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Brock Boeser, Kiefer Sherwood and Jake DeBrusk combined for 11 shots and 26 attempts but couldn’t snap their growing goal droughts
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Published Dec 08, 2025 • Last updated 3 hours ago • 7 minute read
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Detroit Red Wings’ James van Riemsdyk (21) scores on Kevin Lankinen (32) as Marcus Pettersson (29) defends during the first period at Rogers Arena on Monday night Photo by ETHAN CAIRNS /THE CANADIAN PRESSArticle content
Any visit by an ‘Original Six’ team usually moves the must-see meter and is often marquee material.
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Whether it’s present potential, or rich franchise history, there’s usually something to draw the loyal or the curious to Rogers Arena.
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On Monday, the interest level was raised with ongoing Quinn Hughes trade speculation linking the dynamic and generational defenceman to the Detroit Red Wings.
And with a trio of players reportedly mentioned in a possible transaction on display — centre Nate Danielson, 21, centre/winger Marco Kasper, 21, and defenceman Simon Edvinsson, 22, — the package that would also include prospect centre Emmitt Finnie, 20, plus first-round draft picks in 2026 and 2027, is considerable, should the Canucks captain not choose to sign a contract extension.
That drama easily topped an inability to find the back of the net as the Canucks fell 4-0 despite owning a big 36-20 shot advantage. And even in victory, it was evident the Red Wings covet Hughes. They don’t have an elite blueliner who can skate out of trouble, send laser-like passes, and cause the opposition all kinds of matchup problems with wheeling and dealing in the offensive zone.
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However, they do have a centre in Danielson, whom the Canucks had considered in the first round of the 2023 draft before selecting defenceman Tom Willander. Danielson delivered the dagger Monday with a deft deflection at the top of the crease in the second period to provide a three-goal cushion.
And Kasper sent a feed across the crease in the third period that could have been the fourth goal before Dylan Larkin potted the empty-netter.
“We’re generating fine, but it’s taking 10 or 15 looks to score,” said Hughes. “Our breakdowns were significant tonight and our goalies have been really good all year and kept us in a lot of games. It’s something we’re going to have to continue to work on.
“It’s challenging because we already know where we’re at with injuries and a little thin. Guys are working as hard as they can and doing what they can. We had our chances. It wasn’t like we got slaughtered.”
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As for the continuous trade noise that keeps getting louder, Hughes put it in perspective.
“It’s difficult because I want to win and where we’re at in the standings,” said the captain. “Credit to them (Wings). They have some really good players and have done a good job through the draft and you see it come to fruition now. But it’s not like that’s a top-three team. We played them well tonight and just didn’t capitalize.
“As far as the other things (trade speculation), I’m doing everything I can and playing as well as I can. If it wasn’t like that for me and my standards, that would be a problem.”
Detroit Red Wings’ Nate Danielson (29) jumps to avoid Elias Pettersson (25) as they vie for the puck during the first period Photo by ETHAN CAIRNS /THE CANADIAN PRESSGoal drought is troubling trio
Kiefer Sherwood remains the Canucks’ leading sniper with a dozen goals but hasn’t scored in 10 games.
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Jake DeBrusk hasn’t lit the lamp in nine games and Brock Boeser has gone five without scoring and has one goal in his last 12 outings.
It’s not for lack of trying, but a lack of finish had a lot to do with the outcome Monday.
“We had a lot of good chances and it was lopsided for a good part of the game and a couple of mistakes that went in the back of our net,” said Canucks head coach Adam Foote. “That was the game. Guys were digging at the net, but we had a double-up at our goalline and it’s not the way we play and it cost us. And another double-up for a goal.
“When two guys get put in 2-on-1 situations, that can’t happen, and it happened twice. We had full control of the game and giving them fits and then we have a mistake.”
That was compounded by an off night for starting goaltender Kevin Lankinen, who allowed three goals on 13 shots and was replaced by Nikita Tolopilo to start the third period.
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“He was a little off,” Foote said of Lankinen and the pull. “I wanted to give the guys a spark.”
Boeser started the list of considerable chances with an early redirect on net. DeBrusk knocked down a flip pass at speed down the flank but couldn’t convert the opportunity. He then ripped a wrister off the left post on a second-period power play before a jam chance at the side of the net.
The trio combined for 11 shots and 26 attempts, but what the Canucks desperately need is greasier goals, no matter the player or the line. To their credit, they had a better net presence in the third period, but the damage was already done.
“I could have had a couple of goals, so frustrating,” said DeBrusk. “Just inches. I have to try and do something different because it’s costing us right now. I’ve gone through things like this personally and I’m trying to help the other guys out. You have to take it in stride, but constantly getting denied is becoming an issue.”
