The Wild scored the only meaningful goal in this game on a powerplay,
and it’s worth taking a look at how they got it. During a line change, Dany
Heatley slashed and then cross-checked Daniel Sedin at the bench, instigating a brief scuffle during
which Daniel swung back before Alex Burrows and Kevin Bieksa stepped in to
defend him. Burrows was plucked from the scrum and sent to the box, and the
Wild scored on the powerplay. Now, if the Canucks don’t retaliate in this
instance, this game goes scoreless into the second period. But they did, and
thus surrendered the game-winning goal. Please consider this the next time you
claim the team can’t win unless they show teams they can’t go after the Sedins.
When Heatley will whack your stars you know there's little respect. |
Shack’s Take: Okay, I know I’m stepping on dangerous ground here
but I have to disagree completely with Mr. Mooney. I’m not naïve enough to think Harrison reads
my columns but this appears to be a direct shot at my article from Friday where
I take the Canucks to task for not
protecting the Sedins.
Let me counter his point with several and I’d be thrilled if Mr. Mooney had time to further debate the subject.
First, you’ll notice who gives Sedin the shot, it’s Dany Heatley. Dany ‘Freakin’ Heatley, this guy has all the
heart of the tin man yet he didn’t hesitate for a second in giving a cheap shot
to Daniel. If he feels okay with it, imagine how safe real hockey players feel.
Second, Alex Burrows went to Daniel’s defense and got a penalty for
swinging his murse at Heatley.
Seriously, the objective is to let teams know they shouldn’t touch the
Sedins, not reinforce the belief you face only a weak love tap in return.
Burrows job should be scoring goals not protecting Sedins. |
Third, it was one power play and it was the only goal of the game. If the Canucks can’t rally around the Sedins
and kill off the occasional penalty for them or score one goal to compensate,
this team is in a lot of trouble come playoff time.
Fourth, let me paraphrase what I actually said. I said the Canucks need to actually make
someone pay for touching a Sedin, this did the opposite, barely touching the
offender encourages it. I said it’s okay
to take the occasional penalty at the right time to get this point across. In other words, giving up a power play
against Minnesota in a mean nothing game is okay as long as you deliver the
right message. I’m even okay with
Vancouver losing the odd regular season game to serve this purpose.
I would never suggest doing this in a playoff game tied 0 – 0 but if we’re playing Chicago and go
down 3 – 0 in a game, maybe it would be a good time to let David Bolland know the Sedins aren't fair game .
There’s a time and a place for everything and as I said, until fighting
is no longer a part of hockey, there are times to use it to your
advantage.
Unfortunately, the way this whole thing broke down with Heatley
actually reaffirms to me the need to occasionally go Gino Odjick on the other
team. Would Dany Heatley try that on
Patrice Bergeron? No way.
So this looks like a situation where we both see the same play completely opposite but if Mr. Mooney thinks that's how to protect the Sedins, we'll have to differ on that point too. Mr. Mooney, the ball is in your court if you'd like to respond.
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