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[Article] 5 simple things the Canucks still need to get better at despite their hot start


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5 simple things the Canucks still need to get better at despite their hot start

 

By Stephan Roget

1 hour ago
 

There’s not much not to like about the way in which the Vancouver Canucks have started the 2023/24 season.

They’ve emerged from the early-season five-game road trip that followed their home opener with a record of 4-2-0, which is probably a better result than most were expecting. The eight points they’ve gleaned from that are good enough for second place in the Pacific Division and a tie for third place in the Western Conference.

 

The Canucks are also succeeding as individuals. Elias Pettersson has 10 points in six games, placing him in ninth place overall for NHL scoring and fourth overall for points-per-game. His eight assists are third in the league. Thatcher Demko and Casey DeSmith are both among the league leaders in save percentage. With almost 100 minutes played and zero goals against, Quinn Hughes and Filip Hronek have been one of the most dominant pairings in the entire NHL.

 

And yet, as good as things have been, they can always be better.

 

Below are four fairly simple statistical measures that show major areas of improvement for the Canucks as a team:

 

Active sticks and takeaways

 

The Canucks have not played bad defensively. Their 2.50 goals-against-per-game is the seventh-lowest in the NHL, and that’s with a still-unsettled blueline behind the Hughes/Hronek pairing.

 

But if there’s one particular skill that the Canucks lack on the other side of the puck, it’s those active sticks that get into lanes and disrupt passes.

One early season takeaway is that the Canucks aren’t very good at taking away the puck.

 

Canucks Takeaways
Canucks Takeaways Per 60
NHL Rank
28
4.67
6th lowest

 

With just 4.67 takeaways per 60 minutes of play, the Canucks are one of the worst teams in the early goings of the 2023/24 season at picking pockets and forcing turnovers.
 

That could be forgiven if the Canucks were a better possession team, as more time with the puck means fewer opportunities to take it away from the opponents. But the Canucks aren’t that good of a possession team, with their overall Corsi percentage of 47.18% also near the bottom of the league (seventh-lowest).

 

It’s not just active sticks here. There are other factors that contribute to takeaways, like on-ice awareness and timing. But the end result is the same, and that’s that teams playing against the Canucks complete a higher portion of their attempted passes on average. Completed passes eventually add up to goals against, and this is one area that the Canucks could improve upon to ensure their GA stats stay low.

 

 

Drawing more penalties

 

Good news, everyone! The Vancouver Canucks have the third-most-lethal power play in the entire NHL at third overall with 35.3%. That’s not just hot, that’s downright scorching.

 

Now comes the bad news: the Canucks don’t draw enough penalties to fully take advantage of all those man advantages.

 

The results here are almost inverse. Whereas the Canucks have the third-best power play in the league, they draw the second-least amount of penalties, and thus receive the second-fewest power play opportunities.

 

Canucks Penalties Drawn
Canucks Penalties Drawn per 60
NHL Rank
22
3.67
Tied for 2nd lowest

 

 

With just 4.67 takeaways per 60 minutes of play, the Canucks are one of the worst teams in the early goings of the 2023/24 season at picking pockets and forcing turnovers.
 

Having drawn just 22 penalties in six games, the Canucks are clearly not doing some of the things it takes to garner power plays in this league. This could include moving their feet with the puck, going into the tightly-contested areas, and just plain ticking off opponents.

 

Of course, it does take two to tango when it comes to creating penalties, and it does sure seem as though the referees are a little reluctant to pull out their whistles in favour of the Canucks thus far.

 

But a rank of second-lowest in the league can’t be blamed entirely upon the refs. One way or another, the Canucks are going to have to draw more penalties, and find a way to spend more time on the power play in general. Due to their lack of opportunities and efficiency when they do get them, they’ve only spent 28 minutes on the man advantage, the third-fewest in the NHL.

 

 

Allowing fewer shots

 

Demko and DeSmith have played fantastic thus far, with each holding a save-percentage somewhere in the top-15 of NHL goaltenders and looking even better as far as the eye-test is concerned.

 

But goalies can only take you so far, and a team that consistently forces their goaltending to face more shots against than is necessary is playing with fire. At that point, it’s an odds game, and odds are that an excess amount of shots will eventually result in more finding their way into the net.

 

That’s why it’s a problem that the Canucks allow so many shots against per game.
 

Canucks Shots Against per Game
NHL Rank
33.2
7th lowest


In this case, it’s not just how far down the statistical category the Canucks are, but how far away they are from the upper echelons. The best teams in the league at preventing shots, like New York, Carolina, and Los Angeles, are averaging somewhere in the mid-20s for their nightly shots against. The Canucks’ 33.2 is more in line with the dregs of the league, and not too terribly far off the San Jose Sharks’ NHL-worst 37.6 average.

 

Even if Demko and DeSmith continue their strong play, more shots against will inevitably lead to more goals against. Shots that never happen can’t become goals. 

 

 

Taking more shots

 

On the flip-side of that last section comes this one.

