Vancouver Canucks Should Try Bo Horvat with the Sedins

Nov 13, 2016; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Dallas Stars defenseman Dan Hamhuis (2) defends against Vancouver Canucks forward Bo Horvat (53) during the first period at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Anne-Marie Sorvin-USA TODAY Sports
Nov 13, 2016; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Dallas Stars defenseman Dan Hamhuis (2) defends against Vancouver Canucks forward Bo Horvat (53) during the first period at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Anne-Marie Sorvin-USA TODAY Sports /
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Willie Desjardins loves playing Brandon Sutter with the twins. If the Vancouver Canucks are going to play a center at wing, why not try Bo Horvat instead?

Ever since the Vancouver Canucks acquired center Brandon Sutter, coach Willie Desjardins has tried playing him with the Sedins.

When he first put them together last October, people were confused. The Canucks brought in Sutter specifically to be their number two center. Why, then, were they deploying him in a position he had never played before?

Playing a centerman at wing is hardly unprecedented. Ryan Kesler, for example, played on Mats Sundin‘s wing during the latter’s brief tenure as a Canuck. Markus Granlund played wing on Sutter’s line until recently. It’s not that unusual, even if this particular combination is counter-intuitive.

Still, Willie D says he likes the combination. And Sutter did score one of the Canucks’ two goals the other night with the help of a Daniel Sedin pass and a Henrik Sedin screen.

On the other hand, Vancouver just lost a game 7-2. It might be time to try something new.

Swap one crazy combination for another

So, why not try Bo Horvat with the twins instead of Sutter?

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I know, I know — it’s crazy. But answer me this: is it more crazy than playing Brandon Sutter there? It seems to me that any argument for not putting Horvat with the twins works equally well for Sutter.

Since Desjardins is already playing Sutter with the twins, he obviously doesn’t care about how crazy it is. We’re already down this rabbit hole, so let’s try to make the best of it.

There might be a couple advantages to putting Horvat together with the twins.

First, Horvat could use more minutes. We criticize Willie D for not using Horvat in more offensive situtation. The coach even started the year with his promising young center on the fourth line.

Fans want to see Horvat get a shot higher in the lineup. Well, it doesn’t get any higher than playing with the Sedins.

Second, the Canucks need more offense, and this would unite their three best offensive weapons.

Daniel and Henrik need a forechecker and shooter, preferably someone with good speed. Horvat, meanwhile, is not a great playmaker and is not currently playing with great playmakers. On paper at least, they seem like they would complement each other.

Related Story: Canucks Should Use Horvat for More Offense

The Ripple Effect

With Horvat on the top line, the Canucks lineup would probably look like this:

Daniel Sedin — Henrik Sedin — Bo Horvat
Loui Eriksson — Brandon Sutter — Derek Dorsett
Sven Baertschi — Markus Granlund — Alexandre Burrows
Michael Chaput — Brendan Gaunce — Jack Skille

Granlund and Sven Baerstchi played together in pre-season, so that combination should work fine. Perhaps a new linemate could help Baertschi bump his slump.

Granted, this lineup does not look like a marked improvement from last game. But when Derek Dorsett plays on your second line, you already have problems. Maybe this could help squeeze just a little more offense out of the Canucks.

And if turns out it doesn’t work, Willie can stick Sutter straight back on the top line.

Next: Rodin's Status Still a Mystery

Bo Horvat playing with the Sedins is probably crazy. But it’s no crazier than the Brandon Sutter experiment.

The Vancouver Canucks are already trying some crazy line combinations. This one might be just crazy enough to work.