Popular Post JoGuitar Posted November 14, 2023 Popular Post Posted November 14, 2023 (edited) VS Horvat to play at Vancouver for 1st time since trade to Islanders Center spent 9 seasons with Canucks, who 'hold a special place in my heart' © Jason Mowry/Getty Images ByTom Gulitti @TomGulittiNHL NHL.com Staff Writer 9:45 AM Bo Horvat has been feeling more at home with the New York Islanders this season, but he's also been preparing mentally for his return to his previous NHL home. The 28-year-old center will play at Rogers Arena for the first time since being traded to the Islanders on Jan. 30 when they visit the Vancouver Canucks on Wednesday (10 p.m. ET; TNT, MAX, SNP, TVAS). "It's always in the back of my mind," Horvat said Monday. "It's going to be an emotional night. I had a lot of great memories in Vancouver, so to revisit the city, it's going to be a little weird going into the visitors dressing room. But I had so many great memories there, it's going to be a fun night." It's an important game for the Islanders (5-6-3), who have lost five in a row (0-4-1). Horvat is more comfortable with New York now, though and that's translating to his play. He is second on the Islanders with 11 points (four goals, seven assists) in 13 games this season. That feeling didn't come as easily last season when Horvat had 16 points (seven goals, nine assists) in 30 regular-season games with New York after getting 54 points (31 goals, 23 assists) in 49 regular-season games with Vancouver before the trade. "It was tough," he said. "To finally be settled and everything and get a camp under my belt, it definitely feels nice to start that way." Horvat had set down roots during his nine seasons with Vancouver (2014-23), where he had 420 points (201 goals, 219 assists) in 621 regular-season games and 16 points (11 goals, five assists) in 23 Stanley Cup Playoff games. But the Canucks, who selected Horvat with the No. 9 pick in the 2013 NHL Draft, qualified for the playoffs just twice during his tenure and advanced beyond the first round once -- when they reached the second round before losing to the Vegas Golden Knights in seven games in 2020. "We had some good years but also had some dog days there with the rebuild and everything," Horvat said. "There were a lot of great memories there, have some great friends and I started my family there. It'll always hold a special place in my heart." The Canucks were rebuilding last season, so with Horvat in the final year of his contract and potentially headed for unrestricted free agency, they traded him to the Islanders for forward Anthony Beauvillier, forward prospect Aatu Raty and a first-round pick in the 2023 NHL Draft. Although the trade didn't take Horvat by surprise, it was still disconcerting having to move across the continent and getting acclimated to a new area with his wife Holly, their 3-year-old son Gunnar and 18-month-old daughter Tulsa. He also felt additional pressure after signing an eight-year contract on Feb. 5. "You hear stories and different situations of guys getting traded, but until you actually go through it, it's a lot different," Horvat said. "You try not to let it (affect you), but when you're worrying about different other things such as your family and living and all that, it takes a toll on you." On the ice, adapting to the Islanders' system took some time. Off it, Horvat and his family felt like visitors on Long Island while living in a hotel following the trade until moving into an apartment before the start of playoffs. He pressed more in the playoffs and had two points (one goal, one assist) in six games in a first-round loss to the Carolina Hurricanes. "I think I put a little bit too much pressure on myself, to be honest with you," he said. "Instead of going in and enjoying it and playing in the moment, I think I was a little too hard on myself sometimes trying to produce and trying to be the guy and I think it kind of took away from my game a little bit. I put that pressure on myself, and I expect a lot out of myself, too, and sometimes it backfires on you. "I want to get back there this year and prove myself that I can do it." Although Horvat helped the Islanders qualify for the playoffs last season with his defensive play, prowess on face-offs (58.5 percent) and other contributions coach Lane Lambert said were, "totally underappreciated" by