If you’re a passionate, glass-bangin’, face-paintin’ maniac of a hockey fan, your blood runs hot during the Stanley Cup playoffs. It’s part of the experience.
The Vancouver Canucks are no strangers to facing what sure seems like an excess amount of attention from the NHL’s Department of Player Safety in the postseason.
Mother’s Day featured a particularly brutal incarnation of the Vancouver Canucks-Edmonton Oilers rivalry. Game 3 on Sunday evening in Edmonton saw bodies flying everywhere, including into the Oilers’ bench, some rough stuff after the final whistle, and players like Nikita Zadorov, Dakota Joshua, and J.T.
It looks like Carson Soucy could be sitting a game or two for the Vancouver Canucks. Soucy’s actions in Game 3 between the Vancouver Canucks and Edmonton Oilers have put him under scrutiny from the NHL Department of Player Safety (NHL DoPS), with a potential suspension looming over him.
The Vancouver Canucks will be adding two top prospects to the fold next season.
The NHL will hold a hearing for Vancouver Canucks defenseman Carson Soucy for his cross-check to the face of Edmonton Oilers star Connor McDavid at the end of Sunday night's game, the league announced Monday.
The NHL’s Player Safety Department announced some discipline on Monday for Vancouver Canucks defensemen Carson Soucy and Nikita Zadorov. Soucy will have a phone hearing, while Zadorov was fined $5,000, the maximum allowable under the collective bargaining agreement.
Carson Soucy is looking at a suspension from the NHL Department of Player Safety (NHL DoPS) for his cross-check to Connor McDavid at the end of Game 3 between the Vancouver Canucks and Edmonton Oilers.
The NHL’s Department of Player Safety has fined Vancouver Canucks defenceman Nikita Zadorov $5,000 for cross-checking Connor McDavid after the final buzzer sounded in Sunday’s playoff game.
The NHL’s Department of Player Safety will conduct a hearing for Vancouver Canucks defenceman Carson Soucy as a result of his actions against Edmonton Oilers forward Connor McDavid after the final buzzer sounded in Sunday’s playoff game, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reported Monday morning.
One of the top goal scorers in hockey does not believe his team was beaten solely by the opposing team’s netminder on Sunday night. Following the Edmonton
When we think of dominant, playoff performers, one name has emerged given his undeniable effectiveness and absurd stats, Brock Boeser of the Vancouver Canucks.
The Vancouver Canucks and Edmonton Oilers series is living up to the hype. Imperfect teams with high-end brilliance and just enough flaws to ensure no lead is safe.
Leon Draisaitl didn’t sound too keen to give Arturs Silovs much credit for the Vancouver Canucks’ win over the Edmonton Oilers in their playoff matchup on Sunday night.
Goaltending has become the story of the Western Conference second-round playoff series between the Vancouver Canucks and Edmonton Oilers.
Arturs Silovs made a career-high 42 saves -- including 21 in the third period -- and the visiting Vancouver Canucks hung on to beat the Edmonton Oilers 4-3 in Game 3 of their Western Conference semifinal series on Sunday.
The all-Canadian matchup between the Vancouver Canucks and Edmonton Oilers continued on Mother’s Day and it was a 42-save gem by rookie Arturs Silovs and a two-goal performance by Elias Lindholm and Brock Boeser that led the Canucks to a 4-3 victory over the Oilers in Game 3.
The entire province of British Columbia breathed a sigh of relief on Friday night when Elias Pettersson accepted a JT Miller pass on the power play and made no mistake in sliding it past Stuart Skinner into the yawning Edmonton net.
It was a thrilling Friday night for hockey fans as the Vancouver Canucks went head-to-head with the Edmonton Oilers for Game 2 of the Second Round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs in Vancouver, BC.
The Vancouver Canucks roster strength makes a strong case for deserving a 2024 NHL Stanley Cup championship run. Brock Boeser seems to be a great example that keeps popping up.
Defenseman Evan Bouchard got the overtime winner, but Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl were the main reasons why the Edmonton Oilers are tied 1-1 with the Vancouver Canucks in a Western Conference second-round playoff series.
After assisting on Edmonton's two first-period goals in a 5-4 Game 1 loss, he missed the last half of the second period. He headed to the dressing room after an abbreviated 10-second shift in the middle period.
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