2003-04: Bertuzzi causes
controversy; Flames and Canucks meet again in
post-season
 |
|
Todd Bertuzzi was vilified in the
media across the world in 2004, but many
Canucks fans still supported him.
|
The upward progression of the club over the
past five seasons had created the highest demand
for Canucks regular season tickets ever. After
selling out their final 31 home games and all
eight home playoff games in 2002-03, season
ticket subscriptions reached the 17,000 level
this summer and a waiting list was created for
the first time in franchise history.
18,630 jammed into GM Place on October 11 to see
the Canucks beat Calgary 4-1. Rookie RW Jason
King scored his first NHL goal in the third
period, drawing assists from the Sedins in what
would be the Canucks most productive line over
the first couple of months of the season. Two
nights later, G Johan Hedberg blanked Edmonton,
3-0, making him the second goaltender -- after
Mike Fountain in 1996-97 -- to record a shutout
in his Canucks debut. The Canucks lost their
next two games and then went 7-0-2 in their next
nine. This was despite the fact that the top
line of Naslund, Morrison, and Bertuzzi was
producing well below expectations. King,
however, scored 11 goals in his first 19 games
and was the talk of the town. But it was mostly
team defence that was rescuing the club. Blamed
for their failure in previous playoff
experiences, improvement in that area was noted.
On November 18, the Canucks took to the ice at
GM Place wearing “vintage” apparel, replicas
of the blue, green, and white uniforms the club
wore from 1972 to 1978. The night was made
memorable with a come-from-behind 5-4 win over
Montreal, punctuated by Mattias Ohlund’s
overtime goal. It was the first of eleven games
the Canucks would win in the extra frame over
the course of the season, setting a new NHL
record. After starting out with a 9-0-1 record
in their first ten home games, the Canucks
dropped a 5-3 decision to Toronto on November
22. They were a disappointing 12-13-6 on home
ice the rest of the season. On December 9, a
groin injury to Dan Cloutier created the strange
scenario where UBC goaltender Chris Levesque was
summoned to back-up Hedberg in a game against
Pittsburgh. When Hedberg hit his head in a
collision during the game, it looked as though
the undergrad might make an appearance. Hedberg
finished the game, although it was later learned
he suffered a concussion in the collision, and
he missed the next eight weeks. Markus Naslund
showed signs of coming out of his slump by
scoring all four Canuck goals in that game,
including the overtime winner.
By February 16, Naslund was the leading scorer
in the NHL and the Canucks trailed Colorado by
one point in the Northwest Division. The teams
met at Pepsi Center in Denver on that night and
Daniel Sedin’s unassisted goal early in the
third period was the only one of the game, and
with the two points, the Canucks took over the
division lead with 75 points. But the game had
come at a cost. Late in the second period,
Markus Naslund was levelled by Colorado rookie
Steve Moore. The legality of the check was hotly
debated, but there was no call on the play. Marc
Crawford went on a post-game tirade, crying
about “a cheap shot by a young kid on a
captain” and Todd Bertuzzi and Brad May
promised retribution for the hit. Naslund missed
the next four games with a concussion and a
wrist injury, during which time he lost the
scoring lead. He was never the same for the rest
of the season.
The teams met again in Denver on March 3. Again,
Colorado led by a single point. Many were
predicting blood, but under the watchful eye of
Commissioner Gary Bettman and Vice-President
Colin Campbell, the game went off without major
incident, and ended in a 5-5 tie. Five days
later, the teams met for the sixth and final
time of the season, this time in Vancouver. It
was Colorado’s first visit to GM Place since
the Moore hit on Naslund—an incident that had
been, by now, blown entirely out of proportion
by Vancouver supporters. Still, this game was
very important in the standings. Colorado had a
one-point lead with each team having 14 games to
play. But the Canucks stumbled and fell behind
5-0 in a first period that had five fights,
including a bout between Matt Cooke and Steve
Moore. The game was already becoming surreal.
