Jump to content

25 days of Canuckmas


Coconuts

Recommended Posts

15 minutes ago, Kevin Biestra said:

The list of #8s isn't out yet but I guess it's worth mentioning that Peter McNab is another one of those guys like Pit Martin with a hell of a career that just doesn't get talked about too much 40 years later.  Did most of his body of work in Boston but had well over 800 points in almost a thousand games.  Seven straight 70 point seasons with four of them 80+.  Ten 20 goal seasons, one of them with the Canucks.  Some of those seasons with 40 goals.  An absolute monster for Boston in the 1978 playoffs.  He and Brad Park were the class of the Bruins in leading the team to the Stanley Cup Final...and third on the team in scoring was former Canuck Bobby Schmautz.

 

Like Pit Martin and a few of the other guys I mentioned earlier, for a long time Peter McNab was one of the best players to ever wear a Canucks jersey.

 

1984-o-pee-chee-326-peter-mcnab-gem-mt-1

 

 

 

Not to usurp @Coconuts's role, but since you mentioned it...

Danny Johnson 1971-1972
Wayne Connelly 1972
Bobby Schmautz 1973-1981
Gerry Meehan 1975
Rick Blight 1976-1981
Moe Lemay 1982
Jim Nill 1982-1984
Peter McNab 1984-1985
Taylor Hall 1986-1987
Greg Adams 1988-1995
Alek Stojanov 1996
Donald Brashear 1997-2002
Marek Malík 2003-2004
Jozef Balej 2006
Eric Weinrich 2006
Willie Mitchell 2007-2010
Chris Tanev 2012-2020
Jordie Benn 2021
Conor Garland 2022-2024
  • Thanks 1
  • Vintage 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

As for another lesser known (at least for his work as a player) #8, Jim Nill was a pretty substantial part of the 1982 run to the final and scored the double overtime game winner in game 1 of the semifinal against Chicago.  Against Tony Esposito.

 

The game was actually an incredible duel between King Richard and Tony-O.  Esposito stopped 39 of 41 shots and The King stopped 46 of 47.

  • Cheers 3
  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Mitchell is my favourite of the bunch, but he's also one of my favourite Canucks ever, loved his game here and in LA

 

Maybe part of the last wave of old school, tough as nails defensive D alongside guys like Robyn Regehr and Douglas Murray

 

Not a coincidence that LA won a cup with both Mitchell and Regehr in 13-14

 

The 2000's era to about the early to mid 2010's era still featured several big, tough D whose defense and physicality were their bread and butter

 

That's coincidently what I consider to be the timeline for old school hockey's last gasp, game has changed 

Edited by Coconuts
  • Like 1
  • Vintage 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Kevin Biestra said:

As for another lesser known (at least for his work as a player) #8, Jim Nill was a pretty substantial part of the 1982 run to the final and scored the double overtime game winner in game 1 of the semifinal against Chicago.  Against Tony Esposito.

 

The game was actually an incredible duel between King Richard and Tony-O.  Esposito stopped 39 of 41 shots and The King stopped 46 of 47.

 

I wanted to post a pic of him, or even a video, but my google-fu not good, can't seem to find anything that isn't him slathered in other colours or with a Dallas backdrop.  🤷‍♂️

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Tomorrow's will probably be the last abundant one for me (maybe 10th too, we'll see), but then after that I'll probably cut back to one or two per day.

 

Too bad I missed the first couple of days.  There were a couple of gooders wearing those numbers.

  • Cheers 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

21 players that wore or is wearing #9 on this 9th day of Canuckmas:

Ed Hatoum 1971
Dale Tallon 1972-1973
Don Lever 1974-1980
Ivan Boldirev 1980-1983
Tony Tanti 1983-1990
Andrew McBain 1990-1991
Ryan Walter 1992-1993
Russ Courtnall 1995-1997
Gary Leeman 1995
Brad May 1998-2000
Ľubomír Vaic 1998
Mike Stapleton 2001
Harold Druken 2002-2003
Mike Keane 2004
Taylor Pyatt 2007-2009
Cody Hodgson 2012
Zack Kassian 2012-2015
Brandon Prust 2016
Jack Skille 2017
Brendan Leipsic 2019
J.T. Miller 2020-2024
  • Cheers 2
  • Vintage 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, 6of1_halfdozenofother said:

21 players that wore or is wearing #9 on this 9th day of Canuckmas:

Ed Hatoum 1971
Dale Tallon 1972-1973
Don Lever 1974-1980
Ivan Boldirev 1980-1983
Tony Tanti 1983-1990
Andrew McBain 1990-1991
Ryan Walter 1992-1993
Russ Courtnall 1995-1997
Gary Leeman 1995
Brad May 1998-2000
Ľubomír Vaic 1998
Mike Stapleton 2001
Harold Druken 2002-2003
Mike Keane 2004
Taylor Pyatt 2007-2009
Cody Hodgson 2012
Zack Kassian 2012-2015
Brandon Prust 2016
Jack Skille 2017
Brendan Leipsic 2019
J.T. Miller 2020-2024

 

 

A pair of respectable Ring of Honour candidates wearing #9 in Don Lever and Tony Tanti.  Don Lever was the captain before Kevin McCarthy I think and for years he held the Canucks ironman record before Trevor Linden broke it in the 90s.

 

Tony Tanti was one of the more underappreciated scorers in league history and now after all of this time in Canucks history as well.  Only something like 24 players in NHL history have had more than five 40-goal seasons.  Tony had five 39+ goal seasons in a row.  All of the seasons consecutively is even more rare of course and Tanti just needed one more goal twice for it to have been official.  Years ago it never seemed like there would be a day where many or even most Canucks fans wouldn't know who Tony Tanti and Petri Skriko are but...such things come to pass.

 

Andrew McBain was quite a good player.  We got him late in his career but he had 77 points one year with the Jets.

 

Gary Leeman we picked up as a late career lottery ticket of a reclamation project.  Didn't do much in Vancouver but he was a 50 goal scorer with the Leafs.

 

I already talked about Ivan Boldirev earlier in the thread.  800+ points, substantial contributor to the 1982 run...now the vast majority of Canucks fans probably have no idea who he is.

 

Ryan Walter was a really good player with the Canadiens and the Capitals.  Broke 80 points one year, over 600 in his career, over a thousand games.  We had him in the "veteran leadership" denouement of his career.  He was part of a really big trade for Doug Jarvis and Rod Langway...way back when.

  • Cheers 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...