It must be tough love.
That’s the only reasonable explanation.
It’s as if Cody Hodgson is the coach’s son and the coach is proving to
everyone he isn’t showing any favouritism by being hardest on his own flesh and
blood.
Or could it be that Coach V believes that Cody has led a charmed life
and wants to find out if Hodgson has what it takes to go through the fire and
come out stronger on the other side.
Whatever Vigneault’s reasoning, his treatment of the best Canuck’s
rookie since Pavel Bure might be the biggest Vancouver mystery since the
where’s Lui caper at the start of overtime against Anaheim in 2007.
In Cody Hodgson’s first full year as a Canuck, he has finally shown
flashes of why Vancouver fans were so excited Mike Gillis drafted him with the
10th pick of the 2008 NHL entry draft. As anyone who follows the Canucks knows,
Hodgson has already had to face more adversity to get to this point than any
player on the roster except perhaps Alex Burrows and his well-documented tour
of the minors.
After almost making the team as an 18 year old, Cody suffered a back
injury the summer before the second camp.
Cody tried to play through the pain but was ineffective and cut again
despite the huge expectations that were placed on him. Hodgson maintained that his back was still
sore only to have his character questioned by Vigneault who famously said, "I think
Cody is a very young man who hasn't had a lot of disappointments throughout his
life. He's probably having a tough time, personally, dealing with this one and
trying to find a reason why it happened. We've all had times where we've
encountered disappointment and tried to roll the (blame) in a different
direction. We've all been through those things. Cody will learn from
this."
Has there ever been a more condescending comment made
about what appears to be a very high character player by a coach in the
NHL? Looking back at everything Hodgson
had to endure after the comment proved AV to not just be wrong, but completely
out of line.
I’m guessing Coach V was just trying to get Hodgson used
to the tough love that was to come.
Fortunately for the Canucks, Hodgson didn’t hold those
comments against the club, proving his character is solid by working even
harder and becoming an NHL regular this season. Which, oddly enough is where
this story actually gets more interesting.
To this point in his rookie season, Hodgson has shown
flashes of the brilliance he displayed when he led the World Junior tournament in
scoring and won CHL player of the year.
He’s fourth in rookie scoring and seems to get more confident and
competent with each game.
Unfortunately, the better Hodgson seems to play from the
fans perspective, the more Coach V wants to show his tough love.
During the stretch of games from December 30th
through to February 4th Hodgson was not only the leading scorer, he
was by far their most consistent clutch performer. It seemed during this period that whenever the
Canucks’ scored a big goal Cody Hodgson was there, including scoring the game
winning goals in huge match-ups versus Boston and San Jose.
Cody’s reward for helping prop up a struggling hockey
team; an extra 1o seconds per game of additional ice-time. Hodgson, who currently ranks 4th
in rookie scoring, 7th in rookie plus/minus, 6th in
Canuck team scoring and 8th in team plus/minus, currently ranks 65th
in rookie ice-time and 19th in team ice-time, despite clearly being
the most consistent Canuck most nights.
It was during this stretch, fans and media started publicly questioning AV’s
usage of Hodgson. Vigneault responded by saying, "Ryan plays an average of 20 minutes a
game, how is that more than any of the other top players? I'm going to start taking
minutes away from Ryan Kesler?" Vigneault asked rhetorically. "It
just doesn't make a lot of sense to me.
"When some people in the past have been saying, I'm not playing the
twins enough. Those are elite players. You complain when I don't play the twins
enough. The twins don't get the 20, 21 minutes a game because they don't kill
penalties. But they get the best offensive minutes we have available on this
team.
"We have two great centremen right there, I'm going to use
them."
Which makes perfect sense, if you discount two very important facts: The
first is that Kesler has failed to make it through a playoff run healthy since becoming
the workhorse of the team. The second being
this team isn’t in a desperate race to either make a playoff spot or get a
better seeding, why not see what the kid is capable of doing with more ice-time?
During last year’s finals, one of the biggest obstacles the Canucks
could not overcome was their lack of healthy bodies. Kesler had a well publicized bum hip that
prevented him from really contributing, and Henrik dealt with a back that
seemed to hinder him from playing anywhere near his usual standards. Kesler was also hobbled during the previous
year’s cup chase.
