1990-1991: "Life
line" keeps Canucks alive
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Cliff Ronning centered the "life
line."
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Though the previous season was one of great
disappointment on ice, the renewed interest in
the team around the city and province was
noticeable. It showed when a record crowd
turned out at BC Place to watch the NHL Entry
Draft. It turned out to be one of the most
successful drafts in club history. C Petr
Nedved was chosen second overall, followed by LW
Shawn Antoski (28th), D Jiri Slegr (23rd), and
LW Gino Odjick (86th).
There was some worry prior to the draft that
last year's fourth-round pick, RW Pavel
Bure from the Soviet Union, would be
eligible to be re-drafted after the league ruled
the pick invalid. However, the Canucks
managed to get an injunction to prevent this.
The legal battle to follow would carry on for
more than a year. A major change was made
when Stan Smyl, no longer an everyday player,
relinquished the captaincy that he'd held for
eight years to the triumvirate of Doug Lidster,
Trevor Linden, and Dan Quinn. Players
began working out in August, and many became
worried when Vladimir Krutov was nowhere to be
found, and Igor Larionov had not heard from him
at all. When training camp began,
"The Tank" was horribly out of shape
(even more so than the previous season).
Management, incensed by his lack of preparation,
accused Krutov of breaching his contract and cut
him at the end of pre-season. When asked
if there was any chance of Krutov playing for
the Canucks again, Brian Burke answered with a
firm, "None." Krutov filed
suit against the Canucks, and the team had
another nasty legal battle on its hands.
All of this was going on while they were trying to
get Nedved signed prior to the start of the
season.
The Nedved deal was finally done just before
midnight on the night before the opening game of
the season. Once the season started, the
same old problems surfaced the biggest being a
lack of offence. Petri Skriko scored an
early season OT goal and then didn't score
another for the team. He played sparingly
for the next few months before being traded to
Boston for a second-round pick in 1992 (C Mike
Peca). Dan Quinn was a disappointment as
well, and many fans questioned his work ethic.
Nedved had trouble adjusting to the rugged NHL
style and only scored 16 points in 61 games.
Only Linden seemed to live up to, and in fact,
exceed expectations, as he was working his way
to a 70-point season. But the Canucks were
stuck in their familiar spot in the Smythe
Division -- fifth place -- and Bob McCammon's
job seemed in jeopardy. On January 31 he
had Jack McIlhargey work beside him on the
bench, while Mike Murphy worked in the press box
(it was usually the other way around). In
a rare burst of offence, the Canucks shelled
Rangers' goalie Mike Richter with a club-record
63 shots. Only three went in, and the game
ended in a tie. After the game, Pat Quinn
relieved McCammon of his duties. Making
his debut behind the Canucks bench, the Canucks
lost 9-1 in Los Angeles. Things looked
grim indeed in Canuckland. The goaltending
situation, which had seemed strong earlier in
the season, was now becoming a worry. Kirk
McLean was having an off season, and in February
suffered a hand injury that sidelined him for
two months. Troy Gamble was having a fine
rookie campaign and looked poised to steal the
number one job in goal until a scary and bizarre
series of concussions had him in and out of the
lineup for the remainder of the season.
Bob Mason was recalled from Milwaukee of the IHL
to fill the void. On March 5, Quinn made a
move that changed the entire outlook of the
team. Dan Quinn and Garth Butcher were
sent to St. Louis for LW Geoff Courtnall,
LW Sergio Momesso, C Cliff Ronning,
and D Robert Dirk. As well, D Dana
Murzyn was acquired from Calgary for
Ronnie Stern and D Kevan Guy. In their
first game after the deals, in Pittsburgh, the
Canucks lost 4-1. However, Trevor Linden
set up Courtnall for the Canuck goal, and that
would be a sign of things to come. With
Ronning centering, the Canucks now had an
offensive line. From that point on, the
"Life Line" would produce almost all
of Vancouver's offense. With three games
remaining in the season, the Canucks trailed
Winnipeg by two points for the final playoff
spot in the Smythe. Fortunately, two of
the remaining games would be at home against
Winnipeg. In the first of those meetings,
the Canucks and Jets would play two scoreless
periods, thanks to solid netminding from both
Mason and Bob Essensa. Momesso would break
things open in the third, scoring twice.
The rest was up to Mason. Though his
shutout was broken late in the game, he earned
first star honors in a 3-1 win. After a
7-2 loss in Calgary, the Canucks hosted the Jets
again a week later on March 31, tied with 63
points each. The Canucks had won more
games and held the tiebreaker, but the Jets had
a game in hand. A win by either team would
clinch that team a playoff spot, while a tie
would mean that both team's fate would be
decided when the Jets met Edmonton in their
final game. A jubilant sell-out crowd came
to the Coliseum to cheer on the home team, but
they were silenced as the Jets took a 2-0 lead
into the third period. But, early in the
third, the "Life Line" lived up to its
billing as Linden and Ronning scored in the
first nine minutes of the third to tie the
score. The game remained deadlocked until
late in the third, when Winnipeg's Phil Sykes
was ejected from the game with a high-sticking
major. Still on the power-play in
overtime, Courtnall deflected Linden's shot past
Essensa and the Canucks were in the playoffs.
Few gave the Canucks a chance to win more than a
game against the Kings, who had finished 39
points ahead of them in the regular season
standings. But, as we found out two years
ago, strange things happen in the playoffs.
A strange thing happened in the third period of
Game 1. The Kings looked to be in the
driver's seat, leading 5-3, until Geoff
Courtnall scored twice early in the period to
complete his hat-trick and tie the score.
At approximately the midway point of the period,
Cliff Ronning unleashed a perfect wrist shot
that eluded Kelly Hrudey low to the glove side
and the Canucks took a 6-5 lead, which they
managed to hang on to in a frantic final few
minutes. The momentum continued into Game
2, as the Canucks took a 2-0 lead into the third
period. Could they take a 2-0 series lead
back to Vancouver? Doing their best to prevent
that from happening, the Kings offense came
alive in the third and struck twice to tie the
score. The assault continued into
overtime, but Troy Gamble played like a man
possessed, stopping everything. Finally,
at 11:03 of the extra frame, Wayne Gretzky
lifted a shot over Gamble and into the roof of
the net, tying the series at a game each.
The third game saw Ronning open the scoring in
the second period and his goal held up until
Gretzky tied the score with barely eight minutes
to play. In overtime, Linden set up
Ronning, who made a nifty move on a defenseman
and picked a high corner of the net to give the
Canucks the win and regain the lead in the
series. The image of Ronning riding his
stick out to center ice while pumping his right
fist is burned into the minds of many Canucks
fans. The Kings had now figured that the
Canucks were a one line team and by shutting
down the "Life Line", they could
probably shut down the Canucks. Though
Ronning managed another goal in Game Four, it
was the line of Gretzky, Tomas Sandstrom, and
Tony Granato that put on the real show, leading
the Kings to a convincing 6-1 victory.
Game 5 was more of the same, as Gretzky and Co.
struck often en route to a 7-4 win and the first
lead of the series for the Kings. The
Kings were on a roll and could now close out the
series in Vancouver. The Canucks managed
to curtail the Kings' offensive onslaught in
Game 6, which was a tight-checking affair, tied
1-1 with overtime looming. However,
miscommunication around the Vancouver goal with
just over seven minutes to play provided Dave
Taylor with an easy tap in to give the Kings a
2-1 lead. Mike Donnelly added two
empty-net goals to wrap up the game and series.
The team had fallen short, but the fans gave the
Canucks a standing ovation as they left the ice.
The team seemed to be coming together. Surely
a breakthrough season could not be far away.
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