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Canucks: What's the most iconic play-by-play call in team history?

Canucks: What's the most iconic play-by-play call in team history?

Yahoo17-03-2025

If play-by-play calls of Greg Adams' goal that sent the Vancouver Canucks to the 1994 Stanley Cup Final and Kevin Bieksa's goal in 2011 that did the same for the team sound similar, it's completely intentional.
Jim Hughson was calling the action for Hockey Night In Canada on the evening that a puck ricocheted wildly off a stanchion on the sideboards to Bieksa at the blue line and Bieksa knuckle-balled it past a gaggle of bewildered San Jose Sharks for the winner in a 3-2 double overtime victory that clinched Vancouver the Western Conference title.
Hughson is from Fort St. John. He grew up with Jim Robson as the voice of the Canucks. Robson was one of the people Hughson studied as a young broadcaster.
Ask Hughson to name the most iconic play-by-play call in Canucks history and he points to Robson's detailing of Adams' goal in double OT that gave Vancouver a 4-3 win over the Toronto Maple Leafs and clinched them the Western Conference banner.
Hughson liked the call so much, in fact, that he admits 'I tried to imitate that,' on the Bieksa goal that came 17 years later. He pegs it simply as a 'direct imitation of Robson.'
Adams backhanded a rebound past Felix Potvin in the Toronto net and Robson described it as 'Adams shoots … scores … Greg Adams, Greg Adams … Adams gets the winner 14 seconds into the second overtime … the Vancouver Canucks are going to the Stanley Cup Final.'
Hughson used the identical final 10-word phrase to end off his Bieksa call, but it was the mood and emotion that he was trying to mimic most of all. Playing that deep into the spring is rare territory for the Canucks. Those two goals clinched two of the club's three trips to the Cup Finals in its 55-year history.
'It had a couple of different qualities,' Hughson, 68, said of the Adams' call. 'It was a great, exciting call. It was double overtime. And it meant so much to the franchise.
'But it also had this incredulity about it, this, 'Can you believe it that the Vancouver Canucks could actually go to the Stanley Cup Final?' '
Don Taylor (host of CHEK's Donnie and Dhali — The Team); John Shorthouse (Canucks TV play by play); Brendan Batchelor (Canucks radio play by play); and Dave Randorf (Tampa Bay Lightning TV play by play) all grew up in the Lower Mainland, all grew up following the Canucks. We asked them for their picks of the most iconic play-by-play call in Canucks history.
Shorthouse and Taylor both went with the Adams' goal, while Batchelor and Randorf selected the final moments of Game 6 of the Cup Final from that year against the New York Rangers, when a wounded and weary Trevor Linden was coming off the ice at the end of a shift in what would become a 4-1 Vancouver victory to force Game 7 back in New York.
Robson described it as: 'We hope they can patch Linden up and get him into that one. He will play. You know he'll play. He'll play on crutches. He will play and he'll play at Madison Square Garden on Tuesday night.
'It's the way he built that moment and did it with just a few sentences and basically gave every Canuck fan exactly what they were feeling at the time: this isn't over tonight and we're going to keep on going with the greatest ride we've ever seen with this franchise,' explained Randorf, 57, who was born in Toronto but grew up in North Delta.
'It's a pattern that I use to this day, that building up the end of a game. Whether it's the regular season or a playoff, you're trying to emphasis the accomplishment, the win, the night that one player has had. Use a couple of sentences and just time it out as the horn sounds and let the crowd take over from there. It's something I have completely ripped off from Jim Robson.
'I loved it (the Linden call) when I first heard it. It sends chills down your spine. All the moments aren't that big, of course. That was a very big one. But it's still a pattern that I've copied for when the moment is right.'
There have other been signature moments. There was the run to the 2011 Cup Final, which brought us Shorthouse's 'they've slayed the dragon,' as Vancouver ousted a Chicago Blackhawks' team in the first round that ended their playoffs the two years previous with a 2-1 OT Game 7 win on an Alex Burrows' marker.
