozy after taking that hit. He missed the last 6:22 of the second period but did return to action in the third.
Also in the third period, LaBate squared off against Brendan Dillon for the second fight of his four-game NHL career. Enjoy the blow-by-blow in Punjabi!
On this edition of Hockey Fights in Punjabi: LaBate vs Dillon da munda pic.twitter.com/qrfXblCTnn
— Hockey Night Punjabi (@HkyNightPunjabi) February 26, 2017
I think fans would be thrilled to see this big 23-year-old stick with the team stick around for awhile, even after the mumps situation passes.
#Canucks fan base & team so desperate for a player with bite & passion that can simply deliver a good hit. LaBate has fan favourite on a tee
— Stu Walters (@StuWaltersmedia) February 26, 2017
In his first-ever NHL game, defenseman Evan McEneny delivered an early shot on goal and played a total of 15:08, including 11 shifts in the third period after Sbisa left the game. He looked a little overwhelmed at times but he certainly wasn't alone on that front. The cobbled-together defensive pairings literally tripped over each other on several occasions over the course of the night.
Today, the remaining members of the walking wounded will put on their best family-friendly smiles for a very unfortunately-timed SuperSkills competition that will be missing some of its usual fun and games.
#Canucks SuperSkills update: the autograph sessions & minor hockey component of Sunday's event have been canceled due to health precautions. pic.twitter.com/3RLRbqHLyp
— Vancouver Canucks (@Canucks) February 26, 2017
Here's what is still on today's agenda:
@Canucks Superskills is happening today! Doors open at 12. Alumni game at 12:10. Skills start at 1 PM. I will be in Sec 122 for Meet N Greet
— FIN (@CanucksFIN) February 26, 2017
Also, one bit of good news from the rink:
Optional #Canucks skate this morning and look who's back on the ice 👠pic.twitter.com/WQz3oXT5S3
— Vancouver Canucks (@Canucks) February 26, 2017
My money's on Jordan Subban to win the hardest shot competition. Here's his goal from Friday night with the Comets, right before his call-up:
#Canucks prospect Jordan Subban labels it top corner for his goal tonight pic.twitter.com/7ExPL5S7Tr
— Ryan Biech (@ryanbiech) February 25, 2017
All's quiet on the trade front around the league on a busy Sunday that sees seven games on the NHL schedule.
