1970-1971:
Building a foundation
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Orland Kurtenbach was the Canucks'
first ever captain.
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Norman "Bud" Poile, a renowned
hockey man and former General Manager in
Philadelphia, was hired to hold the same post in
Vancouver. Hal Laycoe would be the Head Coach.
The next step was stocking players, which would
be done by drafting the cast-offs from the
established 12 teams along with Buffalo. Among
Vancouver's selections were D Gary Doak and D
Barry Wilkins from Boston, C Orland
Kurtenbach (who had played for the WHL
Canucks and would be the club's first captain)
from New York, RW Ray Cullen from Minnesota, D Pat
Quinn from Toronto, C Andre
Boudrias and LW Wayne Maki from St.
Louis, C Rosaire Paiement from Philadelphia, C
Garth Rizzuto from Chicago, and goaltenders Dunc
Wilson from Philadelphia and Charlie Hodge from
Montreal. Poile also made the franchise's first
trade that day, acquiring D John Arbour from
Pittsburgh for cash. The next day was the
Amateur Draft, in which the expansion Canucks
and Sabres would have the first two picks, and
the spin of a wheel would determine the order.
The Canucks would have numbers one through six,
while seven through 12 belonged to the Sabres.
With NHL President Clarence S. Campbell
presiding, the wheel was spun and it was
announced that the number one had come up. The
Vancouver contingent erupted, but Buffalo GM
Punch Imlach protested, claiming that it was
number 11 (the digits were one on top of the
other). Imlach was found to be correct, and the
first choice belonged to the Sabres. It was a
surprise to nobody when they selected Gilbert
Perreault from the Montreal Jr. Canadiens.
Perreault would wear the lucky number 11
throughout his 17-year career with the Sabres.
The Canucks selected D/RW Dale Tallon from
Toronto of the OHA second overall. After the
inaugural training camp in Calgary, the Canucks
surprised many by going 6-3-3 in the pre-season.
But those games meant nothing. The team was now
set and it was time to get down to business.
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Dale Tallon was the Canucks' first
ever draft pick. (2nd overall in 1970)
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October 9 was the historic night when the NHL
puck finally dropped in Vancouver. The Friday
night encounter with the Los Angeles Kings was
televised nationally on CBC, and all of the
dignitaries and such came out to the game. The
Vancouver Beefeater Band was part of a pre-game
show that included appearances by Prime Minister
Pierre Trudeau, Premier W.A.C. Bennett, and NHL
President Clarence Campbell. Finally, at 8:22 PM
PDT, referee Lloyd Gilmour dropped the puck
between Andre Boudrias and Ross Lonsberry and
the game was under way. The game remained
scoreless until the second period, when Mike
Corrigan was sent off for hooking. On the
power-play, Lonsberry beat George Gardner for
the first NHL goal at the Pacific Coliseum. Bob
Berry made the score 2-0 at 19:52 of the middle
frame and it stayed that way until the early in
the third period. At that point, a turnover at
the Kings blueline saw C Len Lunde come up with
the puck and fire a pass to Barry Wilkins.
Wilkins skated to just inside the face-off dot
and made Canuck history by firing a low
backhander that beat Denis DeJordy to the stick
side. The first regular season NHL goal by the
Vancouver Canucks came at the 2:14 mark. It
would not be enough, however. Berry's second
goal of the game would clinch a 3-1 victory for
the Kings. The crowd of 15,564 was over two
hundred fans shy of a sellout due to a computer
error. Two nights later, however, a completely
full house came to watch the Canucks take on the
Toronto Maple Leafs. Though it must have felt
more like a home game to the Leafs, that didn't
stop the Canucks from running up a 5-0 lead
before a late Toronto comeback made the final
score 5-3. The franchise had its first-ever win.
The highlight of year one had to be a visit by
the powerhouse Boston Bruins on February 20,
when Rosaire Paiement scored four goals,
including the game-winner in the final minute,
to lead the Canucks to a 5-4 victory. "Cracklin'
Rosie's" 34 goals and 152 penalty minutes
lead all Canucks in both categories that season,
while Dale Tallon lead with 42 assists (breaking
Bobby Orr's mark for rookie defencemen), and
Andre Boudrias with 66 points. The 5'8"
centerman from Montreal was known as the "Superpest"
for the way he was able to get under the skin of
opponents, and would be a fan favorite during
his tenure in Vancouver. All told, considering
it was their first in the league, the 1970-71
season had to be considered a huge success.
Though the team registered only 24 wins and 56
points, they did manage to finish ahead of two
established teams (Detroit and California) in
the standings and had some fine individual
performances. Six players reached the 20-goal
plateau, and none of the players had ever
reached that mark in the NHL before. As well,
Charlie Hodge compiled a 15-13-5 record in goal.
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