The Vancouver Canucks had a great 2008-09 season, winning the Northwest Division and making it to the Western Conference Semifinals before being knocked out by the Blackhawks. Just making it to the playoffs isn’t good enough for a team that aims to be the best in the NHL, so they’ve beefed up their blue line, adding Brad Lukowich, Christian Ehrhoff and Mathieu Schneider. Will it be enough to take them all the way to the Stanley Cup Finals? Find out for yourself with tickets to GM Place to watch the Vancouver Canucks in action in the 2009-10 season!
Vancouver joined the NHL as an expansion team in 1970. The club struggled in its first four seasons, placing no better than sixth in its division from 1970-71 to 1973-74. In the 1974-75 season, however, head coach Phil Maloney guided the Canucks to a division title. Outstanding players included goalie Gary Smith, left wing Andre Boudrias, defenseman Harold Snepsts, and right wings Bobby Schmautz and Dennis Ververgaert. The Canucks lost in the first round of the 1975 playoffs, and they again fell in the first round in 1976, 1979, 1980, and 1981.
Under head coach Roger Neilson, Vancouver advanced beyond the first round of the playoffs for the first time in 1982, reaching the Stanley Cup Finals despite posting a losing record during the regular season. Center Thomas Gradin led the team in scoring for the second consecutive year. In the postseason the Canucks defeated the Calgary Flames, the Los Angeles Kings, and the Chicago Blackhawks to reach the finals. There they lost to the heavily favored New York Islanders, 4 games to 0.
From 1982 to 1991 Vancouver reached the playoffs five times, again losing in the first round each year. Star players of this period included right wing Stan Smyl, center Patrik Sundstrom, right wing Tony Tanti, and center Trevor Linden. After 13 seasons in Vancouver, including eight years as team captain, Smyl retired in 1991 as the Canucks' career leader in points, goals, assists, and games.
In both the 1991-92 and the 1992-93 seasons, head coach Pat Quinn piloted the Canucks to division crowns, but both years the team was eliminated in the second round of the playoffs. In the 1991-92 season Quinn received the Jack Adams Award as coach of the year, right wing Pavel Bure earned the Calder Memorial Trophy as the NHL's rookie of the year, and goalie Kirk McLean ranked first in the league in shutouts.
In 1994 Quinn guided the Canucks to the franchise's second Stanley Cup Finals, where the team lost to the New York Rangers 4 games to 3. Following the season, Bure became the first Canuck to be named to the NHL All-Star First Team. After failing to make the playoffs in 1997, the franchise bolstered its roster by signing former New York Ranger center Mark Messier as a free agent. The Canucks, however, failed to qualify for the playoffs again in 1998. Playing hockey since 1946 in the Pacific Coast Hockey League, the Western Canada Senior Hockey League, and the Western Hockey League, the Canucks became an NHL team in 1970 for the sum of $6 million.
Previous players include: Andy Bathgate, Johnny Bower, Tony Esposito, Allan Herbert Stanley, Gump Worsley, Wayne Maki, Stan Smyl, Don Cherry and Phil Maloney. The Canucks play their home games at the General Motors Place, which is also home to special events as well as concerts.