1989-1990: The Soviets invade
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Jyrki Lumme was acquired during the
1989-90 season.
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Expectations were higher than they'd been in
a long time going into this, the franchise's
20th year. The uplifting final few months
of the previous season combined with the
possible acquisitions of Soviet stars C Igor
Larionov and LW Vladimir Krutov lifted
the number of season-ticket sales higher than it
had ever been. New white home uniforms and
the discarding of the infamous "V"s on
them also piqued fan interest. Larionov
was cleared to play early and was with the team
from the start of training camp, while Krutov
got his release from the Red Army later and
joined during the pre-season. They were
part of the Soviet invasion of the NHL.
Krutov became the first Soviet-born player to
score a goal in the NHL, scoring an empty-netter
in Vancouver's second game, a 5-3 home win over
Detroit. The pre-season predictions of
success seemed accurate, as the Canucks jumped
out to an 8-6-1 record after 15 games.
Unfortunately, the team's offensive shortcomings
became apparent after that, as the team won only
six of its next 39 games-a hole it would not
recover from. Krutov and Larionov, from
whom it was hoped a scoring punch would be lead,
had trouble putting up points. Krutov (34
points in 61 games) showed at times that he
still had the quick wrists and puck-handling
abilities that had made him a star overseas, but
had lost speed and had no inclination to play
any sort of physical game. Though Larionov
had little more scoring success than his
countryman (44 points in 74 games), he at least
seemed willing to make more of a defensive
contribution. On Dec 27, Viktor Tikhonov's
Red Army team paid a visit to the Coliseum.
A large crowd gathered to see the Canuck
Russians face their old mates, but it was a
couple of future NHL stars that stole the
spotlight. Arturs Irbe registered a
shutout and Sergei Fedorov a hat trick in Red
Army's 6-0 win.
Desperately seeking a scoring punch of some
kind, on January 21 Pat Quinn dealt Tony Tanti,
Barry Pederson and D Rod Buskas to Pittsburgh
for C Dan Quinn, RW Andrew McBain, and RW Dave
Capuano. It would work to some extent, as
Quinn would lead the team in scoring the rest of
the season (34 points with Vancouver, 63
overall). The team made two deals on the
trading deadline. First they sent Harold
Snepsts, Rich Sutter and a second-round pick in
1990 (Craig Johnson) to St. Louis for D Adrien
Plavsic, a first-round pick in 1990 (Shawn
Antoski) and a second-round pick in 1991 (Craig
Darby). They then sent the draft pick they
acquired from St. Louis to Montreal for D Jyrki
Lumme. The Canucks played well
late in the season, but it was too late to make
a charge at the playoffs. When the Canucks
erased a 5-3 deficit in the last couple of
minutes a game in St. Louis and won in overtime
to stave off elimination, coach Bob McCammon was
asked if he was glad to still be alive. He
responded, "If you call being in an iron
lung alive." On the final game of the
season, Stan Smyl avoided the embarrassment of a
goalless season when he redirected a shot into
the roof of the net in the game's opening
minute. Greg Adams also notched his 30th
goal of the season in a 5-2 win over Los
Angeles. The win gave the Canucks 64
points to finish the season. It was 11
points shy of a playoff spot, and a 10-point
decrease from the previous season. The
game was the last in the NHL for Paul Reinhart,
who posted back-to-back 57-point seasons despite
playing in constant pain. Lost in the
shambles was an outstanding season by goaltender
Kirk McLean, who appeared in 63 games and
arguably played better than he did in his Vezina
nomination season a year earlier.
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