outsiders, Lambert said he can see a difference in Horvat's play this season, playing mostly with Mathew Barzal on one of his wings. "I think this year, knowing where he's at, being settled, family being settled, there's on-ice stuff and off-ice stuff that he can be more comfortable with," Lambert said. "He's got some chemistry with certain guys and there's no question that he feels more comfortable here. … I think what he's doing, he's using his speed, he's, from that standpoint, definitely creating a lot of chances." Horvat said it helped that he converted on some of his early chances, including a two-goal game against the New Jersey Devils on Oct. 20. "Obviously, when the puck is going in, it definitely feels good to be part of that," he said. "But, for me, I'm just trying to be that 200-foot player that they brought me in to be and, obviously, the goals will come." Moving into a house with his family in the offseason has made them feel more a part of the community. They're still getting to know the area around where they live, but they should have plenty of time for that because of the stability provided by his contract. "That's huge for my family," Horvat said. "That was a big thing that I wanted was to be in one spot for a long time and not have to worry about what's going to happen next year or where the kids are going to school and all that kind of stuff. And Long Island is just such a great family spot for us, and we love it so far and can't wait to spend another eight years here." NHL.com staff writer Derek Van Diest contributed to this story Projected Line-ups: Team Record: Canucks 15 GP - 11 W - 3 L - 1 OT/SO L Islanders 14 GP - 5 W - 6 L - 3 OT/SO L Stat Leaders: Edited November 16, 2023 by JoGuitar 8 5 3 2 1
Popular Post Jess Posted November 14, 2023 Popular Post Posted November 14, 2023 Thanks Bo, I really appreciate what you did in your 9 years and over 600 games here. Cheers. And now, to destroy your hopes and dreams with the new and improved Canucks 13 2 2 2
Popular Post 5forFighting Posted November 14, 2023 Popular Post Posted November 14, 2023 (edited) Shouldn't have said what he said when he left. Canucks have 7 players in the top 200 of the NHL and Hronek is about to leap frog him. It worked out well for us. Edited November 14, 2023 by 5forFighting 3 1 1
Popular Post JoGuitar Posted November 14, 2023 Author Popular Post Posted November 14, 2023 We’ll play a nice video for him during a TV Time-out. Everybody will cheer and he’ll wave. And we’ll beat them 5-3 in his honour 2 1 3 2 1
Popular Post Jess Posted November 14, 2023 Popular Post Posted November 14, 2023 2 minutes ago, 5forFighting said: Shouldn't have said what he said when he left. Canucks have 7 players in the top 200 of the NHL and Hronek is about to leap frog him. It worked out well for us. Hmm...It's not like Vancouver was on fire at the time, right? Never understood why Canuck fans took this so personally. We were trending hard downwards and the management had just treated a beloved coach like trash. Of course things sucked in Vancouver at the time. Bo was just being honest about how bad things were in Vancouver and butthurt fans couldn't deal with that. 2 2 2 5 4 1
Popular Post Jaimito Posted November 14, 2023 Popular Post Posted November 14, 2023 Just win. I don't care if it's free or not 3 2 1 2
Rubik Posted November 14, 2023 Posted November 14, 2023 1 minute ago, JoGuitar said: Everybody will cheer and he’ll wave. after his comments? there's definitely going to be some booing 2
Popular Post JoGuitar Posted November 14, 2023 Author Popular Post Posted November 14, 2023 Just now, Rubik said: after his comments? there's definitely going to be some booing Having gone through the Pavel Bure, and Ryan Kesler departures I usually err on the side of Vancouver being pretty polite to its former long serving members. He apologized for his comments, I think we can all move on. 2 2 2 1
Jess Posted November 14, 2023 Posted November 14, 2023 2 minutes ago, JoGuitar said: Having gone through the Pavel Bure, and Ryan Kesler departures I usually err on the side of Vancouver being pretty polite to its former long serving members. He apologized for his comments, I think we can all move on. In the end, I agree, but I do think it's recent enough that you'll get some boos. Give it five years and fans will get over their hurt feelings.
