1973-1974: The
Suitcase arrives
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Dennis Ververgaert had an impressive
rookie season in '73-'74.
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After a season of illness, Bud Poile stepped
down once and for all, giving Hal Laycoe the
General Manager's title outright. Vic
Stasiuk was fired on June 13 and replaced by
Bill McCreary Sr. There was now
competition in town as far as professional
hockey was concerned. The rival WHA had
come to Vancouver, as the Philadelphia Blazers
relocated to the West Coast and would share the
Coliseum with the Canucks. It was felt
that the winning would have to begin now to
maintain the loyal following that had been built
up in the first three years. In the player
department, first-ever draft pick had been a
decent player at both forward and defense
through his first three seasons, but he was no
Gilbert Perreault and the fans never let him
forget it. Crippled by injuries and the
constant pressure to perform at an all-star
calibre, Tallon was mercifully traded on May 14
to Chicago for D Jerry Korab and G Gary
"The Suitcase" Smith.
Smith was the key to the deal, being a six-year
veteran, including 71 appearances with
California in the 1970-71 season.
The brash netminder began making headlines
upon arrival in Vancouver, telling reporters,
"Yes, everything you've heard about me is
true. I am that good." He would
play in 66 for the Canucks in 1973-74, becoming
the first Canuck goalie to post 20 wins in a
season and recording three shutouts to leap-frog
him over Dunc Wilson into the young franchise's
all-time leader in that department. After a
5-4-1 start, the team went 13 games without a
win (0-10-3) and by the halfway point of the
season had only won eight games. Two days after
a 6-1 home loss to the Rangers on January 12,
McCreary was fired and replaced by Phil Maloney,
who had played for the Canucks in the WHL.
The turmoil was not restricted to the hockey
part of the business, as owner Tom Scallen was
finding himself in financial difficulty and
facing a charge of theft. In a somewhat
desperate move, one of the few players that was
producing, Bobby Schmautz (45 points in 49
games), was traded to Boston on February 7 for C
Chris Oddleifson, C Mike Walton, and Fred
O'Donnell. In the latter part of the
season, rookie RW Dennis Ververgaert
showed fans why he had been the third overall
pick in the draft, setting club rookie records
for goals (26) and points (57) to finish second
in team scoring. Ververgaert finished
fifth in balloting for the Calder Trophy as
rookie of the year. Winning the team
scoring title was the ever-consistent Andre
Boudrias, who set single-season franchise
records for assists (59) and points (75).
In the end, the Canucks had their best season
yet, with a 24-43-11 record. The 59 points
was once again good for seventh in the division,
17 points shy of a playoff spot. The final
game of the season, an 11-1 thrashing at the
hands of the Los Angeles Kings, was the final
NHL game for Orland Kurtenbach, the only captain
that the team had ever known. He would
remain in the organization, though, coaching the
Canucks' CHL affiliate in Seattle the next
season.
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