Tuesday, November 25, 2014
In Memory of Pat Quinn - 1943-2014
As a high-school student, I'd read about the Canucks in the paper and see loss after loss pile up. In fact, in the school-yard, we'd flip a quarter to see if the Canucks would win or lose. The magic of '82 under the guiding hand of Roger Nielson had long since faded into the depths of time.
We desperately needed to right this foundering ship and the Griffiths family looked to Pat Quinn in 1987. It was an all-out effort to get someone who could construct the type of hockey team that Vancouver fans were wanting to see. But Quinn was then coaching the Los Angeles Kings and the resultant contract by the Canucks on Pat Quinn's services ran Griffiths and Quinn afoul of the NHL head office. Threats of charges of tampering were thrown about and the LA Kings threatened a review of the contract. This led to Pat Quinn being suspended for the rest of the season as he couldn't conceivably coach for the Kings while undertaking a contract with the Vancouver Canucks.
The first trade that he made was to pack off Patrik Sundstrom and two picks to the New Jersey Devils for Kirk McLean, Greg Adams and a pick who would later be Leif Rohlin (1988 Entry Draft). The backstopper affectionately named Captain Kirk would be an integral piece in the 1994 Stanley Cup run. In the 1988 Entry Draft, The Canucks picked second and they selected a young Medicine Hat kid named Trevor Linden. Then an year later in the 6th round, they selected a young Soviet phenom named Pavel Bure. These players would become the cornerstones of the franchise in 94 with the additions of players like Cliff Ronning, Geoff Courtnall, Bret Hedican, Nathan Lafayette and Jeff Brown. Trevor Linden would be named the youngest captain of the team upon Stan Smyl's retirement and fill those shoes he did as did Quinn's trust in him to lead the team.
Almost twenty years later, the same young man that Pat Quinn had drafted as President of Hockey Operations and General Manager would step into Quinn's shoes and begin his Canuck front office executive career as the Canucks President of Hockey Operations.
He was remembered in April 2014 as a builder and a great leader by Canucks management and his #3 was placed in the Ring of Honour.
...and on Sunday, November 23, 2014, we lost a great man and forever a Vancouver Canuck. Sandra Quinn and Pat's family have asked for privacy at this sensitive time and the media and the fans will respect that. All we know was that Pat was fighting a long illness.
His words ring true for anyone following any passion, be it hockey, be it any sport or creative activity.
"I'm not immune to pain, dejection. But I... have a passion, a love, for this. I don't think that ever leaves you."
The most stirring rendition of "Danny Boy" I have ever heard. Packs a powerful punch visually, aurally and emotionally. You're a hard-hearted person if you can watch this without a tear in your eye and a lump in your throat.
Rest in Peace, Big Irishman, Mighty Quinn.
Monday, June 16, 2014
This Off-Season Is Going To Be Interesting
Everybody knows that this off-season is of absolute importance for the Canucks. Nobody believes the idea that the Canucks will contend for the Stanley Cup next season with the current roster. There are tweaks that have to be made and it will be painful this off-season. But simply put, it has to be done.
Rumor has it that Canucks GM Jim Benning is looking at getting a second draft pick in the first round, trading one of their core pieces to get a key piece for the future - the concensus being that this core piece being dealt is forward Ryan Kesler who has expressed a desire to be traded and according to his agent, he hasn't moved from that position.
Most teams that win the Stanley Cup have a main core that is in their twenties and the LA Kings who just won the Stanley Cup has a young core. But that core was built through the draft, having good scouting and making key trades to bring supporting cast to help bolster their lines.
Considering Benning's reticence to talk about what plans he has for the team, we have no idea what's coming, but rest assured, he's going to be watching the options like a hawk. We know that this off-season is going to be interesting...and that's about all we know about it.
Saturday, May 24, 2014
Waiting For Trotz
Update: May 27, 2014 - Barry Trotz opted for the Washington Capitals head coaching job and was hired by the Capitals today. So mark Trotz off the list of potential head coach candidates.
Update 2: June 23, 2014 - Willie Desjardins was offered the head coaching job of the Vancouver Canucks and Desjardins has accepted.
Friday, May 23, 2014
Jim Benning Named 11th General Manager of the Vancouver Canucks.
photo attrib: Jonathan Hayward, CP
Wednesday, March 5, 2014
So Long, Lu - What A Hell Of Week (leading up to the Trade Deadline)!
Roberto Luongo, the Vancouver Canucks' former beleaguered goaltender, ousted from his starter role by both Corey Schneider (now gone to the New Jersey Devils) and by Eddie Lack, the future of goaltending for the Canucks, has been traded back to the team that he came from eight years ago.
Vancouver gets back touted prospects (who have had a rough stretch of it with the Florida Panthers) forward Shawn Matthias and goaltender Jacob Markstrom (a Swede who can discuss the merits of the Swedish chef with his now bosom buddy, Eddie Lack). The only other trades that happened were Jeff Costello from the Senators for Patrick Mullen. And six-game Canuck Raphael Diaz (obtained from the Montreal Canadians) was sent packing to the New York Rangers for a fifth round draft pick.
