2000-2001: Surprising Canucks
make it back to the post-season
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Markus Naslund showed signs of
turning into a true NHL superstar in his
first season as Canucks captain.
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After the exciting finish to the 1999-2000
season, fan optimism heading into a season was
at its highest in three years.
This was despite the departure of Mark
Messier, who returned to the New York Rangers as
an unrestricted free-agent.
Also departing via free-agency was Garth
Snow, who was not interested in another season
as Felix Potvin's back-up and eventually signed
in Pittsburgh.
Bob Essensa was signed to fill in the
vacancy. Also
coming to terms were the Swedish Twins, Daniel
and Henrik Sedin.
The Canucks held camp in Sweden (in the
Sedins' and Markus Naslund's hometown of
Ornskoldsvik and in Stockholm) and played two
exhibition games against Swedish clubs, winning
both.
In ten total pre-season games, the Canucks went
7-1-2 and the strong play continued into the
season with a 7-2-2-1 record in their first 12
games. On
November 12, Essensa backstopped the Canucks to
a 4-3 win in St. Louis.
It ended a 12-game winless streak versus
the Blues and gave the Canucks their second
four-game winning streak of the young season.
At 12-5-3-1, the Canucks were still
keeping pace with the elite teams in the
conference at the season's quarter point and had
the league's leading offence. Markus
Naslund was thriving in the captaincy role,
keeping pace with the leading goal-scorers in
the NHL and the Sedin twins, though definitely
nowhere near all-star status yet, showed
definite flashes of brilliance.
On the blueline, Ed Jovanovski was having
his finest season in the NHL to date and made
the All-Star Game along with Naslund.
If there was a worry, it was in goal,
where Potvin was having a tendency to allow bad
goals and "Sideshow Bob" Essensa began
earning many of the tough assignments.
The situation eroded to the point where,
after a poor outing in a 5-2 loss to Chicago on
January 28, G Dan Cloutier was acquired from
Tampa Bay for Adrian Aucoin, who had fallen into
Marc Crawford's dog house.
A week later, Potvin was traded to Los
Angeles for future considerations.
On February 28 the Canucks beat Dallas
5-4 and followed it up with a 3-2 overtime win
over St. Louis two nights later.
They were now in fifth place in the
Western Conference, 12 points ahead of
ninth-place Los Angeles, with 16 games to play.
On March 10, Naslund scored his 39th and
40th goals of the season in a 4-4 tie with
Toronto. The
game was the Canucks fourth straight without a
win heading into what looked to be an ugly
seven-game road trip.
Sure enough, the Canucks won just once on
the trip (1-2-4-0) but the worst part happened
on March 16 in Buffalo.
On an awkward play in the corner, Markus
Naslund broke his left leg and would be lost for
the season.
Naslund finished with 41 goals and 34
assists for 75 points in 72 games.
On the final game of the trip, a 2-2 tie
in Minnesota, Andrew Cassels, who lead the club
with 44 assists and was second to Naslund with
56 points, sprained his knee and would not
return for the balance of the season.
After scoring at will early in the
season, the Canucks could no longer buy a goal.
Meanwhile, the Los Angeles Kings, who
were on a tear since acquiring Felix Potvin from
Vancouver, were closing in.
On April 2, the Canucks had won only once
in their past 14 games and with three games to
go lead the Kings by only two points.
Despite out-shooting the Kings 33-16,
only Donald Brashear could sneak one by Potvin
and the Kings won 2-1 on home ice.
A 12-point lead had been surrendered in
the span of a month.
Tied with 88 points each, the teams met
again at GM Place on April 5.
In a complicated scenario, the Canucks
found themselves in a position to clinch a
playoff spot with a win combined with a Phoenix
loss in San Jose.
D Brent Sopel solved Potvin just 33
seconds into the game, but by the end of the
second LA lead 2-1.
Early in the third, RW Harold Druken tied
the game on the power-play and then scored the
winner in overtime to send GM Place into
euphoria. The
fans remained to watch the final moments of the
Sharks' win over the Coyotes on the OrcaVision
screens and the Canucks were in the playoffs for
the first time since 1996.
They could still have finished as high as
sixth place heading into their final game of the
season versus Edmonton on April 7, but lost 4-2
and finished eighth.
Winners only twice in their final 17
games and minus their top two scorers, the
Canucks had the unenviable task of playing the
Colorado Avalanche, who sported the best record
in the NHL during the regular season with 118
points. All
season long, specialty teams had been a weakness
of Vancouver and this was quite evident in Game
1. The
awesome Colorado power-play cashed in three
times out of five to give them a 4-3 lead after
40 minutes.
Halfway through the third, Ed Jovanovski
scored on a brilliant set-up by the Sedins to
tie the score.
The game appeared headed for overtime
until Colorado defenseman Rob Blake (who had
four points on the night) sprung Chris Drury on
a breakaway with 1:07 to play.
Dan Cloutier attempted a poke-check and
missed, leaving Drury to backhand the winning
goal into the yawning cage.
Game 2 was scoreless after a period, but
the Canucks began the second on a five-on-three
power-play.
Brendan Morrison made good by deking
Patrick Roy out of his shorts at the 35 second
mark to take the lead.
That held up until early in the third,
when Ville Nieminen and Milan Hejduk tallied
within 42 seconds of each other to give the Avs
another one-goal win.
The series shifted to Vancouver for Game
3, where the fans were treated to a game that
was fast, hard-hitting, and full of emotion.
Tied 2-2 through two periods, the Canucks
took the lead at 5:32 of the third when Henrik
Sedin made an incredible, spinarama, backhand
pass right on the stick of a streaking Todd
Bertuzzi, who chipped the puck past Roy.
The lead lasted just over four minutes,
however. Adam
Foote's power-play point shot hit the stick of
Denis Pederson and beat Bob Essensa.
In overtime, Daniel Sedin was hauled down
in the slot by Stephen Reinprecht and it looked
like the Canucks were headed for the power-play.
However, after the whistle, Bertuzzi
drove the head of Eric Messier into the ice,
cutting his nose and drawing a roughing minor.
On the ensuing four-on-four, Peter
Forsberg fought off fought off two Canucks
defensemen and put a backhander over Essensa
into the roof of the net to give Colorado a
commanding 3-0 series lead.
Game 4 was scoreless until late in the second
when Drury again avoided a Cloutier poke-check
and scored.
Midway through the third, Colorado scored
three times in 38 seconds to ice the series.
The final was 5-1.
Though it was a sweep, it was anything
but ordinary.
The Canucks actually held the lead for
longer than the Avs in the series and neither
team achieved a two-goal lead until the 9:11
mark of the series' final period.
Considering their depletion, the Canucks
performance versus Colorado was admirable.
The fans agreed, giving their hometown
heroes a five-minute standing ovation at Game
4's conclusion.
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