Early in the second, Brad May scored twice, and
both goals were assisted by Trevor Linden. His
first assist ended a 13-game scoring draught and
made him the franchise’s all-time leading
scorer with 1,111 points, eclipsing Stan
Smyl’s record. This gave the fans a solitary
reason to cheer on what was otherwise a dreadful
night. The comeback was short-lived and early in
the third period the Avalanche led 8-2. With the
game out of reach, Todd Bertuzzi found himself
on the ice with Moore and thought the time right
to finally avenge the hit on Naslund. After
failing to engage him in a fight, Bertuzzi
grabbed the rookie’s sweater with his left
hand and clobbered him in the head with his
right. Moore tumbled to the ice with Bertuzzi
and a pile of players landing on top of him, and
a full-out line-brawl erupted. With Moore on the
bottom of the pile, it was not until the brawl
died down that it was realised he had been badly
injured. Moore was carried off on a stretcher
with his neck stabilised. The following day it
was learned that he had three cracked vertebrae
and a concussion and his future career in hockey
would be uncertain. Bertuzzi was given a match
penalty and was obviously going to face stiff
discipline from the league. As it turned out, he
was suspended for the remainder of the regular
season and playoffs, and would have to be
formally re-instated to play beyond that.
To complicate matters, the trade deadline was
the following day and Brian Burke was forced
into action to replace his star winger. He
acquired D Marc Bergevin from Pittsburgh, RW
Geoff Sanderson from Columbus, and RW Martin
Rucinsky from the New York Rangers without
giving up any regulars. Two days after the
Colorado game, a meek air hung over the arena as
the Canucks hosted the Minnesota Wild. Sanderson
scored with 5:17 left to salvage a 1-1 tie. But
the team was in a fog and after blowing a 4-2
lead to Columbus and losing 5-4 on March 21, the
Canucks were 2-5-3-1 in the month of March and
now trailed Colorado by five points with six
games to play. Many figured the Canucks would
have to run the table in order to win the
division, and that is exactly what they did. As
Colorado floundered down the stretch, the
Canucks somehow re-composed themselves and
finished the season with a superb 5-2 victory
over Edmonton on April 3. The win gave the
Canucks 101 points to clinch their first
regular-season division crown in eleven years.
Following the game, the players gave away their
jerseys to lucky fans, and when Todd Bertuzzi
came out to give away his, the 18,630 in
attendance (the 80th consecutive home sell-out)
gave him a five-minute standing ovation.
 |
|
Brendan Morrison tries to score on
Miikka Kiprusoff, who was stellar for
the Flames throughout the 2004 playoffs.
|
As the number three seed in the conference,
the Canucks would be paired against their
long-time playoff nemesis, the Calgary Flames.
For the Flames, it was their first trip to the
post-season in eight years and the inexperience
showed early in game one, as Martin Rucinsky and
Sami Salo each scored power-play markers in the
first six minutes and the Canucks went on to
win, 5-3. In game two, it was the Flames who
came fast out of the gate, scoring twice in the
first four minutes before the Canucks took over.
Unfortunately, they met a wall in the Calgary
net named Miikka Kiprusoff. He made 25 saves and
only Markus Naslund’s second-period tally
eluded him as the Flames evened the series.
The scene shifted to Calgary for game three,
where late in a scoreless first period, Dan
Cloutier stopped a shot by Oleg Saprykin, and
was slow to get to his feet afterward. The play
was eventually stopped, and Cloutier left the
game with an apparent knee injury, not to return
for the remainder of the series. At the time of
his injury, he had an active shutout streak of
75:09. Johan Hedberg was beaten by Chris Simon
early in the second period, but Naslund tied the
game up a minute later. Early in the third
period, Matt Cooke gave the Canucks a 2-1 lead,
which they were able to hang onto to regain the
series lead. After another scoreless first
period in game four, the Canucks turned in a
dreadful second period and the Flames ran up a
3-0 lead. The final score was 4-0 and the series
was now a best-of-three.
Rumours swirled the day of game five that Marc
Crawford was going to start unproven rookie Alex
Auld in goal for game five. Most dismissed these
rumours, but Auld was indeed given the start, as
the coach played a hunch. Auld turned in a solid
performance, stopping a breakaway with a nifty
poke-check and making 17 saves through two
periods as the game was tied, 1-1. The Canucks
outshot the Flames 12-2 in the final 20 minutes.