AV wants us to believe limiting his two prized centre ice-times during
January and February when teams in the Canucks’ position are really just trying
to come out healthy and fresh for the up coming playoffs is a bad thing? Really? It’s more important to win a January
game against Florida or a February game against Colorado than it is ensuring
your best players are as fresh and healthy as possible for April and May?
Honestly, I’m not blind, I’ve seen the bad soft passes in his own zone
and the lack of foot speed creating chances for the other team, but what if
Hodgson wasn’t benched every time he had a couple of bad shifts or made a big
mistake? What if AV actually let Cody
think he trusted him on occasion?
Now let’s take this one step further, let’s pretend Coach V starts giving
Cody more responsibility every so often, not all the time but once in a while
he gets put on the ice in those clutch moments.
In the long run wouldn’t this actually help the team? If Kesler or Henrik Sedin get hurt, wouldn’t
Hodgson be the natural guy to step in and take some of their minutes and
responsibilities? Wouldn’t it be great
if Hodgson already felt confident and comfortable enough to handle the
situation? Personally I think it would
be better to give Hodgson the opportunity to fill some of these minutes during
meaningless games late in the season, than waiting to see if he can respond if
the worst was to happen in the playoffs.
I’m guessing there must be a bonus in Vigneault’s contract for regular
season performance because there is no other reason to stubbornly ride your
studs when it’s not beneficial in the long term.
Given Hodgson’s recent usage, it came as no surprise that once his
scoring slowed, AV showed him a little more tough love and cut his ice-time further
a few games ago. In fact, to really show
how much he cared, Vigneault demoted Hodgson to fourth line duty. This was
despite the fact that for the first time in years the third line was producing
points, and Many Malholtra, Hodgson’s replacement on the third line, was
struggling mightily since returning from his eye injury.
When pressed on this subject Coach V responded with the following comment,
“If you look at our template from last year, which was pretty effective, we had
two offensive lines with Hank Sedin and Ryan Kesler and a real strong line with
Manny and whoever would play with him. Most of the time it was Jannik and Raffi
and that enabled me to play them head-to-head against one of the other team's
top lines, which freed up either Ryan or Hank to play against a third or fourth
line. When we're capable of doing that, it can make it real challenging for the
opposition.”
This statement more than any other makes me question his future with the
organization. It was bad enough for
those that think Hodgson should be given more responsibility to hear Vigneault
say Cody’s never getting more ice time from Kes and Hank, despite the fact
there are four other top 6 forwards which Hodgson can replace.
No, the scary part of that statement to those on Team Cody is
Vigneault’s desire to get back to the two scoring lines with one checking line
scenario that played out most of last year.
If it truly is Vigneault’s desire to use the third line as he did last
year, Hodgson’s ice-time can only go down from here. This year Sedin and Kesler are averaging
almost identical ice-time totals as last year, about 19:30 for Sedin and 20:30
for Kesler. The difference being Malholtra
who was averaging 16:30 a game is now getting 12:30. Where are his extra minutes going to come
from?
According to Vigneault, he’s not taking minutes from Hank or Kes so this
leaves Hodgson. When you consider 4th
liners on the Canucks averaged about 8-minutes a game last year and that the
Coach wants to return to last year’s ice time distribution, it appears Cody’s
ice-time can only shrink in the next couple of months.
If this is true, doesn’t this make you wonder where exactly Hodgson fits
in the Canuck’s future plans? Hodgson
appears destined to be a top 6 centre but Vancouver already has those positions
covered and signed for years to come.
Hodgson does not fit AV’s idea of a third line centre and probably never
will. Coach V wants a fast-skating,
relentless checker for this position, and despite there being many superlatives
to describe Hodgson’s game, those two adjectives would not be among them.
Hodgson looks like a square peg trying to fit in a round hole in Alan
Vigneault’s grand plan for the Canuck’s and it can’t be easy on Hodgson knowing
whenever he makes a mistake more tough love is coming.
Most people think Schneider is the Canuck to be traded for the missing
piece Vancouver needs for their cup run.
I’m starting to think that in order for the team to fit Vigneault’s
vision, shipping Hodgson could be AV’s final act of tough love for Cody.
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