logo

Canucks close out road trip with shootout loss to the Coyotes: Recap and Chance Data

Thomas Drance
12 years ago
alt
Kassian tries to direct a Henrik Sedin feed past Coyotes goalie Mike Smith.
The Canucks newest acquisition impressed in the team’s 2-1 SO loss in Glendale.
(Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)
Tonight’s game between the Coyotes and the Canucks got off to a typically slow start, but somehow on the way to the Forum, it turned into a wide-open hockey game and a goaltenders duel. The Canucks got the opening marker on a first period power-play, when Alex Edler directed a pass in the general vicinity of the Coyotes net. The puck deflected off of multiple Coyotes defenders and past Mike Smith. 
From there the Canucks continued to generate shots, but had few scoring chances and looked lost in the first fifteen minutes of the second frame. I think it’s fair to describe the team’s breakout in the second and third periods as conservative, and so was their cycle game. The team fell into the "get traffic and set up points shots" offense as the Coyotes out-chanced Vancouver’s club mostly against the flow of possession. 
The Coyotes caught a break with 10 minutes to go in the game, when "the Wizard" Ray Whitney capitalized on an ugly rebound that Cory Schneider coughed up off of a 120 foot Keith Yandle shot. The goal shook the Canucks out of their mid-game slumber, and they dominated what remained of the game but couldn’t beat Mike Smith. Smith shut the door over the balance of the third, throughout OT and then stoned both Canucks shooters in the skills competition to earn the NHL’s hottest team yet another two points.
A more detailed recap, scoring chance data, and the statistical three stars and goats after the jump!
– We’ll start with the basic numbers. The Canucks were out-chanced by the Coyotes tonight, by a total tally of 27 to 25. At even-strength the teams were even with 23 scoring chances a piece. The Canucks were totally dominant in a "tied-score game state" and had 16 scoring chances to the Coyotes 7 when the game was knotted. 
– Cory Schneider had an excellent game, and kept the Canucks in the contest – especially in the second period when the Coyotes were absolutely handing a listless Vancouver side their collective asses. Schneider’s heroic aside, it’s fair to say that he struggled with his rebound control all evening – and not just on the play that led to Ray Whitney’s game-tying marker. His rebound control issues even show up in tonight’s chance data as the Coyotes recorded 7 scoring chances on "second chance" opportunities. Some of that is on the Canucks defenders too – but I still think it’s fair to say that Schneider was uncharacteristically fighting the puck tonight.
– The Canucks backup also had issues handling the puck. While he was only tagged with only one giveaway by the official scorer, he deserved at least two (Shane Doan failed to handle the puck on Schneider’s "uncredited giveaway" early in the third, so the official scorer didn’t count it). Rebound control and puck-handling are details: overall Schneider was excellent. It was just one of those games where Schneider, despite turning in his usual brilliant performance, was just a little rough around the edges.
– Mike Smith, on the other hand, never has any issues handling the puck. We even credited him with a "chance created" for his Wes Unseld outlet pass to Martin Hanzal about three and a half minutes into the third period. If Hanzal had capitalized on his wrist-shot (he struck the post) Mike Smith would have earned the heck out of that primary assist.
– Zack Kassian and Sami Pahlsson both made impressive Canucks debuts tonight. Let’s start with Pahlsson who played an effective, low-event game despite starting 8 shifts in the defensive zone, none in the offensive zone and matching up primarily against Shane Doan’s line. Despite hard minutes, Pahlsson came out ahead in that matchup from a possession stand-point. Based on the relative quality of their opposition: it looks to me like Pahlsson’s is the first checking line (they spent most of their time against Doan/Whitney), while Malhotra and Lapierre’s line is the second checking line (their primary matchup was Daymond Lankow). The early returns on Pahlsson are that he comes as advertised. 
– The guy Canucks fans were more excited about seeing today, however, was Zack Kassian – and he didn’t disappoint. His even-strength performance was tantalizing, but ultimately a wash. By the chance data he had a positive differential (+1) and by the possession data he had a slight negative differential (-1). That aside, he won some puck battles, he beaked Biznasty, and demonstrated the speed and on-ice intelligence that made him a top-prospect. Kassian set up a scoring chance, he cycled the puck nicely with Mason Raymond on a sequence that drew a Coyotes penalty, and he did well to read the play while forechecking. The best indication of how well Kassian performed tonight: he started out on the fourth line, and quickly worked his way up to Kesler’s wing for the rest of the game.
– Chris Tanev took his first NHL penalty tonight, and for the first time since October had a pretty rough game. He struggled killing penalties, and when partnered with Aaron Rome, their pairing was something of an adventure. Then again, everyone who is paired with Rome has been something of an adventure lately, and Tanev was steady when he spent time with Hamhuis in the middle portion of tonight’s game. 
– Yes Mason Raymond falls down a lot. Yes, it’s absolutely a mistake to have him shooting second in the shootout. Yes, his shootout move was especially weak tonight (I hate the spin-o-rama anyways). That said, he had a really strong game!
He played on several lines, created a scoring chance, was a +6 in EV scoring chances in the game, looked good centering the 2nd power-play unit and was generally good defensively. He had a miscue on a back-check in the second period where he nearly created a Coyotes chance with one of his patented, slap-stick pratfalls – but otherwise he was effective in both ends. I especially liked a sequence of his near the end of the first when he broke through the slot and directed two dangerous shots (both recorded as scoring chances) on Mike Smith.
I rag on John Garrett a fair bit, so it’s only fair that I give him credit when he adds to my enjoyment of the broadcast. On one Cory Schneider save where the well spoken young man from Marblehead went cross crease to make two difficult stops in quick succession – Garrett marveled at how "high" Schneider is able to "keep his shoulders," while completing an athletic, lateral movement. Having never played goaltender, my understanding of butterfly technique is pretty shallow. So to hear a former NHLer talk about how impressed he is with a particular technical attribute he sees in a younger keeper’s game is both interesting and instructive to me. Let’s have more of that!

