Lumaktaw sa pangunahing content

Canucks will just have to survive with Quinn Hughes in COVID-19 protocol

VANCOUVER – The most consistent thing about the Vancouver Canucks is COVID-19, which remains undefeated after two of the few remaining players untouched by the coronavirus this winter were run down by Omicron during the NHL All-Star break.

One of those was star defenceman Quinn Hughes, who was added to COVID protocol on Monday as most – but not all – of his teammates resumed training at Rogers Arena.

Forward Elias Pettersson, who tested positive in January, missed Monday afternoon’s practice due to what coach Bruce Boudreau said were non-COVID-related flu symptoms and defenceman Tucker Poolman continued his mysterious absence due to an undefined illness. Boudreau insisted Poolman is not suffering long-haul symptoms from his recent bout with COVID.

Checking winger Matthew Highmore was the other Canuck who went into protocol on Monday, leaving – by unofficial count – only defenceman Oliver Ekman-Larsson and young forwards Nils Hoglander and Vasily Podkolzin untouched by Omicron.

There was an inevitability to Hughes, easily the best Canucks skater this season, contracting the virus. It feels like Omicron is coming for all of us eventually, but at least showing some restraint to those who have backed up their functioning immune systems with vaccinations.

Hughes could have gotten sick on the last road trip or this week’s homestand, which starts Tuesday against the Arizona Coyotes, but instead contracted Omicron during the All-Star break. He is quarantining at home in Michigan, trapped on the wrong side of the Canada-U.S. border, which means the 22-year-old will likely rejoin the Canucks for a Feb. 17 game in San Jose.

Hughes is only one player, and the Canucks have had as many five at a time in COVID protocol. But Hughes is the skater they can least afford to miss. Few players in the NHL can play like he does and move the puck like he can, either with his skating or passing. The Canucks waited five decades for a defencemen like Hughes, and there isn’t an extra one like him hanging around on standby.

The Canucks will just have to survive, which they have done admirably since their COVID conga line began in mid-December. But just surviving won’t get them to the playoffs.

The team started 8-0-1 under Bruce Boudreau after he was hired as coach on Dec. 5, but has scuffled through various absences and schedule interruptions since then, going 4-5-3 after Jan. 1. Vancouver’s five-on-five play and team defence (2.5 goals against per game) have remained excellent, but the Canucks average of 2.17 goals per game since New Year’s Day is nearly last in the NHL, fractionally ahead of the Philadelphia Flyers and Seattle Kraken offences.

Taken as a whole, the two-month turnaround under Boundreau has been quite remarkable, lifting the Canucks back to .500 (currently 20-20-6) and in the vapour trails of the Western Conference playoff race.

But they need wins, not just loser points, and the precariousness of the team’s standing ahead of the March 21 trade deadline is re-enforced by the Canucks management summit going on this week and the presence at Monday practice of president Jim Rutherford’s newly-constructed hockey-operations department: general manager Patrik Allvin sitting with new AGMs Derek Clancy and Emile Castonguay, joined by incumbent player-development boss Ryan Johnson and special advisors Daniel and Henrik Sedin.

Winning or losing this month doesn’t change the clear need for upgrades to the Canucks’ roster, which includes building some cap flexibility that Rutherford said is vital. But losing this week – the New York Islanders are at Rogers Arena on Wednesday before the Toronto Maple Leafs visit Saturday – are likely to expedite the changes even through Rutherford has said, “ideally,” he’d like to give this group of players the chance to make the playoffs.

It will be impossible to watch the Canucks play and not notice the absence of Hughes. But there’s no free pass for losing because one of the most dynamic defencemen in the world is taking his turn in COVID protocol.

“If you look at the amount of goals that he creates from the back end, (on) a team that is somewhat offensively challenged … I mean, that’s going to be the challenge right there,” Boudreau said of Hughes. “He’s a great player. We’ve gone with (J.T.) Miller and (Bo) Horvat being out at the same time. We’ve gone with (Thatcher) Demko being out and (Jaroslav) Halak at the same time, so we’re going to go through with this.”

Pettersson reported to the rink on Monday before the Canucks sent him home, so he may be available to play on Tuesday. His offensive slump is representative of a team that, for all its flaws, was supposed to score goals this year with its talented forwards at the top of the lineup.

