2001-2002: Offensive
juggernaut Canucks rally to make playoffs
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Trevor Linden was re-acquired by the
Canucks on November 11th, 2001.
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The summer of 2001 was a time for change on
the Vancouver sports scene. Gone were the
Canucks' GM Place co-tenants, the NBA's
Vancouver Grizzlies, off to Memphis less than a
year after John McCaw sold the team to Michael
Heisley. In their place would be the expansion
Vancouver Ravens of the National Lacrosse
League. Across town at the Canucks' old home,
the Pacific Coliseum, the Pat Quinn, Gordie
Howe, and Ron Toigo-owned Vancouver Giants would
bring Major Junior Hockey back to the lower
mainland for the first time in 13 years.
Following the club's first playoff appearance in
five years, Brian Burke was committed to keeping
his team together and did not make any
significant off-season moves. The only change of
note was fan favourite Bob Essensa being
released because Burke did not feel he could
split time with an unproven Dan Cloutier.
Several weeks later, Essensa was replaced by
waiver wire pick-up Martin Brochu, a move that
shocked -- and, in some cases, angered -- local
fans.
After a pre-season cut short by the September 11
terrorist attacks, the Canucks got off to a
rocky start, dropping their first three games
and going 3-8-1-0 in their first 12. Brochu, a
huge disappointment as an NHLer, was waived
after a 5-1 loss in San Jose on November 5
(pictured). Unrestricted free agent goalie Peter
Skudra was signed in his place. The team
continued to turn in stale performances, though,
and Burke decided it was time to make some
moves.
On November 11, Burke re-acquired former captain
and fan-favourite Trevor Linden from Washington
for a first-round draft pick (Boyd Gordon). On
December 18, he sent enforcer Donald Brashear to
Philadelphia for LW Jan Hlavac and a
3rd-rounder. Finally, on December 28, he made a
brilliant move by sending Drake Berehowsky and
Denis Pederson to Phoenix for C Trevor Letowski,
LW Todd Warriner, RW Tyler Bouck, and a
3rd-round pick in '03. Meanwhile, Dan Cloutier
was beginning to show signs of being an impact
goaltender and, on December 19, posted his fifth
shutout of the season -- 3-0 over Detroit -- to
end the Canucks' five-year, 17-game winless
streak against that team.
Alas, in the final game before Christmas,
Cloutier surrendered a weak, one-handed backhand
shot in the last three minutes of a game versus
Minnesota for the winner. The loss dropped the
Canucks record to 14-21-4-0 and it looked
doubtful that there would be any playoff games
in Vancouver come spring. But, right after
Christmas, things began to turn around. In the
21 games between the Holiday and Olympic breaks,
they went 14-4-1-2. This included a six-game
winning streak and a nine-game unbeaten streak
(8-0-1-0). Todd Bertuzzi had been flying since
sitting out an early-season, ten-game suspension
and was thriving on a line with Markus Naslund
and Brendan Morrison. Between January 3 and
February 4, Bertuzzi recorded seven goals and 13
assists and at least a point in all 15
games--tying Petr Nedved's franchise record. He
was named NHL Player-of-the-Month for January.
Having moved to within a point of the final
playoff spot in the West, most of the Canucks
had two weeks to recuperate during the Winter
Olympics break. This would not be the case for
Ed Jovanovski (Canada), RW Jarkko Ruutu
(Finland), Markus Naslund, and Mattias Ohlund
(Sweden), however. The most notable
Canuck-moment in the Olympics was when
Jovanovski tallied a key assist in his team's
5-2 victory over the host Americans to win the
gold medal.
When the NHL started up again in late February,
the Canucks won only one of their next six
games, but then went on an incredible roll to
close out the season. They went 13-2-1-0 to
finish with 94 points -- a total that would have
put them comfortably into the playoffs in a less
competitive conference. Losses could not be
afforded by anybody down the stretch and nobody
in the hunt did very often. A six-game Eastern
road trip in March could have sunk the club but
they took five out of six. The trip began March
12 in Nashville, where Cloutier earned his sixth
shutout of the season, tying the franchise
record shared by Gary Smith and Garth Snow. He
earned record number seven two weeks later at
home against Los Angeles in a 4-0 win.