The Statistical Three Stars

  1. Mike Smith – quality start, .975 save percentage, 21/21 on scoring chances directed on net.
  2. Dan Hamhuis – +2 EV chance differential, 2 chances created, no chances against in 3:37 SH TOI.
  3. Cory Schneider – quality start, .971 save percentage, 19/20 on scoring chances directed on net.

The Statistical Three Goats

  1. Aaron Rome: -4 EV chance differential, 2 chance against in 36 seconds of SH TOI.
  2. Maxim Lapierre: -7 EV chance differential, -3 fenwick.
  3. Chris Tanev: Noooooo! -2 EV chance differential, 2 chances against in 84 seconds of SH TOI, 2 PIM.

External Resources

Corsi/Fenwick
Zone Starts
Head-to-Head Ice Time
Event Summary

Scoring Chance Data

A chance is counted any time a team directs a shot cleanly on-net from within home-plate. Shots on goal and misses are counted, but blocked shots are not (unless the player who blocks the shot is “acting like a goaltender”). Generally speaking, we are more generous with the boundaries of home-plate if there is dangerous puck movement immediately preceding the scoring chance, or if the scoring chance is screened. If you want to get a visual handle on home-plate, check this image. A big thank you to Vic Ferrari is in order in all of those, because his timeonice.com scripts enable the entire operation.Yes there is an app for this.
Scoring Chances for NHL Game Number 20836
TeamPeriodTimeNoteVANOpponent 
VAN114:55 814222933351113172332415v5
PHX113:17 3723273540322283337415v5
PHX113:08 37232735401220222637415v5
VAN112:24 23202635361923324150895v5
VAN111:36 237172135311131733415v5
VAN19:28 2371421351520283341 5v4
VAN19:01 2371421351517202833415v5
VAN16:35 617202335 313192841504v5
PHX16:23 820262935 1323283741504v5
PHX16:15 820262935 1323283741504v5
PHX15:45 23223335401423334150895v5
VAN15:15 23142233351415232832415v5
PHX14:53 6717212335319334150895v5
VAN12:59 2314213335319334150895v5
VAN12:57 2314213335319334150895v5
PHX12:33 67172123351315232832415v5
PHX11:29 2392735401920222637415v5
VAN219:09 2371721351415232832415v5
PHX218:37 82026293536319334150895v5
PHX218:36 82026293536319334150895v5
PHX218:01 23142233351415232832415v5
PHX216:49 820262935361920264150895v5
PHX216:22 23202635361920264150895v5
PHX215:36 814222933351113172026415v5
PHX214:02 239273540315283337415v5
PHX213:52 239273540315283337415v5
VAN213:17 7817212935314193341505v5