But the Canucks have scored about as often for Boudreau (2.52 per game) as they did under previous coach Travis Green (2.36).

“I think the five-on-five play, our defensive play, has been really good,” Horvat, the captain, said Monday. “(But) I don’t think we’ve even come close to what we can produce offensively.

“I think a lot of us, including myself, has a lot more to give offensively. I think that, honestly, is a good problem to have. We haven’t even … reached our peak of being our most offensive, and we’re still winning hockey games, and we’re still doing a lot of good things away from the puck. It’s just a matter of time … for us to break through.”

With just 11 goals in 46 games this season, Pettersson had only four shots on target during the four-game road trip that preceded the weekend break.

“It’s not like he hasn’t been told,” Boudreau said. “I try to tell him to be more selfish. Matter of fact, in Nashville (a 4-2 Canucks loss last Tuesday), I told him to start shooting the puck more, and next shift he went out, shot the puck and hit the cross bar. But that was his last shot of the game.

“I would love him to get four or five shots on goal a game. And I think … the rest of the group would too.”

• With Hughes and Poolman out, the Canucks defence pairs on Monday were Ekman-Larsson-Noah Juulsen, Luke Schenn-Tyler Myers, and Brad Hunt-Kyle Burroughs. Jason Dickinson took Pettersson’s left wing spot on a line with Horvat and Conor Garland, while the top line was Miller between wingers Brock Boeser and Tanner Pearson.



Canucks will just have to survive with Quinn Hughes in COVID-19 protocol
Source: Healthy Lifestyle

Mga Komento

Mga sikat na post sa blog na ito

Leonen is backlog topnotcher

Supreme Court Associate Justice Marvic Mario Victor Leonen has racked up the top spots in his division and the court en banc in terms of pending cases. Marvic Leonen Documents from the court show that aside from 82 unresolved en banc cases, Leonen also has 899 pending cases in the Third Division as of March 31, 2020. The division’s Statistics on Judicial Pending Cases was signed by Division Clerk of Court Misael Domingo Battung erd. Leonen has 199 cases classified as “aging” and 700 “non-aging” cases in the Third Division which he heads. Non-aging cases are cases which are waiting for other pleadings to be submitted. Other members of the Third Division at that time when the statistics were made were Justices Alexander Gesmundo, Rosmari Carandang, Rodil Zalameda and Samuel Gaerlan. Leonen has been with the Supreme Court for eight years, having been appointed by President Benigno Aquino 3rd on Nov. 21, 2012. He turns 58 years old on December 29. He is the division’s m...

TikTok donates $300,000 for typhoon victims in PH

Over the course of two weeks, two devastating back to back typhoons hit the Philippines. On November 1st, Super Typhoon Rolly (Goni) the strongest typhoon ever recorded in recent history struck the southern region of the Philippines. An estimated two million Filipinos have been affected, many of whom lost their homes and livelihoods. Ten days later, Typhoon Ulysses (Vamco) swept through many of the same provinces previously devastated by Typhoon Rolly, including Metro Manila and parts of Central Luzon leaving widespread flooding and power outages. Many areas are still struggling to recover from the aftermath of these calamities. Homes and livelihood across various provinces were lost to floods, strong winds and rain. LGUs and other organizations continue to mobilize and provide assistance to all who were affected by these typhoons, but many are still in desperate need of help. In line with its mission to inspire creativity and bring joy, TikTok has pledged to donate $300,000 (approxi...

Ladies Who Shaved Their Private And Public Hair Needs To Know This

Many women practice waxing or shaving as methods of removing body hair. Still, a recent research has shown that this habit is dangerous and it must be stopped right away. This research was carried out by a team of scientists led by Andrea De Maria and it was published in the “American Diary of Obstetrics and Gynecology”. The results of the research have indicated that eighty seven percent of women go to the beauty salon to get their private intimate parts waxed, while ninety percent of all women shave their pubic hair on a regular basis. Nevertheless, De Maria claims that women should not wax or shave their private parts. As De Maria explains, the skin in the genital region is pretty sensitive and vulnerable to infection, particularly when there are small cuts and wounds on the surface of the skin caused during the process of shaving or waxing. This region also contains a great number of sweat glands and this means that this region is perfect for the growth of bacteria. Event...