2016–17 Vancouver Canucks season

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2016–17 Vancouver Canucks
Division 7th Pacific
Conference 13th Western
2016–17 record 30–43–9
Home record 18–17–6
Road record 12–26–3
Goals for 182
Goals against 243
Team information
General Manager Jim Benning
Coach Willie Desjardins
Captain Henrik Sedin
Alternate captains Alexandre Burrows (Oct–Feb)
Alexander Elder (Feb-Apr)
Bo Horvat (Feb-Apr)
Daniel Sedin
Brandon Sutter (Feb-Apr)
Christopher Tanev (Feb-Apr)
Arena Rogers Arena
Average attendance 18,509 (97.9%)[1]
Minor league affiliations Utica Comets (AHL)
Alaska Aces (ECHL)
Team leaders
Goals Bo Horvat (20)
Assists Henrik Sedin (36)
Points Bo Horvat (52)
Penalties in minutes Nikita Tryamkin (64)
Plus/minus Christopher Tanev (+3)
Wins Ryan Miller (18)
Goals against average Jacob Markstrom (2.63)
<2015–16 2017–18>

The 2016–17 Vancouver Canucks season was the 47th season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on May 22, 1970.[2] For the third consecutive season, they opened the season with a match against the Calgary Flames.[3] The team finished with the lowest-scoring season in franchise history, scoring just 182 goals.[4] The day after the Canucks' season-ending game, head coach Willie Desjardins was fired, along with assistant coaches Doug Lidster and Perry Pearn.[5] The Canucks overall missed the playoffs for the second consecutive year.

Off-season

The Canucks made their first off-season move while the 2016 Stanley Cup playoffs were still in action, sending centre Jared McCann and second and fourth round picks to the Florida Panthers in exchange for defenceman Erik Gudbranson and a fifth-round pick.[6] On June 27, two days after the 2016 NHL Entry Draft, the Canucks placed winger Chris Higgins on unconditional waivers and subsequently bought out the final year of his contract.[7]

Training camp

Vancouver's 2016 training camp was held in Whistler, British Columbia, on September 22–26, 2016.[8]

Regular season

During the team bye week in February, many Canucks players experienced mumps symptoms, with some being diagnosed with the disease. Compounded with ongoing injuries to other players at the time, the Canucks played their following game with 11 regulars out of the lineup, where they lost to the San Jose Sharks 4–1.[9]

Preceding the 2017 NHL trade deadline, the Canucks traded long-time forward Alex Burrows to the Ottawa Senators in exchange for prospect Jonathan Dahlen on February 27, 2017.[10] The following night, they traded another long-time forward, Jannik Hansen, to the San Jose Sharks in exchange for Nikolay Goldobin and a conditional fourth-round pick at the 2017 NHL Entry Draft.[11]

The Canucks finished their season with 69 points and have the second-best odds for the draft lottery of the 2017 NHL Entry Draft.

Standings

Divisional standings

Pacific Division
Pos Team GP W L OTL ROW GF GA GD Pts
1 y – Anaheim Ducks 82 46 23 13 43 223 200 +23 105
2 x – Edmonton Oilers 82 47 26 9 43 247 212 +35 103
3 x – San Jose Sharks 82 46 29 7 44 221 201 +20 99
4 x – Calgary Flames 82 45 33 4 41 226 221 +5 94
5 Los Angeles Kings 82 39 35 8 37 201 205 −4 86
6 Arizona Coyotes 82 30 42 10 24 197 260 −63 70
7 Vancouver Canucks 82 30 43 9 26 182 243 −61 69
Source: National Hockey League
x – Clinched playoff spot; y – Clinched division.

Conference standings

Template:2016–17 NHL Western Conference standings

Schedule and results

Pre-season

Regular season

2016–17 game log

Legend:       Win (2 points)       Loss (0 points)       Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)

Detailed records

Roster

# Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace
32 United States Richard Bachman G L 29 2015 Salt Lake City, Utah
47 Switzerland Sven Baertschi LW L 24 2015 Langenthal, Switzerland
55 Canada Alex Biega D R 29 2013 Montreal, Quebec
6 United States Brock Boeser RW R 20 2015 Burnsville, Minnesota
24 United States Reid Boucher LW L 23 2017 Grand Ledge, Michigan
45 Canada Michael Chaput C L 25 2016 Montreal, Quebec
26 Canada Joseph Cramarossa C L 24 2017 Toronto, Ontario
15 Canada Derek Dorsett RW R 30 2014 Kindersley, Saskatchewan
23 Sweden Alexander Edler (A) D L 30 2004 Östersund, Sweden
21 Sweden Loui Eriksson RW L 31 2016 Gothenburg, Sweden
50 Canada Brendan Gaunce C L 23 2012 Sudbury, Ontario
60 Finland Markus Granlund C L 23 2016 Oulu, Finland
82 Russia Nikolay Goldobin RW L 21 2017 Moscow, Russia
44 Canada Erik Gudbranson D R 25 2016 Orleans, Ontario
53 Canada Bo Horvat (A) C L 22 2013 London, Ontario
27 Canada Ben Hutton D L 23 2012 Prescott, Ontario
63 Denmark Philip Larsen D R 27 2016 Esbjerg, Denmark
25 Sweden Jacob Markstrom G L 27 2014 Gävle, Sweden
46 United States Jayson Megna C R 27 2016 Fort Lauderdale, Florida
30 United States Ryan Miller G L 36 2014 East Lansing, Michigan
13 United States Griffen Molino C L 23 2017 Trenton, Michigan
17 Sweden Anton Rodin LW R 26 2009 Stockholm, Sweden
5 Switzerland Luca Sbisa D L 27 2014 Ozieri, Italy
22 Sweden Daniel Sedin (A) LW L 36 1999 Örnsköldsvik, Sweden
33 Sweden Henrik Sedin (C) C L 36 1999 Örnsköldsvik, Sweden
42 United States Drew Shore C R 26 2017 Denver, Colorado
9 United States Jack Skille RW R 29 2016 Madison, Wisconsin
51 Canada Troy Stecher D R 23 2016 Richmond, British Columbia
20 Canada Brandon Sutter (A) C R 28 2015 Huntington, New York
8 Canada Christopher Tanev (A) D R 27 2010 East York, Ontario
88 Russia Nikita Tryamkin D L 22 2014 Yekaterinburg, Russia

Player statistics

Final stats

Skaters

Goaltenders

Regular season[13]
Player GP GS TOI W L OT GA GAA SA SV% SO G A PIM
Jacob Markstrom 26 23 1416:58 10 11 3 62 2.63 692 .910 0 0 0 2
Ryan Miller 54 54 3211:51 18 29 6 150 2.80 1737 .914 3 0 1 22
Richard Bachman 5 5 295:11 2 3 0 13 2.64 162 .920 0 0 0 0
Totals 82 4924:59 30 43 9 225 2.74 2,591 0.913 3 0 1 24

Acquired by Canucks mid-season. Stats reflect time with Canucks only.
Acquired by another team mid-season. Stats reflect time with Canucks only.


Awards and honours

Awards

Milestones