Canucks vs. Oilers Game Day: Why doubling up on Connor McDavid is key

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‘They have a lot of threats but we can play against anyone. We have responsible players who play both ways and it will be a good matchup.’ — Elias Lindholm

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Published May 08, 2024Last updated 59 minutes ago4 minute read

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Vancouver Canucks vs. Edmonton Oilers
Round 2, Game 1, Stanley Cup Playoffs

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When and where: Wednesday, 7 p.m., Rogers Arena

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TV: SN Pacific. Radio: Sportsnet 650

The buzz: The odds are stacked higher than shot glasses at last call in a sports bar.

The Canucks have no chance of upsetting the high-octane Oilers in their second-round NHL playoff series. Check a poll, betting odds or pundits. The overwhelming consensus is that the Connor McDavid train will roll into Rogers Arena and roll right over the Pacific Division champions.

However, the Canucks can do more than just slow down McDavid, but it won’t be easy. The superstar center had 132 points including 100 assists in the regular season. He added 12 points (1-11) in a five-game, first-round series dominance of the Los Angeles Kings and is the catalyst for a power play that’s 9-for-20.

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The Canucks can counter with matchup strength, better team defense and improved penalty kill. They sent a message in a 3-1 win at Edmonton on April 13. With the Oilers in contention for the division title, Casey DeSmtih made 32 saves but McDavid didn’t play. He could also be without injured winger Adam Henrique on Wednesday.

Regardless, the Canucks can’t turn pucks over or parade to the penalty box.

“They’re incredible on the power play and feed off turnovers,” said Canucks head coach Rick Tocchet, whose club was held to 13 goals and two power-play goals in six first-round games. “I want us to be aggressive and we have to be disciplined, but we don’t have to back off. We’re going to have to find another level.”

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If JT Miller is a beast in the faceoff circle, and Quinn Hughes does his thing, the Canucks could surprise the Oilers in the second-round series. Photo by Frank Franklin II /AP

Here are five key series matchups:

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1. Centers of attention: JT Miller and Elias Lindholm doubling up on McDavid in the circle is crucial to forcing the Oilers’ captain to play in his own zone. Miller is fifth in post-season face-offs at 58.5 percent and second in even-strength draws. Lindholm is 48.7 percent and effective short-handed.

“They have a lot of threats but we can play against anyone,” said Lindholm. “We have a lot of responsible players on our lines who know how to play both ways and it will be a good matchup. We’ve been playing pretty good defensively.”


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2. Silow vs Skinner: Silovs has shown an uncanny likeness to legendary rookie goaltender Ken Dryden by stepping in because of injuries and stepping up in three playoff games — including a series-clinching shutout in Game 6 at Nashville. DeSmith is an option for Game 1, but how do you not ride Silovs?

Skinner proved in the first round that he could overcome weird goals and stopped 82 of 86 shots in the final three games. He worked with a sports psychologist in the summer to put bad goals and games aside. He’s less vulnerable on rush goals.

3. Hughes vs. Bouchard: They went seventh and 10th overall respectively in the 2018 draft. And had Hughes gone off the board early, Bouchard might be a Canuck. They have grown their games with greater confidence and an accent on offense.

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Hughes led all blueliners with 92 points (17-75), while Bouchard was fourth with 82 points (18-64). Both will draw added attention. Whoever can trigger the transition will play a major factor in the series outcome. Bouchard has nine points (1-8) in five post-season games and Hughes has five assists in six.

4. Wild-card Pettersson: Elias Pettersson had nine points (5-4) in four games with the Lotto Line in January and was player of the week. He has one goal in his last 19 games and had no goals and just eight shots in the first playoff round. He missed practice Tuesday with an illness.

“Obviously it’s a mindset and there’s a lot of physical stuff,” said Tocchet. “You have to know before what you want to do. If you don’t move your feet and throw blind passes, you’re dead against Edmonton. If you do, it opens up options.”

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5. Finding comfort zone: The Canucks have 10 playoff newbies and some looked nervous against the Predators in Round 1. It comes with the territory of added hype and pressure, but they’re better off for the experience.

“Some guys were really tight the first couple of games. It’s another level, but it’s knowing what to expect,” said Tocchet.

The injured: Canucks: Thatcher Demko (knee, week-to-week), Pettersson (illness). Oilers: Adam Henrique (ankle, day-to-day).

The quote: “Knowing his tendencies helps, but we can’t change our whole defensive system.” — Tocchet on McDavid.

The lineup:

Suter-Miller-Boeser

Hoglander-Pettersson-Mikheyev

Joshua-Lindholm-Garland

DiGiuseppe-Blueger-Lafferty

Hughes-Hronek

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Socucy-Myers

Zadorov-Cole

The prediction: The Canucks benefit from rest and practice and stay out of the box. They squeak out a 3-2 win.

(FAN FORUM: Do you have a specific question for a player? Pass it along to @provincesports and we’ll get it in a future edition.)

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Tags: Canucks Oilers Game Day doubling Connor McDavid key

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