Canucks: 3 takeaways from 6-5 OT loss to the Calgary Flames

VANCOUVER, BC - FEBRUARY 13: JT Miller #9 of the Vancouver Canucks skates with the puck while being checked by Sean Monahan #23 of the Calgary Flames during NHL hockey action at Rogers Arena on February 13, 2021 in Vancouver, Canada. Goalie Jacob Markstrom #25 of the Calgary Flames, Rasmus Andersson #4 along with Elias Pettersson #40 of the Vancouver Canucks and Brock Boeser #6 look on during the play. (Photo by Rich Lam/Getty Images)
VANCOUVER, BC - FEBRUARY 13: JT Miller #9 of the Vancouver Canucks skates with the puck while being checked by Sean Monahan #23 of the Calgary Flames during NHL hockey action at Rogers Arena on February 13, 2021 in Vancouver, Canada. Goalie Jacob Markstrom #25 of the Calgary Flames, Rasmus Andersson #4 along with Elias Pettersson #40 of the Vancouver Canucks and Brock Boeser #6 look on during the play. (Photo by Rich Lam/Getty Images) /
facebooktwitterreddit
Prev
2 of 3
Next
VANCOUVER, BC – MAY 03: Olli Juolevi #48 of the Vancouver Canucks skates with the puck during NHL action. (Photo by Rich Lam/Getty Images)
VANCOUVER, BC – MAY 03: Olli Juolevi #48 of the Vancouver Canucks skates with the puck during NHL action. (Photo by Rich Lam/Getty Images) /

Juolevi, Chatfield struggle on the blueline

Olli Juolevi and Jalen Chatfield will probably chalk this game up as one to forget.

The two young blueliners made up the third defensive pairing on Sunday night, with Jack Rathbone slotting out to make room for Juolevi. Chatfield logged just over 14 minutes during Saturday’s contest against the Edmonton Oilers, whereas Juolevi was given the day off that afternoon, but both struggled right out of the gate on Sunday night.

Let’s start with Chatfield.

The right-handed defenceman, who just turned 25 years old on Saturday, was a defensive liability on almost every Calgary goal.

After a bad line change led to a far-too-easy zone entry from Matthew Tkachuk, the Flames forward was able to throw a fairly harmless shot on net. The puck whizzed past Braden Holtby, caroming off of the boards behind him before eventually landing in the blue paint for an easy tap-in goal for Tkachuk.

By just reading the description of the play above, it sounded like a rather fortunate bounce for the Flames. But it’s important to see how Chatfield responded to the play.

Instead of marking Tkachuk and following him to the net, Chatfield looked for the bouncing puck. By doing this, he left Tkachuk wide open in front of the net, and we all know that he’s not going to miss many uncontested chances like that.

The defensive woes continued for Chatfield just seven minutes later, as he was caught screening Holtby for Calgary’s fifth goal of the game.

Chatfield finished the contest with two blocked shots, zero SOG and a minus four rating over 13:13 of ice time. He’s only played 17 games this season, and is expected to be on the outside looking in next season, but this still doesn’t bode well for the Canucks’ prospect pool.

Now onto Juolevi.

The former first-round pick didn’t play as poorly as Chatfield overall, but he was absolutely burned on the Flames’ second goal of the game, no pun intended.

*Warning: viewer discretion is advised*

Let’s break down this play in detail.

The Flames worked their way out of their own zone, with Vancouver native Milan Lucic leading the pack up the middle. Before crossing the blueline, Lucic fed a quick pass over to Leivo, who was streaking down the left flank. It was a simple pass from teammate to teammate, much like we’ve seen the Canucks do on their zone entries, but Juolevi was caught flat-footed with poor defensive positioning, and the Flames eventually made him pay.

On a night like this, where two non-playoff teams are squaring off in a meaningless game, most people might not take too much notice of it. But this happened against Calgary’s third line, with two of their slower players leading the charge. Imagine the carnage that would’ve taken place if this occurred against a faster, more-skilled team in the league, like a Tampa Bay or a Colorado, clubs that the Canucks could very well be playing against again next season if the league returns to their previous format and travel schedule? They’d be picking apart Juolevi every chance that they’d get, and that’s not a great look for this already-struggling Canucks’ blueline.

To make matters worse, Chatfield was also on the ice for that goal.

Juolevi finished the contest with one SOG, one block, one hit and a minus three rating over 12:23 of ice time. He also logged some minutes on the penalty kill, almost falling victim to an exploding stick blunder that would’ve been the cherry on top.

Juolevi will most likely dress for at least one of the two remaining games this year, but, after last night’s performance, his future role with the team should definitely be put under the microscope.