1993-1994: So close...
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The trade for Jeff Brown (above),
Bret Hedican and Nathan Lafayette in
1994 was a big reason why the Canucks
made the finals.
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In the summer, plans were announced to build
a new 20,000-seat arena adjacent to BC Place
between the Georgia and Dunsmuir Street viaducts
to open in the fall of 1995. In addition,
Northwest Sports (the Canucks parent company,
now run by Arthur Griffiths) would pursue an NBA
franchise to be co-tenants with the
Canucks. For the second straight year, the
Canucks would lose one of their top
centers. Petr Nedved, who had a
breakthrough season in 1992-93, was not happy
with the Canucks' contract offer and opted to
hold out and play for Canada's Olympic Team
instead. Suddenly, with the retirement of
Ryan Walter and the loss of C Anatoli Semenov to
Anaheim in the Expansion Draft, the center-ice
position was one of a great question mark.
There didn't seem to be any problems right away,
though, as the Canucks jumped out to a 7-1-0
start. But slowly the team started to fall
back and on January 2, the Canucks lost 2-0 to
Montreal to even their record at 19-19-0.
From that point on, the Canucks did not
waver more than four points from the .500
mark. After a relatively average first
half (missing eight games due to injury), Pavel
Bure exploded in the second half-scoring 40
goals in his last 42 games. Bure's stellar
numbers in March (19 goals and 30 points in 16
games) earned him NHL Player of the Month
honours. On March 23, he scored his 50th
of the season into an empty net in a 6-3 win in
Los Angeles, but this event was overshadowed by
Wayne Gretzky's 802nd NHL goal, which came in
the second period, to make him the league's
all-time leading goal scorer. Two days
prior to that game, the Petr Nedved fiasco was
finally settled. Weeks earlier, Nedved was
signed to play in St. Louis, but the mediated
compensation (C Craig Janney) refused to report
to Vancouver. Finally, the Canucks traded
Janney's rights back to the Blues in exchange
for D Jeff Brown, D Bret Hedican, and C Nathan
LaFayette. On April 7, Canucks owner Frank
Griffiths passed away after a lengthy
illness. For the remainder of the season
and the playoffs, the team wore a patch that
read "2 PTS F.G." in recognition of
his signature phrase, "Two
points." On the final game of the
season, Bure once again reached the 60-goal
plateau, which was enough to earn him the NHL
goal-scoring title. His 107 points was
good for fifth place in league scoring.
The Canucks beat Anaheim in the game 2-1 to
finish one game over .500, with 85 points.
The win was G Kay Whitmore's 36th in two seasons
with the Canucks, moving him into fifth place in
the franchise wins category. In the new
conference-based playoff format, the
seventh-seeded Canucks would face the
second-seeded Calgary Flames in the first round.
Click here to re-live the magical playoff
run of 1994...
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