Better yet, now that we have Jeff Costello, any chance we can talk with the Toronto Maple Leafs and do a trade for Spencer Abbott? That'll just make everybody's day.
Sunday, December 29, 2013
NHL Wheel Of Justice - A Fun Way To Determine Suspensions
A recent demonstration of NHL infractions suspensions has most of us believing that either Brendan Shanahan either is told how many games to suspend violating players by NHL management or he goes to a Wheel and spins it to determine how long of a suspension he'd mete out. So some industrious guy with a lot of time on his hands came up with this:
After all deliberate intent doesn't mean a hill of beans in this league, regardless of contact or not. Edler gets 4 games for a phantom head-hit while a deliberate attempt by Joffrey Lupul to elbow Henrik Sedin who ducked out of the way doesn't warrant anything - the refs said "If no contact was made, then no penalty can be called." But au contraire, my dear blind zebra. Take a look at this video: (courtesy of Canuck friends from Legion of Blog TV)
Lupul impacts poor Nazem Kadri. I believe there was intent there. Should Lupul not be suspended for hitting Kadri? Intent to Injure Teammate?
With non-calls like this and the lack of an unsportsmanlike on Brad Marchand the day after, I would have to say the NHL Player Safety Commissioner is throwing darts blindfolded.
I figure this would have come out if Lupul had actually made contact with Henrik Sedin's head and ended up concussing him for the rest of the season.
Sounds about right.
Common Sense & Discretion Not Present - Milan Lucic Assaulted By Drunken Jack-Ass.
Most of you know that this is a Vancouver Canucks Fan-Blog and as such I write about things that concern the Vancouver Canucks but this is a slight against Vancouver fans because one drunken jackass took it too far after the 6-2 drubbing that the Canucks gave the visiting Boston Bruins.
In all the articles and crap about Milan Lucic being assaulted in a Vancouver bar that he and his Bruin buddies went to, there was no onus on Lucic have any common-sense about being in a Granville Street Bar after midnight. Anybody who has lived in Vancouver knows that Granville Street after midnight is not the place to be and if you are one of the misfortuned enough to be in the area after midnight, you keep your head down, make yourself as inconspicuous a target as possible and get the hell out of there. You don't go doing like Milan Lucic and start being a tough guy; no matter how much you are a tough guy or do that kind of physical play on the ice surface. I really don't give a crap if he pounded Mike Komisarek into the ice surface and made him take up roughly the same surface area as a Sham-wow. You retaliate in a jackass manner (by hollering back at the assailant) and you just make yourself a bigger target. In that regard there wasn't a drunken jackass and Milan Lucic in this video - there were two drunken jackasses with one making death threats. As for the "I'll fucking kill you." That's a verbal threat and is indictable under the Canadian Criminal Code. Of course the Crown has to determine whether the threat was serious or not, but considering that it came from a hockey player with a penchant for dropping the gloves on the ice and verbally abusing his girlfriend Boston Barstool Sports.com article on Lucic Verbal Altercation, the Vancouver cops might want to take a good look at the death-threat and verbally warn him that the behavior will not be tolerated.
Do I like him as a player? Not particularly and the hate for him as a Bruin does not translate into any dealings with him as a person. Frankly put, I don't know the guy (in answer to his "Do You Know Who I Am?" rant) and would care less about him if I ran into him on the street and that pretty much goes for most hockey players. Outside of the arena, they're normal citizens and should be held to the same standards as normal citizens. I don't feel that the guy who assaulted Lucic had any legitimate reason for doing so and should be arrested for assault and charged.
As far as his pissy "I'm gonna disown Vancouver", then his penitent retraction. I really don't give a flying shit about it anyway. Just remember that Vancouver remembers 2011 and there will be people who don't like Lucic. And he has to realize that common-sense should have prevailed and to not have put himself into a situation where there was the opportunity to be assaulted. In that regard, he is stupid. If he really wanted to he should have spent a quiet night in the hotel, sent out for food and then got on the plane and headed back to Boston.
I may not have been born in this city (I'm originally from Edmonton - moved to Vancouver in 1976 but have been a Canucks fan since 1970), but I am a Vancouverite more than I will ever be an Edmontonian (though it was the city of my birth). In 43 years of life, I've spent more time in British Columbia than I have in any other province in Canada. And when someone born in Vancouver slights "MY" adopted hometown as Milan Lucic has, I can pretty much tell him to "take yourself and go. Leave if you don't like this city. Set your roots in Boston if you feel that way. You put yourself into the situation that you did with the bar incident." Comparing what stupid idiots did to your church and to your parents doesn't compute with the situation that you put yourself into. What was done to your parents you can be indignant about, what you did to yourself in putting yourself in a situation that you could have easily avoided is just plain stupidity.