The Robson calls have had staying power, though. Batchelor posted on social media recently about team captain and top defenceman Quinn Hughes returning to the lineup from injury and got replies quoting the Robson line.
So much old footage making its way to things like YouTube has a part in that.
'My personal favourite call is, 'Greg Adams, Greg Adams', but the most iconic call is the, 'He'll play. You know he'll play.' It's remained part of the lexicon for Canuck fans,' said Batchelor, 36, who's originally from Coquitlam.
'For me, what made Jim so special was his ability to convey the emotion of a moment without necessarily having to provide an overly detailed description. It was all in his tone. It was all in the way he would call a goal or the way in that moment he was like, 'He'll play. You know he'll play.' He perfectly encapsulated the emotions of the fan base in the way he delivered that line.
'I don't think there's ever been anyone in hockey broadcasting who's been able to take moments like that and amplify them to such a great degree and did it by complimenting the emotion of the moment without taking over the moment.'
Batchelor and the others did have some of these answers on top-of-mind since the Canucks interviewed them for a tribute to Robson on his 90th birthday in January.
Robson lives in Vancouver, and you'll see him at the odd Canucks game or from time-to-time at Nat Bailey Stadium watching the Vancouver Canadians.
He picks apart both the Adams and Linden calls. That is very much on-brand. He's notoriously humble.
Robson maintains that 'every time I hear the Linden call I wish I had finished it off with, 'He will play for the Stanley Cup.' ' And the Adams call had 'too many Adams in it.'
Press him for memorable calls, and he'll give you some. There's the Rosaire Paiement game-winner in a 5-4 triumph over the powerhouse Boston Bruins in the Canucks' 1970-71 inaugural season. There's Jim Nill's OT winner in a 2-1 win over the Blackhawks in the opening game of the 1982 Clarence Campbell Conference final.
There's the Bob Nystrom OT winner in a 5-4 victory for the New York Islanders over the Philadelphia Flyers in Game 6 of the 1980 Cup Final that cinched the first of four straight championships for the Islanders. Robson was tapped by Hockey Night to do that series.
He also cites Wayne Gretzky scoring his 802nd career goal for the Los Angeles Kings versus the Canucks in March 1994. That broke Gordie Howe's all-time record. Robson called that action on BCTV and offered up a 'there it is … No. 802,' before letting the fan reaction and the video take over the story.
Ask Robson about hockey play-by-play in general, and he readily brings up that he thinks Hughson was the best ever 'but was not appreciated in the east.'
'I've always said that Foster Hewitt was the first, Danny Gallivan the most-loved, Bob Cole the best voice, but it's Jim Hughson who's my choice as the very best,' he continued.
Robson called Canucks games on TV until 1999 but retired from the radio in 1994 and was succeeded by Hughson. Hughson told The Vancouver Sun then that 'Jim Robson has made this job a very prestigious one.' He was Robson's backup for a time before that, and admits that Robson was always 'open to having you just look over his shoulder and watch and listen.'
Hughson would, of course, eventually move onto national broadcasts. He retired in September 2021 and lives in White Rock.
It's all part of this market's remarkable run of play-by-play voices. That includes Kelowna's Rick Ball, who is handling Blackhawks games on TV.
Robson set the table. Along the way, he received the Foster Hewitt Memorial Award from the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1992 and was inducted into the B.C. Hockey Hall of Fame in 1998 and the B.C. Sports Hall of Fame in 2000.
'With all due to respect to everybody else, because they're all friends, but I grew up with Jim Robson and I don't think he just set the standard in Vancouver but also across the country and across all of hockey,' said Taylor, 65, who's a Burnaby native. 'It was just something about his voice. It was just amazing. He made you feel like everything was so important and fun and exciting. I just loved his voice.'
Hughson added: 'I think the bar was set pretty high by Jim and all of us had to work hard to try to reach that level.'
Shorthouse, 55, is from Vancouver. The Canucks have had their eras where they've struggled mightily. That included during Shorthouse's adolescence. There was a time, as a kid, that Shorthouse felt Robson was the 'best part of the team,' and he remembers being excited when Robson would get a national assignment for the playoffs because 'he was getting recognized for how good he was outside of our market, where we already knew how good he was.'