Popular Post Barn Burner Posted November 14, 2023 Popular Post Posted November 14, 2023 3 minutes ago, -AJ- said: Hmm...It's not like Vancouver was on fire at the time, right? Never understood why Canuck fans took this so personally. We were trending hard downwards and the management had just treated a beloved coach like trash. Of course things sucked in Vancouver at the time. Bo was just being honest about how bad things were in Vancouver and butthurt fans couldn't deal with that. Sorry AJ, but I call BS on that. He didn't need to say anything. It was an intentional shot at the team. He should've kept his mouth shut. Obviously his own disdain reared its ugly head. I liked him as a player, for the most part. A little too soft for me, considering he's Miller's size, but he's gone. And we got a good return. All the best Bo. 1 6 3 1
Popular Post 5forFighting Posted November 14, 2023 Popular Post Posted November 14, 2023 9 minutes ago, -AJ- said: Hmm...It's not like Vancouver was on fire at the time, right? Never understood why Canuck fans took this so personally. We were trending hard downwards and the management had just treated a beloved coach like trash. Of course things sucked in Vancouver at the time. Bo was just being honest about how bad things were in Vancouver and butthurt fans couldn't deal with that. In less than a year we are battling for the #1 spot in the league. He was part of the problem, not part of the solution. We take it personally because WE ARE ALL CANUCKS. Bo should have kept his comments to himself and said the right thing. I think he will be booed and cheered tomorrow. I liked Bo, even after the trade, until that comment. That is not the comment of a captain. Hank never said anything like that, even in all the horrible years. 3 minutes ago, Barn Burner said: Sorry AJ, but I call BS on that. He didn't need to say anything. It was an intentional shot at the team. He should've kept his mouth shut. Obviously his own disdain reared its ugly head. I liked him as a player, for the most part. A little too soft for me, considering he's Miller's size, but he's gone. And we got a good return. All the best Bo. This is the correct take. 6 1 1
Jess Posted November 14, 2023 Posted November 14, 2023 3 minutes ago, Barn Burner said: Sorry AJ, but I call BS on that. He didn't need to say anything. It was an intentional shot at the team. He should've kept his mouth shut. Obviously his own disdain reared its ugly head. I liked him as a player, for the most part. A little too soft for me, considering he's Miller's size, but he's gone. And we got a good return. All the best Bo. Sure, he could've kept his mouth shut, but I won't disparrage him for simply telling the truth about how he felt. 1 1
Jess Posted November 14, 2023 Posted November 14, 2023 6 minutes ago, Jaimito said: Meh, Wolanin deserves it way more, but I like Hirose too. Let's see how he does if he plays. I expect he will, given that Soucy was playing LD. 1
Googlie Posted November 14, 2023 Posted November 14, 2023 Wolanin, playing better, or Irwin. 60+ NHL games last season, would have been better callups, but we'd lose either to waivers on reassignment. So Hirose, waiver exempt, is more logical 2 1 1
Popular Post Rusty Shackleford Posted November 14, 2023 Popular Post Posted November 14, 2023 Bo did us a favour for wanting the pay day he did and we're better off for it. Miller has shown this season that he was the right player keeping. Thanks, Bo, I didn't care about your comment and agree with you that Rogers was dead during your era. It's not your fault we sucked. Now let's beat these Islanders. 1 8 1 1 1
Mike Vanderhoek Posted November 14, 2023 Posted November 14, 2023 12 minutes ago, -AJ- said: Meh, Wolanin deserves it way more, but I like Hirose too. Let's see how he does if he plays. I expect he will, given that Soucy was playing LD. Wolanin brings more offense then defensive reliability. Hirose is the smarter player, reliable in all zones and makes the smart play getting pucks out of the zone. For a brief stint he can come in and not be noticed.
Popular Post John.Tallhouse Posted November 14, 2023 Popular Post Posted November 14, 2023 Canucks win in regulation, I’ll tell you that for free. 5 1 3
Popular Post Chon derry Posted November 14, 2023 Popular Post Posted November 14, 2023 2 minutes ago, Rusty Shackleford said: Bo did us a favour for wanting the pay day he did and we're better off for it. Miller has shown this season that he was the right player keeping. Thanks, Bo, I didn't care about your comment and agree with you that Rogers was dead during your era. It's not your fault we sucked. Now let's beat these Islanders. At the time I was choked about the trade, with miller’s antics last year but in hindsite I’ll have to eat my words. Miller’s play coupled with Horvats apparent disgruntledness. They made the right choice. I’ll tell ya that for free! 5 1
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