Vancouver Canucks eager to build on playoff experience as new season begins

The Vancouver Canucks got a taste of playoff hockey last season — now they’re hungry for more. 

Battling through two gritty post-season matchups is an experience the team will draw on as it heads into a new campaign, said right-winger Brock Boeser. 

“Playoffs is a blast, and it was awesome that we had success,” he said at training camp in Penticton, B.C. “And I think it’s only going to help us for this year.”

The Canucks� finished the 2023-24 regular season atop the Pacific Division with a 50-23-9 record and, in April, Vancouver hosted its first playoff game since 2015.

Groups of hockey fans, in a park, seem to celebrate something offscreen.
Fans watch from a public viewing party as the Vancouver Canucks face the Edmonton Oilers during the Stanley Cup playoffs. Vancouver hosted a playoff game for the first time since 2015 during the 2023-24 season. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

After dispatching the Nashville Predators in six, the Canucks met the Edmonton Oilers in the second round. Both teams slugged through a seven-game series where Edmonton emerged victorious. 

Vancouver made strides last year, but head coach Rick Tocchet has challenged his players to up their game once again this season. 

“To get to the next plateau, there’s higher expectations and it’s going to be hard,” he said. “We know that.” 

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It was a busy summer for the Canucks front office as general manager Patrik Allvin tinkered with the lineup in free agency. 

Instead of signing key midseason acquisitions Elias Lindholm and Nikita Zadorov to big deals, Allvin inked left-winger Jake DeBrusk to a seven-year, US$38.5-million contract. 

Lindholm and Zadorov both landed with DeBrusk’s former team, the Boston Bruins, while Vancouver said goodbye to backup goalie Casey DeSmith, veteran blue liner Ian Cole and depth forwards Sam Lafferty and Ilya Mikheyev.

DeBrusk, who had 19 goals and 21 assists for Boston last season, is expected to line up with star centre Elias Pettersson and provide the star centre with some offensive assistance. 

It’s a role DeBrusk relishes.

A hockey player smiles as he looks to embrace another one.
Vancouver Canucks’ Jake DeBrusk (74) celebrates his goal against the Calgary Flames during overtime of a NHL pre-season game in Abbotsford, B.C., on Sept. 25. (Ethan Cairns/The Canadian Press)

“I personally don’t really care how I do personally in terms of statistics. If we’re winning, that’s why I’m here, to help. But in saying that, I feel like I can add some elements to the team,” he said. 

“There’s obviously lots of great players already, but I think that I could fit in pretty seamlessly. That’s why I chose to come here.”

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New signings, key injuries

Allvin also signed left-wingers Danton Heinen (Boston) and Kiefer Sherwood (Nashville), and bruising defencemen Derek Forbort (Boston) and Vincent Desharnais (Edmonton). He rounded out the additions with sniper Daniel Sprong (Detroit Red Wings) and goalie Kevin Lankinen (Nashville). 

“It’s a lot of speed, a lot of character. The new guys seem to fit in really great. Great guys off the rink as well,” said Canucks centre J.T. Miller.

“They’re all very eager to learn. They all played on good teams prior to this. So they know the expectation and I think there’s a sense of excitement in the group right now.”

A bald man looks at another bald man who is delivering a news conference
Vancouver Canucks head coach Rick Tocchet, back left, listens as general manager Patrik Allvin speaks during a news conference ahead of the NHL hockey team’s training camp, in Penticton, B.C., on Sept. 18. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

Vancouver will be without one major player to start the season. 

All-star goalie Thatcher Demko announced ahead of training camp that he’s working his way back from a muscle injury in his knee. No date has been set for an expected return. 

Tocchet said he plans to have rookie netminder Arturs Silovs in goal when the Canucks open their season against the Calgary Flames on Wednesday. 

A goalie in blue training gear with the Canucks logo lifts his mask with a padded hand with a blurred-out Rogers logo on the white boards behind him.
Vancouver Canucks goalie Thatcher Demko lifts his mask off his face while practising with coaches during the opening day of the NHL hockey team’s training camp, in Penticton, B.C., on Sept. 19, 2024. No date has been set for Demko’s return from a knee injury.  (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

The 23-year-old Latvian got ample experience with high-pressure play last spring when he was elevated from Vancouver’s third-string goalie to starter in a matter of days during the playoffs. In 10 post-season appearances, he posted a 5-5 record with a .898 save percentage, a 2.91 goals-against average and a shutout. 

“We’ve put [Silovs] in some tough spots and he’s done a nice job for us,” Tocchet said.

Tocchet took home the Jack Adams award as the league’s top coach last season, while Canucks captain Quinn Hughes won the Norris Trophy as the NHL’s best defenceman. Hughes led all NHL blue liners in scoring with 92 points (17 goals, 75 assists). 

Missing home

Canucks fans won’t get a chance to watch their team play in Vancouver for nearly a month in the middle of the season. 

After hosting the Toronto Maple Leafs on Feb. 8, the Canucks will go a full three-and-a-half weeks before playing another home game against the Anaheim Ducks on March 5. 

In between, there’ll be international hockey with the 4 Nations Face Off in Montreal and Boston before Vancouver heads out on a five-game road swing through the Western Conference. 

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Kingsley Bailey, who operates Vancouver Ticket Services, says ticket prices have noticeably increased at the Canucks’ home of Rogers Arena since last season after the team’s playoff success.

Bailey says eager Canucks fans were waiting to see how the team performs this season, but acknowledged that support will suffer if the team has a poor start, and ticket prices remain high.

“At the end of the day, it’s not really gonna hurt the team much because they’re still going to make their money from their TV sales, their everything else, but it will hurt the having no fans in the stands,” he told CBC News.

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Posted in CBC