 

The Canucks aren’t great at preventing shots, and they’re not great at taking the, either.

With just 26.3 shots per game, the Canucks shoot the fourth-least in the entire NHL, and a full ten shots per game fewer than the league-leading Colorado Avalanche.
 

Canucks Shots per Game
NHL Rank
Canucks Shooting Percentage
NHL Rank
26.3
4th lowest
14.6%
2nd


This is especially frustrating, because when the Canucks do shoot, they’re quite good at it. The Canucks have the fourth-lowest amount of shots but the second-best shooting percentage in the league (just 0.1% behind the league-leading Kings). It stands to reason, then, that if they were to take more shots, they’d score a fair few more goals.

 

Now, there’s nothing wrong with efficiency. Shot selection is important, and a well-timed and well-aimed shot can be worth a dozen lesser shots. Again, however, the volume the Canucks are producing is more in line with the league’s worst — San Jose, St. Louis, Chicago, Washington — and a far cry from the league’s best.

 

It stands to reason that the rate of shots taken needs to get better if the Canucks want to keep scoring as much as they are.

 

 

Preventing high-danger chances

 

 

This is the big one.

 

If shots against inevitably turn into goals against, and shots for inevitably turn into goals for, then what can we say about the importance of high-danger chances?

 

Aside from the straight-up scoreboard, there may be no better measure of likely success in hockey than the ol’ HDCF% column. And, unfortunately, it’s one in which the Canucks have already sunk to the very bottom.

 

Canucks High-Danger Chances For
Canucks High-Danger Chances Against
Canucks HDCF%
NHL Rank
43
69
38.39%
2nd worst


Again, the Canucks are in bad company here. The only two teams in the league with a HDCF% below 40% are the San Jose Sharks and the Vancouver Canucks.

 

It’s really no big deal for the Sharks. They came into the year expected to be the worst team in the league with one of the worst bluelines ever assembled, and they’re playing right to that expectation.

 

The Canucks are a different kettle of fish. They’ve found success despite bleeding high-danger chances against, but that’s a strategy that is all-but-guaranteed to turn against them the longer they try to make it work.
 
There’s ample blame to go around here. There’s that unsettled blueline. There’s shuffling forward lines that are still learning their defensive responsibilities in Rick Tocchet’s system. There’s Tyler Myers.
 
But the point worth making is that if the Canucks continue to allow so many high-danger chances against, they’re going to eventually start allowing more goals against.
 
And nothing will put a damper on a hot start quicker than starting to let more goals into your own net…
 
link to rest of article:

 

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I still think it is a couple of things in which they are still trying to work on. Consistency is getting better and will probably improve over time. So effort "night in and night out" and playing full "60 minute games" is greatly improved but I am not sure if it is where Tocchet would like it to be just yet. The other thing is systems and again Tocchet mentioned players still backing off on plays instead of attacking players. 

When we do get it finally tuned in and the roster is closer to what they would like it to be? Watch out. 😊

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Here's a simple fact I think everyone will agree with.  The Canucks have been outplayed at least one period per game.  We are not playing the full 60 minutes but rather 40 minutes.  That gives us a 2/3 chance of winning which is fine... but there have been times where we get pummeled for 20 minutes.  Either our goalie stands on his head or we now fall behind.

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27 minutes ago, Miss Korea said:

Here's a simple fact I think everyone will agree with.  The Canucks have been outplayed at least one period per game.  We are not playing the full 60 minutes but rather 40 minutes.  That gives us a 2/3 chance of winning which is fine... but there have been times where we get pummeled for 20 minutes.  Either our goalie stands on his head or we now fall behind.


Yeah, we’ve been hemmed in for long stretches, which has produced many of these unfavourable stats. Less so vs. Nashville, but a lot vs. Philly, and the Oilers’ home-opener.

 

We’ll need to see them build on last game, then these stats will likely turn around. 

 

 

 

 

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I don't think many teams manage to play a full 60 minutes every night. They just cover up their weaknesses well. Even Vegas aren't that perfect, but when their defence make mistakes, their forwards help defend and their goalie backs them up.


We've just got to play like that more and we are this season more than last year. Our forwards help defend. Our defenders help score. Our goalie helps save everyone's butts. Our PP is bailing us out big time, and our PK isn't losing games for us.


Last year, we had our D playing badly, our backup goalies leaky and then our PK letting in goals as well. Now we're the opposite, which fills a lot of holes for when we're not playing a perfect 60 minutes.


We could certainly still defend better but we're getting close to becoming a solid defence-first team which is what I want to see, a big shift from the "roll 3 lines" teams we've had in the past that got us nowhere. Our offence is good enough, we have solid stars up front and a killer PP we don't have to worry about. Our 2nd defensive pairing is suspect and not great at matchups against deep teams, that's where we'll run into problems, but again, if we can match that 2nd pairing with a solid defensive forward line and our goalie bail them out when needed, we'll be good.

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