'When you turned on a Canuck game and Jim was calling it, you knew it would be concise, it would be accurate and it would be fair, and you could tell how the Canucks were doing just by the sound of his voice,' said Shorthouse, who, like Taylor and Randorf, is an alum of the Sports Page TV show as well. 'It wasn't just the words. It was also the tone.
'That was one of the things that made him so special — just the number of gears he could go to with his voice. Some guys have one gear or two. You're either really low or screaming, or you're always screaming. Jim could go from here to here to here to here to here, depending on the gravity of the moment or the excitement of the game, or the importance of the game. He had so many different gears he could go to.'
Greg Douglas was the Canucks' media relations director for their first seven seasons, so he has a long history with Robson. He recalls the Canucks playing the California Golden Seals on the road in that inaugural season. Charlie Finley owned the Golden Seals and was in the building. Finley was high-profile, through his ownership of baseball's Oakland Athletics.
Douglas offered to try to get Finley to be an intermission guest. Robson told Douglas that would never happen. Douglas managed to bring him on with Robson for the first-period break. According to Douglas, things went so well that Finley offered to come back for the second-period intermission, too, and 'hundreds of Jim's guests over the years shared the same sentiments.'
He has that kind of affect on people. Always.
'Jim Robson never changed during a Hall of Fame career that saw him broadcast over 2,000 NHL games on television and radio between 1970 and his retirement in 1999,' Douglas explained.
SEwen@postmedia.com
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Southern hockey surge: NHL teams thrive in non-traditional markets, from Texas to Florida
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Southern hockey surge: NHL teams thrive in non-traditional markets, from Texas to Florida

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Shane Willis remembers playing with the Hurricanes following the NHL's arrival in North Carolina — a process featuring a two-year transition to Greensboro before moving to Raleigh — and sometimes noticing a sparse home crowd during warmups. 'I'm like, 'Is anybody coming?'' said Willis, now Carolina's manager of youth and amateur hockey after five seasons as an NHL player. That isn't the case now, with Carolina having won a Stanley Cup in 2006 and currently on a seven-year run of winning at least one postseason series, including this year's run to the East final. Southern success This is the sixth season in a row a team from Florida has reached the Stanley Cup Final. The Panthers are there for the third year in a row, this time in a rematch against Edmonton. Tampa Bay also made it to the final three straight seasons, winning the Cup the first two. The Lightning's run began by beating Dallas in 2020 in what is still the the 'southernmost' Stanley Cup Final — except that entire postseason was played in Canada after the regular season was shortened because of the pandemic. Dallas made its third West final in a row this year, coming up short of another Cup chance. But they were the first Sun Belt team to hoist the Stanley Cup in 1999, followed by Tampa Bay in 2004. Every game in the conference finals in 2023 was played in the Sun Belt, a first. The Panthers beat Carolina in the East like they did this year, and Dallas lost to Vegas in the West. Popeye, Mo and Sakic Popeye Jones met Modano after getting invited to do an appearance during a Dallas Cowboys game. 'Not being a hockey fan, I really didn't know who he was and he didn't who I was. But we just struck up a conversation and started talking,' Jones said. 'Just general talk about sports and whatever, and he was such a nice guy and I enjoyed sitting there and talking to him.' That helped Jones become a Stars fan. They both played home games at the since-demolished Reunion Arena before Jones was traded to Toronto and later Boston, homes of two of the NHL's Original Six teams. His only season playing in Denver was 1999-2000, when the Avalanche lost to the Stars in consecutive West finals before winning the Cup in 2001. It was there that he got to know Avs star Joe Sakic, another future Hall of Fame hockey player and now the team's president of hockey operations. Jones' oldest son, Justin, came home from school one day in the Denver area and said he wanted to play hockey, which had a significant influence on Seth, who was 5 or 6 at the time. With his sons interested in playing an unfamiliar sport , Jones sought advice from Sakic, who said the boys needed to take skating lessons. Seth Jones started playing hockey in Colorado, but was born in Texas and was on some Stars-affiliated youth teams after his dad later returned to the Mavericks. 