May 6, 2024
Nashville Predators level playoff series with 4-1 victory over Vancouver Canucks | CBC News

Nashville Predators level playoff series with 4-1 victory over Vancouver Canucks | CBC News

Filip Forsberg scored and had an assist, and the Nashville Predators earned a 4-1 win over the Vancouver Canucks in Game 2 of their first-round playoff series Tuesday.

Anthony Beauvillier — a former Canuck — added a goal and a helper for the Preds, who levelled the best-of-seven series at 1-1.

Colton Sissons and Kiefer Sherwood also found the back of the net for Nashville, while Juuse Saros made 17 saves. 

Bruising defenceman Nikita Zadorov replied for a Vancouver side that struggled to get shots on net and experienced a series of unlucky bounces.

A hockey goalie with a blue and white helmet looks on.
Vancouver Canucks goalie Casey DeSmith replaced the injured Thatcher Demko. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

The Canucks were playing without all-star goalie Thatcher Demko, who was ruled out with an undisclosed injury earlier on Tuesday.

Casey DeSmith took over in net and stopped 12 of 15 shots. 

In other games last night, the Winnipeg Jets lost 5-2 to the Colorado Avalanche 5-2, tying their series 1-1. The N.Y. Rangers took a 2-0 series lead with a 4-3 win over Washington, and the Florida Panthers beat Tampa Bay 3-2 and lead their series 2-0.

The enthusiastic crowd at Rogers Arena erupted with chants of “Let’s go Case-y!” moments after the puck dropped. 

They were quickly quieted. 

WATCH | Fans’ reaction to Demko’s injury: 

Vancouver Canucks goalie Thatcher Demko injured

Vancouver Canucks fans are gearing up for Game 2 of the team’s first-round playoff series against the Nashville Predators. Earlier today, the team announced star goaltender Thatcher Demko will miss Game 2 due to injury. Our Michelle Ghoussoub is in Delta, B.C., where fans are gathering to watch the game.

Forsberg sent a long shot flying from inside the blue line and Beauvillier, stationed above the hash marks, deflected it in past an out-of-position DeSmith to put the Predators up 1-0 just 1:14 into the game. 

Beauvillier started the season in Vancouver before the Canucks dealt him to the Blackhawks to shed salary in November. Chicago then sent the left-winger to Nashville in exchange for a fifth-round draft pick ahead of the NHL trade deadline in March. 

The Canucks saw three power plays across the first period Tuesday but struggled to get shots on net. 

Two hockey players collapse into each other along the advertising boards.
Nashville Predators’ Jeremy Lauzon, right, checks Vancouver Canucks’ Nils Höglander during the third period. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

Elias Pettersson came painfully close to levelling the score on a man advantage in the dying seconds of the opening frame. 

Saros slid over to stop Quinn Hughes as he powered toward the net, but the defenceman sliced a pass to Pettersson and the Swedish centre blasted a shot at the empty net, only to see the puck glance off the outside of the post. Pettersson dropped to his knees in apparent disappointment.

Both teams went 0-for-4 on the power play Tuesday.

The Preds took a two-goal lead midway through the second when Forsberg collected a pass from Gustav Nyquist, stickhandled his way toward the Canucks’ net and fired a shot past DeSmith to make it 2-0 at the 7:29 mark. 

A little more than a minute later, the visitors took a three-goal lead.

DeSmith stopped a shot from Beauvillier but couldn’t control the rebound and the puck popped out to Sissons, who batted it in past the netminder. 

Zadorov cut the deficit to 3-1 with less than five minutes to go in the second. His shot from above the faceoff circle hit the stick of Nashville’s Mark Jankowski in front of the net and the puck sailed in over Saros’ right shoulder. 

WATCH | Sports writer says it’s OK to jump on the Canucks bandwagon: 

Hopping on the Canucks bandwagon? This sports writer says that’s OK

Lachlan Irvine, Canucks Army writer, says fair-weather Vancouver Canucks fans have used their time wisely — and the sport needs casual fans, too.

The Canucks ended the period with yet another close call. 

With 27 seconds to go, Vancouver’s J.T. Miller unleashed a blast from near the boards and, while Saros got a piece of the shot, it bounced out, hitting the skate of Nashville defenceman Alexandre Carrier before ricocheting off the inside of the post. 

The home side outshot the Predators 6-4 across the third but couldn’t get a puck across the goal line. 

Vancouver pulled DeSmith in favour of an extra attacker with just over two minutes left on the game clock. 

Sherwood beat Hughes to a loose puck along the boards and put a shot into the empty net 18:07 into the third period.

In addition to Demko, the Canucks were missing a key piece on defence with Tyler Myers out of the lineup. The big blue liner’s absence was a surprise as he did not appear to pick up any injuries in Game 1. Noah Juulsen took his spot in the lineup Tuesday. 

The series shifts to Nashville for Game 3 on Friday. 

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