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If DeBusk didn’t ping a short-side chance off the post on a power play it might have made a difference.
“Or score on the breakaway I had, or the backdoor I had, or any one of those and you can pick them,” added DeBrusk. “I just tried to get the puck up and quick on the backdoor and a great save. But I have to finish that off. I can’t believe it.”
Long goal droughts are nothing new for DeBrusk, who had a career-high 28 goals last season, and he has a knack of going on a goal spree. However, Boeser seems miffed at how he’s not connecting by either shooting high or wide with a shot that normally packs velocity and accuracy.
As for Sherwood, this is also not new territory. He had a career 19 goals last season, but also a 14-game goal funk.
So what’s the way out of the slumps? Keeping it simple and direct? More bodies to the net?
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“Creating a little bit more chaos around the net,” suggested defenceman Tyler Myers. “Get bodies to the net and a shot mentality. As defencemen, we have to do more of that. Our defensive zone game has improved a lot, but there are mistakes we can clean up and that can be the difference to get momentum.”
Detroit Red Wings’ Andrew Copp (18) scores on Kevin Lankinen (32) as Filip Hronek (17) scrambles back during the second period Photo by ETHAN CAIRNS /THE CANADIAN PRESSHoglander dives into deep end
Nils Hoglander vowed to ease into his first NHL regular-season game this season. Good luck with that. He’s not wired that way.
The feisty winger, who suffered an ankle injury in a pre-season game collision at Abbotsford, can’t just dip his toes into the competitive waters. Even though that was his pre-game promise.
“I’m going to play pretty easy the first couple of shifts and get comfortable to get back in it,” he said.
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Well, on his first shift, Hoglander threw a good hit on a strong puck-possession shift in the offensive zone and followed up with a wrister on a feed from Arshdeep Bains. He then controlled another puck in the offensive zone and circled the net to look for an open linemate.
“He plays with a lot of energy and is hungry on pucks,” said Canucks head coach Adam Foote. “He’s right where we’re going in trying to transition into a grittier team.”
Detroit Red Wings’ James van Riemsdyk (21) celebrates his goal as Marcus Pettersson (29) skates away during the first period Photo by ETHAN CAIRNS /THE CANADIAN PRESS
OVERTIME — Adam Foote said centre Elias Pettersson was feeling better Monday with his upper-body aliment, and will know better in a couple of days about his timeline for return. He added Thatcher Demko will “probably” return Thursday from a groin strain to face the Buffalo Sabres.
REPORT CARDS
Brock Boeser (C+)
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Early scoring chance would have set tone but is snake-bit. Three shots. Lots of frustration.
David Kampf (C)
Playing better defensively and big presence in the faceoff circle at 65 per cent efficiency.
Conor Garland (C)
As usual, played with speed through neutral zone, set up plays that need finishing.
Evander Kane (C-)
Drove the neutral zone on one good foray, had two shots, six attempts, minus-2 rating.
Aatu Raty (C+)
Nearly scored goal by putting puck between legs. Won 62 per cent of draws. Four shots.
Kiefer Sherwood (B+)
Three shots, 12 attempts, 10 hits. Lots of drive and good scoring chances. Frustrated.
Jake DeBrusk (B)
Five shots, eight attempts, plenty of Grade A looks including pointing post on power play.
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Max Sasson (C)
Smart plays and speed will keep him in the game but one shot and no faceoff wins.
Linus Karlsson (C)
Using big body better to win board battles and maintain net-front presence.
Nils Hoglander (C+)
Hard to play catch up in first game of the season. But plenty of hustle, desire.
Drew O’Connor (C)
As a winger asked to play centre, tough task to be that reliable two-way guy.
Arshdeep Bains (C)
See Sasson assessment. Same kind of player. Lots of speed but not shots.
Quinn Hughes (B+)
Did what he could. Dangerous end-to-end rushes, four shots, seven attempts.
Filip Hronek (C)
A couple of rare giveaways for solid top-pairing defenceman. Not as steady.
Elias Pettersson (C)
Five shot attempts and three hits proving he’s trying to build bigger game.
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Tyler Myers (C)
Had one foray where he let shot go from point but otherwise dependable.
Marcus Pettersson (C)
Continues to take bad penalties and lost positioning on first Detroit goal.
Tom Willander (C)
There was one easy end-to-end rush that gave you hope for bright future.
Kevin Lankinen (C-)
Three goals on 13 shots and got the hook after two periods. Not a great night.
Nikita Tolopilo (B)
Big and square and solid in relief. Nothing seems to faze the big Belarusian.
bkuzma@postmedia.com
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