'When I was there, you could see more and more kids starting to play in Texas,' the 30-year-old Panthers defenseman said. 'And then really the past eight to 10 years, you see kids actually moving from the northern cities down to Texas because the hockey has really grown. Where before, all the good kids out of the southern cities would move up north to Chicago and Michigan and New York and these places.' More and more players The number of players registered with USA Hockey has grown significantly in Southern states over the past 20 seasons. USA Hockey said 4,793 players registered in North Carolina for the 2005-06 season, with roughly 2,400 of those being 18 or younger. That overall number of players jumped 19.5% (to 5,728) for the season following their 2006 Cup run. By the 2024-25 season, the state had 8,698 players (up 81.5% from 2005-06) with 5,608 being 18 or younger (up 135.5%), though Willis noted the actual number is likely higher since not all players register with USA Hockey. The total number of registrations have increased even more in Florida and Texas over the past two decades. In Florida, the total number of players has gone from 9,363 in 2005-06 to 22,888 (a 144.5% increase), with the number in the 18 or younger age groups nearly doubling to 10,277. Texas went from 7,017 to 17,346 total registrations (147.2%) in that same span, with those 18 and under going from 5,457 to 7,199 (31.9%). Pete DeBoer, the Stars coach the past three seasons, had his first NHL head coaching job with Florida from 2008-11. He recalls the Lightning and Panthers then playing before sparse crowds with questions about whether those teams would even stay in those markets. 'To see where they're at now is really impressive,' DeBoer said before the team fired him this past week. 'Dallas for me is a perfect example of coming into a place and, you know, getting a foothold at the grassroots level, and that the amount of rinks, ice surfaces and facilities and kids playing minor hockey here in Dallas is way bigger than I ever anticipated.' Much of that came as a result of the 1999 Stanley Cup for the Stars. 'They won, they captured the city's attention and all this stuff got done. Rinks got built,' DeBoer said. 'I think Florida didn't get that done early, but is doing it now and they're going to reap the benefits of that. I think when you get a team that wins and it's in a non-traditional market, I think the benefits roll out for decades.' Introducing the game For the Hurricanes, early outreach included going to area schools and essentially running PE classes as an introduction to the sport. The team, aided by grant money from the NHL, has more recently purchased equipment such as balls, sticks and Hurricanes-logo apparel to donate to more than 100 schools. The team this year partnered with Raleigh suburb Apex to open two public street hockey rinks. Carolina, Dallas and Florida all have tie-ins to to the 'Learn to Play' umbrella program created by the NHL and NHL Players' Association to introduce boys and girls, and even adults, to the sport. Those programs include variations of providing hockey equipment and instruction, and on-ice workouts at multiple rinks in their areas. "What you have to do is not only introduce the game of hockey to people, you have to introduce your brand. You have to make both things very attractive to parents to want to get involved,' Willis said. 'I see so many parents now, they come to games and we talk about it: if you can create a hockey player, whether it's street hockey or ice hockey, you're creating three fans. 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New York Times

time2 hours ago

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The Stanley Cup Final is underway, and there are just over three weeks until NHL free agency opens July 1. In a shallow UFA class this year, longtime Toronto Maple Leafs star Mitch Marner is going to be the most prominent name to watch this summer. How hard should each NHL team pursue the 28-year-old top forward this offseason? Advertisement This week, The Athletic asked its NHL staff to put teams into four tiers — 'they should do everything they can,' 'they should consider it,' 'they should at least look into it' and 'they shouldn't bother' — based on how they think each club should go about pursuing one of the biggest UFAs to hit the market in years. Here's what they said. The Ducks are positioned to make a gigantic splash in free agency. Marner was the NHL's fifth-leading scorer. Wanting him and getting him might be different matters, but the last Ducks player to finish that high in the scoring race was Ryan Getzlaf (with 87 points) in 2013-14. 