Canucks 2, Leafs 1: No Hughes, no Demko, no problem

The Canucks are playing grinding, get-it-done hockey and it’s working.

Thank goodness, as ever, for Kevin Lankinen.

The Canucks’ other goalie has been solid all season and it was no surprise he was excellent in backstopping the Canucks to a 2-1 win over the Toronto Maple Leafs.

It was a game where the Canucks score first, a good thing, and then commanded the third, also a great thing.

Playing with Jake DeBrusk and Kiefer Sherwood, the line played aggressive two-way hockey, limiting the Leafs’ efforts to create scoring chances from the inside. They even closed out the game, with Pettersson providing the final block to keep the puck from getting anywhere near the Canucks’ net.

It was a pretty complete performance.

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Toronto Maple Leafs’ Pontus Holmberg (29) and Vancouver Canucks’ Brock Boeser (6) vie for the puck during the first period of an NHL hockey game in Vancouver, February 8, 2025.Photo by ETHAN CAIRNS /THE CANADIAN PRESS

What a pass

He looked confident.

And he looked confident again when he nailed the iron later in the opening frame.

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Vancouver Canucks’ Filip Hronek (17) celebrates his goal against the Toronto Maple Leafs during the first period of an NHL hockey game in Vancouver, February 8, 2025.Photo by ETHAN CAIRNS /THE CANADIAN PRESS

But where were the other passes?

Canucks really took a foot off the gas in the second period. They broke out well more than once but they kept slowing the game down on attack, declining to make aggressive cross-ice pass opportunities several times.

And so they found themselves in a 1-1 tie going into the second intermission, when Morgan Rielly scored late in the period.

It was a game that had no business being 1-1.

Nailing the scouting report

A big factor in the win was how the Canucks looked fully prepared for the Leafs’ game plan from the start. More than once the Canucks’ forecheckers got better angles to the puck on the Leafs’ defencemen, winning the race to the puck.

They made it very hard on the Leafs’ breakout too. Toronto does not play a fast game and so keeping their rushes from getting even started was key.

Further, there’s just no breaking down the Canucks’ defensive posture from behind the net, but time and again the Leafs tried to do that.

Look at this shot map:

The shot map of Saturdays' Canucks vs. Leafs game. The Leafs struggled to get inside at five on five.
The shot map of Saturdays’ Canucks vs. Leafs game. The Leafs struggled to get inside at five on five.Photo by Natural Stat Trick

Atmosphere

This was yet another game where the Canucks’ folly of not retaining the Larscheiders stands out.

We heard a lot of defensive Go Canucks Go against Go Leafs Go chants … but not much else.

For a game with so much traditional energy to it, too often the atmosphere was underwhelming.

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Joseph Woll #60 and Chris Tanev #8 of the Toronto Maple Leafs defend against Drew O’Connor #18 of the Vancouver Canucks during the first period of their NHL game at Rogers Arena on February 8, 2025 in Vancouver.Photo by Derek Cain /Getty Images

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