1988-1989:
Otto's foot stomps out promising season
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Steve Weeks provided solid back-up
netminding in '88-'89.
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Quinn secured a good chunk of the Canucks
future by drafting RW Trevor Linden
second overall in the entry draft, and would
continue his wheeling and dealing that had begun
the previous summer. The Canucks only had
to part with a third-round pick in 1989 (Veli-Pekka
Kautonen) to obtain the services of veterans D
Paul Reinhart and LW Steve Bozek from Calgary on
September 6. The next day, D Robert
Nordmark and a second-round pick in 1989 (Craig
Darby) arrived from St. Louis for Dave Richter.
The Canucks would have their power-play point
men for the coming season in order, and gave up
hardly anything to get them. The
free-agent signing of Harold Snepsts would
return a familiar face to the Canucks blueline,
and suddenly defense seemed to be a strength of
the Canucks. Combined with solid
netminding from McLean and Weeks, only the
powerhouses, Montreal and Calgary, would
surrender fewer goals than the Canucks this
season. This would also be the grittiest
team that Vancouver fans had seen in a while.
With Garth Butcher, LW Rich Sutter, Stan Smyl,
Jim Sandlak, RW Ronnie Stern, D/LW Darryl
Stanley, and Snepsts in the line-up, Vancouver
was suddenly a not-so-pleasant stop on a western
road trip.
Things looked bright when the Canucks went
6-1-1 in the pre-season and on an early-season
visit to Edmonton, ended a three-year, 27-game
winless streak against the Oilers with a 6-2
victory. Outbursts of six goals would not be
common, though. Though they would only
lose by more than three goals once all season,
goal production was a problem. Both Tony
Tanti (47 points) and Stan Smyl (25) had big
drop-offs in production and, by association, so
did Greg Adams (33) and Barry Pederson (41).
The scoring slack was picked up somewhat by
Petri Skriko (66 points), Trevor Linden (59),
and by the defensemen Reinhart (57) and Nordmark
(41). Even with that, however, by
mid-season the Canucks were only producing
results that were marginally better than the
previous few seasons and only remained in the
playoff race due to an unexpectedly poor season
in Winnipeg. A club-record seven-game
winning streak in February would change
everything. All at once everything
suddenly came together and a Canucks game was
the hottest ticket in town. Jim Sandlak
was the hero in the seventh win, a
tight-checking game against Toronto that was
played in front of a packed house and a national
television audience. His rebound goal in
overtime off of a Snepsts point shot after an
offensive-zone face-off (reminiscent of Nill's
goal seven years earlier) sent the home crowd
into frenzy. The team would continue to
delight the Coliseum faithful, racking up a
12-game home unbeaten streak (11-0-1). The
Canucks nailed down a playoff spot on March 23
and threatened to overtake Edmonton for third
place in the Smythe before tapering off in the
last couple of weeks. The 74 points would
earn them a playoff date against the NHL's
number one team in the regular season, the
Calgary Flames.
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Trevor Linden was runner-up to New
York's Brian Leetch in 1989 Calder
Trophy voting.
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This was going to be a short series.
Nobody was predicting more than five games.
Jim Taylor of the Vancouver Province even
predicted that it would be the first
best-of-seven series to be settled in three.
The Flames were given 3:1 odds to win the
Stanley Cup, while the long shot Canucks' odds
were set at 100:1. In the first game,
however, the Canucks managed to stay within a
goal of the powerful Flames until Robert
Nordmark was able to tie the game with a
power-play goal in the third period. In
the dying minutes, Harold Snepsts made a game
saving save when Kirk McLean was caught out of
position. The Saddledome crowd had barely
settled into their seats when ex-Flame Paul
Reinhart exacted revenge on the team that was so
quick to part with him by sending a wrist shot
through traffic over Mike Vernon's left
shoulder. To the surprise of many,
the Canucks had won 4-3 and struck first blood
in the series. In the next two games,
however, the Flames showed everybody how they
managed 117 points during the regular season,
dominating the Canucks in all facets of the game
in scoring 5-2 and 4-0 victories. It
looked doubtful that the series would last
longer than five games. But the Vancouver
Canucks weren't going to have any part of that.
They bothered and pestered the more talented
Flames into taking stupid penalties, resulting
in four power-play goals and a shocking 5-0
lead, which chased Vernon from the game.
The Flames came alive in the third period, but
simply ran out of time. The Canucks hung
on for a 5-3 win and tied the series. But
four games in five nights had taken its toll,
and the overworked Canucks were no match for the
depth of the Flames in game five. The
Calgarians cruised to another 4-0 win, and
looked to end the series two nights later.
Unfortunately for the Flames, the 16,123 fans
that packed the Coliseum on the night of April
13 had no intention of seeing that happen.
The building was alive in a way that hadn't been
seen in Vancouver since 1982. After an
early Flames goal, Trevor Linden brought the
crowd to its feet in the second period when he
split the defense and scored a beautiful goal to
tie the score. The Flames regained the
lead, but three goals in 2:18 late in the
period, including Garth Butcher's first goal all
season, would give the Canucks a two-goal
cushion headed into the final frame. The
Flames did not want to go to a seventh game and
demonstrated that in the third period.
They got to within a goal and pressed for the
equalizer on the power-play when C Brian Bradley
intercepted a cross-point pass and had nobody
between himself and Vernon. He faked to
the forehand and deked to the backhand, scoring
to giving the Canucks a 5-3 lead and turning the
Coliseum into a madhouse. The deal was
sealed with an empty-netter at 19:56 and the
series was, incredibly, headed back to Cow Town
for a seventh game. The tone of
nervousness that set across Southern Alberta was
unmistakable. A loss to the lowly Canucks
would not be tolerated. Surely Terry Crisp
would not keep his job should the Flames lose
this game. Things began well for the home
team. Harold Snepsts, remembered for his
blunder in the '82 finals, attempted to block a
point-shot and inadvertently re-directed the
puck under the crossbar behind McLean at 19:59
of the first period to give the Flames a 2-0
lead. In the second period the Canucks
roared back to tie the score but the Flames took
a 3-2 lead into the third. Trevor Linden
tied the game early in the period and then
pressed hard for the win, but by the end of the
period, the game was still tied, 3-3. In
overtime, there were numerous chances for each
team, especially the Canucks. Doug Lidster and
Tony Tanti both had glorious chances to win it.
Petri Skriko hit the post when he had a
half-empty net to shoot at. And Stan Smyl
had his breakaway but was stymied by Vernon.
The Flames looked to have won the game at
one point, but the net had been dislodged before
the puck crossed the goal line. Finally,
in the final minute, the Flames rushed into the
Vancouver zone. Jim Peplinski sent a
seemingly harmless shot toward the net that
re-directed, perhaps intentionally, off the
skate of Joel Otto in the goal crease and into
the net. There was a lot of confusion, but
the goal stood. David had come so close to
knocking off Goliath. But it was not to
be.
That summer, several Canucks were
acknowledged for their performances during the
season by becoming the first Canucks to be
nominated for post-season awards. Though
Trevor Linden (Calder Trophy), Kirk McLean (Vezina),
Stan Smyl (Masterton), and coach Bob McCammon
(Adams) came away empty-handed, they, along with
all of their teammates, had truly given the fans
of Vancouver a series to remember.
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