During the Canucks' final regular season game in
Calgary, Naslund recored his 40th goal and 50th
assist of the season. His 90 points were second
in the NHL -- the highest ever finish for a
Canuck. Bertuzzi's two assists in the game gave
him 85 points--good for third in the league.
This was the first time that the Canucks placed
two scorers in the league's top ten. The Canucks
won the game, 4-1, to temporarily move into
fifth place in the conference. However, final
day victories by Chicago, Phoenix, and Los
Angeles leap-frogged all three teams past them
in the tightest playoff race in NHL history. In
the end, only nine points separated second-place
Colorado from tenth-place Dallas. The Canucks
finished eighth, and would once again be pitted
against the NHL's regular-season champions.
Though they were an eighth-seeded team playing
against one loaded with future Hall-of-Famers,
the Canucks' amazing finish (coupled with
Detroit's late tail-spin) had not gone unnoticed
in hockey circles and many were suggesting an
upset was possible. Things became more
interesting when it appeared Steve Yzerman might
not play due to a knee injury. He was in the
lineup to start the series, although limping
noticeably, and got things going by springing
Luc Robitaille on a first period breakaway to
open the scoring in Game 1. The Wings led 3-2
midway through the third period when Trevor
Linden, ever the clutch playoff performer, tied
the game with a waist-high wrist shot through
traffic that eluded Dominik Hasek to tie the
game. At the 13:59 mark of overtime, Henrik
Sedin picked up a loose puck just inside the
Detroit blueline and let go a high shot that
deflected off the shoulder of ex-Canuck Igor
Larionov and past Hasek for the winning goal.
In Game 2, the Canucks built up a 3-1 lead after
two but the Wings starting coming on in the
third. Yzerman scored to make it 3-2 and
memories of the January 9 game where Detroit
erased a 4-1 Vancouver lead in the third and won
began to surface. This time, however, Cloutier
held the fort until Markus Naslund provided some
breathing room with one of his patented wrist
shots with 1:52 to play. An empty netter made
the final 5-2.
Game 3 was a goaltending duel between Hasek and
Cloutier. The game remained tied until the last
minute of the second when Niklas Lidstrom fired
a long shot from centre ice that beat Cloutier
for a deflating goal. The Wings won 3-1 and were
back in the series.
Two nights later, they jumped out to an early
2-0 lead but the Canucks fought back ferociously
in the second and tied the game on goals by
Mattias Ohlund and RW Matt Cooke (who was
outstanding in the series). Early in the third,
Andrew Cassels was hooked off the puck in the
corner by Brendan Shanahan, who fed Yzerman in
front of the net for the game winner.
After Game 3, Brian Burke went on a tirade about
the breaks that Detroit was getting in the
series from the officials. It cost him $1,500,
but it appeared to pay off in Game 5 when the
Canucks got three of the first four power-plays.
However, not only did the Canucks fail to score,
but they surrendered both a power-play and a
short-handed goal and Cloutier was chased with
the score 3-0. Skudra allowed a fourth tally in
the period and from there the Wings cruised,
with the 4-0 margin holding up to the end.
The Canucks returned home facing elimination on
April 25 and the "Big Red Machine" was
firing on all cylinders. They struck twice early
to chase Cloutier in the first period for the
second straight game. Refusing to lay down and
die, the Canucks came back again with goals less
than a minute apart by Ed Jovanovski and Henrik
Sedin. Detroit broke the game open again with
three in the second and the Canucks tried to
come back again in the third, but fell short.
The final was 6-4 and the season was done.
Though he likely would have traded it for a
better showing in the series (only two points),
Markus Naslund became the first player in
franchise history to be named a First Team
All-Star, getting the nod over Shanahan at left
wing.
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