1986-1987:
Neely traded during another lousy season
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The Cam Neely deal is considered one
of the worst trades ever made by the
Vancouver Canucks.
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A trade was the main event of the off-season:
On June 6 Cam Neely was dealt to Boston for
Barry Pederson and a first-round draft pick in
1986 (Glen Wesley). It has drawn an
abundance of criticism in hindsight, but at the
time it did not seem to bad at all. In
three seasons in Vancouver, Neely had scored no
more than 39 points, while Pederson had
registered two 100 point seasons in Boston and
no less than 76 in any full season. Though
he would not outscore Pederson this year, Neely
was in the midst of a 72-point breakthrough
season in Boston. It was becoming clear
that a top prospect had got away and the team
was in need of some direction in the
front-office. As if to add insult to injury,
Boston also signed the club's all-time scoring
leader, Thomas Gradin, as a free-agent on June
24. In December the Canucks approached
Kings coach Pat Quinn on becoming the President
and General Manager of the club once his
contract expired at the end of the season.
The move set off a long series of legal
proceedings during which suspensions and
sanctions were placed and overturned. The
Kings fired Quinn, but he was not permitted to
join the Canucks until the conclusion of the
season.
On the ice, Tony Tanti lead the team with 41
goals and 79 points and Pederson would register
a club-leading 52 assists and 76 points and earn
the Cyclone Taylor Award as team MVP.
Petri Skriko notched three consecutive
hat-tricks in November to earn himself NHL
Player of the Week honors. His 74 points
was third on the team. Patrik Sundstrom's
71 points made four straight years of at least
60 points while Stan Smyl's 43 marked the first
time since his rookie season that he failed to
meet that mark. Another plus was the play of
Doug Lidster on defense, who netted a
career-high total of 63 points and broke Dennis
Kearns' 10-year-old record for defenseman
scoring. Jim Sandlak, in his first full
season with the team, was named to the NHL
All-Rookie Team. On the whole, though, the
season was another to be forgotten, as the
Pacific Coliseum was once again the place not to
be in Vancouver. A franchise record low of
10,406 went through the turnstiles on an average
per-game basis. The team finished with 66
points and missed the playoffs.
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