Unfortunately, a shot by Calgary’s Andrew
Ference hit the shaft of Jarome Iginla’s stick
and beat Auld to give the Flames the eventual
winning goal. The Canucks now faced elimination
in game six, and came out strong. It looked like
their dominant first period might go for naught,
though, as they weren’t able to score until
the final minute, when some fancy playmaking by
the Sedins set up Jarkko Ruutu for the game’s
opening goal. They kept rolling in the second
period, as Daniel Sedin, Brad May, and Geoff
Sanderson gave the Canucks a commanding 4-0 lead
by the 10:15 mark. Only 16 seconds later,
though, they caught a bad break. Oleg Saprykin
tipped Robyn Regehr’s shot past Auld and into
the net, but it went to video replay because it
looked like a high stick. Despite video evidence
which appeared to conclude that Saprykin’s
stick was several inches above the cross-bar at
the time of contact, the officals in the NHL’s
“War Room” amazingly ruled the play
“inconclusive” and the goal stood. The score
was 4-2 by the end of the second. When ex-Canuck
Martin Gelinas cut the lead to 4-3 at 1:14 of
the third, the Saddledome was abuzz and the
Canucks were in panic mode. Their shoddy play in
the defensive zone gave the Flames several
chances to score. Finally, at 7:04 to play,
Chris Clark deflected Regehr’s shot through
Auld’s legs and the game was tied. Incredibly,
the game was headed for overtime. There were not
a great number of chances in the first overtime
period, but things really opened up in the
second. Early in the period, Gelinas got a
breakaway, but Auld again came up with a
poke-check to thwart him. Later, Ville Nieminen
hit the cross-bar. Then a clearly exhausted
Jarome Iginla lost control of the puck on a
two-on-one. For the first time in franchise
history, the Canucks went to triple overtime in
the playoffs. At 2:28 of the third overtime
period, Brendan Morrison outwaited Kiprusoff and
slid the puck past his outstretched glove just
inside the post to end the longest game in
Vancouver Canucks history. The teams would head
back to Vancouver for a seventh and deciding
game.
Both of the teams’ last two playoff encounters
had gone to seventh games. In 1989 and 1994, the
games had been played in Calgary. On 19 April,
2004, game seven was played at GM Place. The
previous two seventh games had been two of the
most exciting games in Canucks history. After
the fourth scoreless first period of the series,
this one didn’t seem to be living up to that
standard at first. Almost thirteen minutes into
a still scoreless second period, Craig Conroy
stepped out of the penalty box, took a pass from
Mathew Lombardi, and fed Jarome Iginla with a
breakaway pass. Alex Auld had stopped the first
two breakaways he had faced in the series, but
Iginla beat him this time to give Calgary a 1-0
lead. The Canucks came to life after the goal
and put on constant pressure for the last seven
minutes of the period, but were unable to beat
Kiprusoff. The pressure continued in the third
period and finally, at 7:32, Matt Cooke scored
to tie the score. Two minutes later, though,
Cooke was hit by Andrew Ference, which forced
the blade of his stick into the face of Rhett
Warriner. The Calgary defenseman was cut, and
Cooke was assessed a double-minor for
high-sticking. On the power-play, Iginla scored
his second of the game, converting on a rebound
despite being checked in front of the net, to
give the Flames a 2-1 lead with 9:46 to play.
Things looked grim in Canuckland. They did get a
late power-play, but when it was negated by an
Ed Jovanovski cross-checking penalty with only
27 seconds to play, it looked like the end of
the line. Iginla had a chance to get the hat
trick shooting for the empty net but missed, and
Mattias Ohlund picked up the puck behind his own
net with 12 seconds left to make one last rush.
Ohlund passed up to Markus Naslund at the
blueline as Cooke slashed the stick out of
Iginla’s hands. Iginla then tripped over his
stick lying on the ice, which created an opening
for Naslund, who turned on the after-burners.
Naslund beat Steve Montador to the outside and
took a bad-angle shot at Kiprusoff. It was
stopped, but the rebound came to Cooke in front,
who lifted the puck just under the cross-bar to
tie the score with only 5.7 seconds to play. GM
Place exploded and Canucks fans everywhere leapt
to their feet and rejoiced at this amazing turn
of events. Just like in 1989 and 1994, game
seven was headed for overtime. The building was
still abuzz after the intermission, but there
was still the Jovanovski penalty to kill off.
The Flames went to work right away on the power
play. Iginla took a shot that Auld stopped.
Gelinas got the rebound, and Auld flopped to
stop that as well, but he was down and out as
Gelinas picked up the puck again and deposited
it in the back of the net at the 1:25 mark to
end the game and the series in Calgary’s
favour. After the elation of tying the game late
in regulation, the sudden ending was a bitter
disappointment for the Canucks. As was the case
in ’89 and ’94, the series winner, the
Flames this time, would advance to the Stanley
Cup Finals. As the teams shook hands and the GM
Place crowd filed out, Canucks fans everywhere
were feeling the sting of another playoff let
down and, with impending labour trouble,
wondered when they’d get to see their team
play again.
TO BE CONTINUED...
|