PHX212:36 78172129351923324150895v5
PHX29:03 820293536401319222332375v5
PHX28:25 614172335 311131719414v5
PHX28:22 614172335 311131719414v5
PHX26:05 814222933351415232832415v5
VAN23:26 2892235401220222637415v5
VAN22:30 69212333351415232832415v5
VAN22:28 69212333351415232832415v5
VAN20:46 314222933351923324150895v5
PHX316:35 37142129351119202226415v5
VAN315:01 28202635361113172026415v5
PHX312:15 620232735401220222637415v5
PHX311:47 3727293540311131733415v5
PHX310:171-161422233335311131733415v5
VAN38:16 37272935401114232832415v5
VAN34:28 6917212335314152833415v5
VAN33:45 314222933351923324150895v5
VAN32:55 28202635362022262837415v5
VAN30:59 614222333351415232832415v5
PHX30:09 23172135361113232832415v5
VAN44:22 622233335 1117233241 4v4
VAN42:27 322233335 319223341 4v4
PHX40:49 23173536 311153341 4v4
VAN40:33 321233536 1923283241 4v4
VAN40:18 621233536 1923283241 4v4

Canucks Skaters

#PlayerEVPPSH
2D. HAMHUIS18:411080:43103:3700
3K. BIEKSA21:0012120:59102:2900
6S. SALO17:35643:11004:0812
7D. BOOTH11:27571:08100:0000
8C. TANEV14:18570:00001:2302
9Z. KASSIAN12:27430:00000:0000
14A. BURROWS14:58851:08103:0302
17R. KESLER16:24453:02002:4812
20C. HIGGINS11:10360:00001:5812
21M. RAYMOND16:391151:08100:1600
22D. SEDIN14:06853:02000:0800
23A. EDLER18:42863:18003:4712
26S. PAHLSSON9:43340:00001:5802
27M. MALHOTRA8:13170:00003:0000
29A. ROME15:57590:09000:3602
33H. SEDIN15:091153:02000:0800
35C. SCHNEIDER52:4423234:10108:0014
36J. HANSEN12:07570:00002:2500
40M. LAPIERRE8:40290:00000:1600

Coyotes Skaters

#PlayerEVPPSH
3K. YANDLE21:05966:32210:0000
11M. HANZAL15:49654:12200:0000
12P. BISSONNETTE5:29210:00000:0000
13R. WHITNEY16:43637:05410:0000
14T. PYATT12:07380:04000:0000
15B. GORDON11:02670:00003:2001
17R. VRBATA15:17354:58200:0000
19S. DOAN15:36995:27210:5000
20C. SUMMERS10:54740:00001:2201
22D. LANGKOW11:40630:00000:5000
23O. EKMAN-LARSSON20:387132:05202:4800
26M. STONE12:34730:00000:0000
28L. KORPIKOSKI13:267112:49213:2001
32M. ROZSIVAL19:346130:07002:4800
33A. AUCOIN20:391070:11001:2201
37R. TORRES9:16722:29200:0000
41M. SMITH52:2922238:00414:1001
50A. VERMETTE14:26762:35210:0000
89M. BOEDKER11:16751:26000:0000

Chance Totals (Canucks on the left, Coyotes on the right).

PeriodTotalsEVPP5v3 PPSH5v3 SH
1987610001200
261361100000200
3656500000000
4414100000000
Totals2527232310001400
 

Check out these posts...