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It would also be a major statement the Blue Jackets are in 'win' mode. — Aaron Portzline Any general manager owes it to his team to at least look into it anytime a 100-point player is available, but Dallas doesn't have the cap space to go after Marner. And even if Jim Nill were silly enough to trade away someone like Jason Robertson to clear up room, the Stars need some high-end grit more than they need more high-end skill. The blue line is more likely to be a focus this summer, anyway. — Mark Lazerus The Red Wings might not be just one player away from Stanley Cup contention, but Marner would nonetheless be a true difference-maker for a team hungry for a player of his caliber. Yes, he'd be another smaller forward in Detroit's top six, but he's also a 100-point forward who kills penalties. Those are rare. And for a team at risk of getting stuck in the middle, Marner would be a major needle-mover. — Max Bultman Advertisement The Oilers are always interested in improving their team with players who can mesh with Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl. Marner certainly fits that description. Realistically, though, it's hard to figure out how the Oilers could make this work, even if Marner wanted to come to Edmonton. Draisaitl's big contract is kicking in, McDavid is eligible for an extension, and Evan Bouchard needs a new deal. — Daniel Nugent-Bowman There are dots to connect here — and most are on the player's end. No income tax, minimal pressure and a championship core are attractive to anyone. Bill Zito is fearless, so we shouldn't rule out his taking a look, especially if Sam Bennett and Aaron Ekblad are on track to head elsewhere. If Marner is willing to take a significant discount to land in a great spot, why not have the conversation? — Sean Gentille The Kings are still in win-now mode despite their inability to win a playoff series for a fourth consecutive year. One element they've lacked is an A-list star. Marner hasn't wowed in the playoffs, but he just had his first 100-point season. He's averaged 100 points for every 82 games he's played the last seven years. Adding him to a deep group that has lacked top-end firepower would boost their contending chances. — Eric Stephens When you have a player of that talent level, it's always worth a phone call. But it's just not realistic for the Wild to get Marner. They have around $15.6 million in cap space left, and a Marner deal would take up pretty much all of it. Minnesota needs to address its need at center, especially if it moves on from Marco Rossi (a restricted free agent whose contract is not included in that cap space). — Joe Smith Firstly, Marner is not leaving one powder keg in Toronto only to head to another one down the road in Montreal. Secondly, the Canadiens are not at a stage of their build when throwing lots of money at a premier free agent makes a whole lot of sense, even if there are timing similarities with the New York Rangers when Jeff Gorton signed Artemi Panarin in free agency. — Arpon Basu The choice would really be somewhere in between 'at least look into it' and 'shouldn't bother,' but when you're as awful as the Preds were last season, you need to keep an open mind about any sort of impact player. That said, it's highly doubtful Barry Trotz would sign up for all that comes with Marner. — Joe Rexrode The Devils probably can't make a Marner move happen unless they clear some cap space, but they should at least be open if Marner is at all interested. He would make New Jersey's top six elite, though signing him would probably come at the expense of some bottom-six depth because of the money Tom Fitzgerald would have to move around to make it happen. — Peter Baugh Advertisement GM Mathieu Darche wasn't hired to conduct a teardown and full rebuild. Islanders ownership views the team as not that far away from being better; a good way to accelerate that process is to use some of their ample cap space on a dynamic player who's also defensively sharp. — Arthur Staple The Rangers want a big fish, and their lineup could most certainly use someone such as Marner, but their salary-cap situation makes it difficult to envision them making a play for the winger. They'd have to clear multiple contracts and would probably have to convince either Artemi Panarin or Mika Zibanejad to waive their no-movement clauses. That doesn't feel particularly feasible. — Peter Baugh There are two hurdles in the way of such a scenario that sees Marner turn to the dark side: the Sens' salary-cap picture and Marner's interest. The Sens have around $15 million in cap space, according to PuckPedia. Ottawa still has Fabian Zetterlund and Claude Giroux to sign, among other pending