PITTSBURGH — After going 24-for-24 in closing out regulation wins when leading into the third period, the Vancouver Canucks finally stumbled Thursday by allowing the Pittsburgh Penguins to salvage a point. But the Canucks still took two, which is what confidence does for you.
Elias Pettersson scored his second goal of the game — and seventh in four games — on a breakaway at 3:05 of overtime as the Canucks survived ageless Sidney Crosby’s tying goal with 29 seconds left in the third period and defeated the Penguins 4-3.
Technically, the Canucks are now 25-0 this season when leading after two periods. More importantly, they are 28-11-3 in the standings and second in the National Hockey League.
The resilience they demonstrated at the end of the fiercely-contested game in Pittsburgh is representative of the resolve, the belief in themselves, they have shown during the longest road trip of their season.
A week earlier, their seven-game odyssey began with a flat 2-1 loss against the St. Louis Blues. The hardest part of the marathon came next, four games in six nights against strong teams in arenas where the Canucks have frequently suffered.
All they did was sweep the New Jersey Devils (6-4), the New York Rangers (6-3), the New York Islanders (5-2) and the Penguins. In more than four hours of road hockey, the Canucks trailed for a total of 53 seconds.
The rebirth of the Lotto Line, which has generated 12 goals in the four games (not including the three-on-three OT winner) since Pettersson, J.T. Miller and Brock Boeser were reunited after the St. Louis loss, has been a massive catalyst for the Canucks.
But the success goes far deeper than the three outstanding forwards who built Vancouver its 3-1 lead in the first period on Thursday.
“We’re building consistency; this is all about that,” defenceman Nikita Zadorov explained. “I think every guy shows up every night to play their best hockey. If we’re going to do it the rest of the year and in playoffs, we’re going to be beating a lot of teams. That’s definitely a success for all 23 guys in here. We’re all working our asses off, playing for each other. That’s the main thing.”
Tyler Myers, another veteran blue-liner, said before the game: “We knew coming into this road trip, it’s an important road trip for us. It’s a big part of the season, things are getting tighter (on the ice) and to not have the game we wanted to have against St. Louis, it was a great way to respond for us. And I really like the response we’re having within each game as well. Whenever it seems like the other team is getting a little momentum, we’re pushing back. And I think that’s a sign of maturity with our group because we wouldn’t necessarily do that in years past.”
Those years past, and especially the last three seasons that were marked by disappointment and chaos, are still fresh enough to be driving Vancouver’s core players and other holdovers.
But there are so many new players to the Canucks this season, mostly in depth roles, who have brought experience and leadership and confidence from other winning teams to this one.
Players like Ian Cole, Carson Soucy, Teddy Blueger, Sam Lafferty, Casey DeSmith and Zadorov.
“It’s great when you have a mentality you can beat any team, you can win any game in any situation,” Zadorov said. “I think that’s where we’re going. But definitely, there’s a difference between being confident and being overconfident, so we’re going to find that fine line. There’s a new day every day in our lives to get better — to get better as a group, to get better as individuals. I think that’s our mindset, for sure.”
In explaining the resilience of his team, on this road trip and in this season, coach Rick Tocchet said: “I think that’s been all year where we’ve maybe had a couple of duds, you know, and we’ve managed to do something out there to win a game or stay in it. It seems like we’re bouncing back pretty well.
“In this business, you have to have a short memory and I think that’s what this team does. The one thing is, when we teach them something. . . the next game, they’re usually good at that. If our D-zone coverage is not good, the next game they’ll correct it.”
Defending five skaters against six, Canuck coverage was not good on the tying goal, the only goal in the final 34 minutes of regulation time, as there was confusion about point coverage and Pettersson was slow to get out to Erik Karlsson. Karlson’s shot went past Pettersson, off Cole’s stick and bounced in off Crosby’s knee. Vancouver goalie Thatcher Demko nearly saved the double deflection with his blocker.
But just 3 ½ minutes later, Pettersson tucked a forehand deke under the pads of Tristan Jarry after taking a breakaway pass from Filip Hronek, who had blocked Karlsson’s pass on a Pittsburgh two-on-one.
“I knew I wasn’t going to catch the (Penguins’ rush) so I tried kind of. . . to get lost in the play and cheat a little bit I guess for offence,” Pettersson said. “It bounced right for me. Demmer made a good save, Hronek passed to me and, yeah, I scored a goal.”
And then Pettersson, so often stoic, celebrated by going to one knee and pumping his fist in victory.
“There’s a level of unpredictability and bounces to the game that you just can’t plan for,” Cole said. “And there is a level of grit and stick-to-it-ness you need when it matters.”
The Canucks visit the Buffalo Sabres on Saturday before ending their seven-game road trip Monday against the Columbus Blue Jackets.