UFAs. Also, we haven't seen any smoke that suggests Marner would play for the Sens. Moving on. — Julian McKenzie The Flyers are devoid of high-end skill, so they should at least gauge Marner's interest. But this doesn't seem like a fit at the moment. The Flyers are set at right wing long-term with Matvei Michkov and Travis Konecny, but perhaps more crucially, they've always been targeting the 2026 offseason as the one in which they're going to open their wallets. — Kevin Kurz Marner is a great player. He's buddies with Sidney Crosby. He and Kyle Dubas know each other very well. The Penguins need an infusion of talent and have money to spend. Sounds great, right? But they are in the early stages of a rebuild, and a $100 million contract doesn't make sense right now. — Josh Yohe The Sharks are further away from contender status than other teams with plenty of cap space at their disposal, but players such as Marner hitting free agency don't come around every year. It doesn't hurt to have ex-teammates Joe Thornton and Patrick Marleau selling him on the virtues of San Jose and playing with Macklin Celebrini outside a pressure-packed cauldron. — Eric Stephens There is one no-question bona fide elite talent in unrestricted free agency, and the Kraken don't have that caliber of player. They have a lot of other interesting players. Serious speed at the center. Some really interesting two-way wingers with one-shot goal-scoring ability. A legitimately good, deep blue line. A solid young starter. Add in Marner, the Kraken could have a stew. — Thomas Drance I have to imagine Marner wants to go to a legitimate Stanley Cup contender and wants to maximize his value. Though the Blues appear to be on the upswing, they also don't seem positioned to meet those criteria. But he fits the type of player they need, and you'll never know his interest level unless you ask, so it's worth a phone call. Have Robert Thomas make that call since they're friends. — Jeremy Rutherford Advertisement Every team should at least look at the possibility of signing Marner this summer, even if it doesn't seem plausible. It's not often that elite talent makes it to free agency, so why not kick the tires? Can the Lightning pull it off? Almost definitely not, considering their cap outlook. But it doesn't hurt to check. — Shayna Goldman The writing has been on the wall for some time now that Marner would prefer to head elsewhere this summer. The Leafs tried to extend him this season and were unable to. Afterward, Marner spoke about his tenure with the team in the past tense and never expressed a desire to stay. After all this time and so much baggage, a split is what's best for Marner and the Leafs. — Jonas Siegel The Mammoth fell just short of a wild-card berth this season, and a big reason was that their offense couldn't keep up with most of the playoff teams. Utah finished 21st in scoring despite Clayton Keller's having a career year (90 points). They have a lot of intriguing prospects coming, a lot of cap space and aren't far from being a playoff team routinely. Marner would put them over the top. — James Mirtle Marner isn't going to come to Vancouver, but if it were hypothetically a realistic option, the Canucks should be all in on trying to make it happen. This team wants to get back to contending and needs elite talent up front more than anything else to do so. Marner's addition would be worth the price and whatever cap surgery the club would have to perform to make the pieces fit. — Thomas Drance On one hand, the Golden Knights and Marner appear to be a match. Vegas checks a lot of boxes for what Marner will be looking for, and Vegas' biggest need is scoring on the wing. On the other hand, Vegas already has several sizable cap hits, and Jack Eichel will be eligible to sign what projects to be a mega extension July 1, so adding Marner's contract could risk becoming too top-heavy. — Jesse Granger We just saw the Caps can maximize distressed assets in their mid-20s. Marner's game, say what you will about the postseason, is in better shape than that, and he'd work perfectly on a line with Alex Ovechkin and Ryan Strome. Washington's cap situation is challenging — raises for Jakob Chychrun and Logan Thompson are kicking in, among other factors — but the fit makes it worth a look. — Sean Gentille There's no way Marner is signing in Winnipeg. It's highly unlikely he's their guy and highly unlikely the Jets are his team. I didn't have the heart to commit to 'they shouldn't bother,' though, because that's a defeatist attitude. Winnipeg should obviously have the conversations, assess Marner's interest and consider his price. He's a tremendous player. It's just hard to imagine him as a UFA fit. — Murat Ates

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