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THE MOJ: Canucks passengers need to start driving the bus after Game 4

Coach Tocchet calls out ā€˜5 or 6 guysā€™ for not putting in the works as Edmonton evens series
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Vancouver Canucksā€™ Elias Pettersson (40) and Edmonton Oilersā€™ Evan Bouchard (2) battle for the puck during third period second-round NHL playoff action in Edmonton on Tuesday May 14, 2024.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jason Franson

The Edmonton Oilers were a desperate team and it showed as they beat the Vancouver Canucks by a 3-2 margin at Rogers Place in Edmonton on Tuesday night to tie their best-of-seven second round series at two games a piece.

It simply boiled down to effort ā€“ and the Canucks didnā€™t have enough players matching the Oilers in that department.

ā€œWe need five or six guys to get going here. Itā€™s the Stanley Cup playoffs. We canā€™t play with 12 guys, so weā€™ve got to figure it out quick. Obviously, itā€™s a tough one. Edmonton came to play ā€“ they wanted it more early,ā€ Vancouver head coach Rick Tocchet said afterwards.

J.T. Miller didnā€™t play at the level most of us are accustomed to but you can classify that as an exception and not the norm. The playoffs are a grind, both mentally and physically, so you can give Miller a mulligan for game four.

The same cannot be said for Elias Pettersson, who again was the target for Canuck Nation on social media after the game. Vancouverā€™s $11.5 million dollar man has been a non-factor with just one goal in 10 playoff games.

Never mind the lack of production, itā€™s the lack of compete that has Canuck fans fuming and his coach frustrated.

ā€œHeā€™s got to get going. I donā€™t know what else to say,ā€ said a disappointed Tocchet when questioned about Petterssonā€™s play.

The Canucks looked listless for most of the night as Edmonton took a 2-0 lead into the third but got some juice when Conor Garland took a tip pass from Elias Lindholm and made his way to the slot where he let go a wrist shot that beat Oilers netminder Calvin Pickard to make it 2-1 at 6:54 of the third.

From there on in, the Canucks had the Oilers on their heels and tied the game when Dakota Joshua got credited for a goal with 1:41 remaining in the third period. Joshua, Lindholm and Oiler defenseman Darnell Nurse were all in front of the crease when Brock Boeser took a shot that deflected off Joshuaā€™s skate.

Overtime loomed but the Canucks wound up making up several mistakes that allowed Evan Bouchardā€™s shot from the blueline to elude all the traffic in front and beat a screened Arturs Silovs with :39 seconds remaining in the third.

ā€œItā€™s a will to get the puck. Itā€™s not Xā€™s and Oā€™s. There are times where you know where the puck is going to go. You just have to get there before the other guy and I think we are pausing. Some guys are playing pause hockey and you canā€™t win if you have five or six passengers or seven. Thereā€™s at least half a dozen passengers tonight. Quite frankly, thatā€™s what it was,ā€ said Tocchet.

The Oilers opened the scoring at 11:10 of the first on the power play with Miller in the box for a high-sticking infraction on Leon Draisaitl. Draisaitl made him pay with a sharp angle shot from the right side after Conor McDavid darted to the middle and drew three defenders to him before passing it off to Draisaitl, whose one-timer was very similar to the goal he scored in the second game.

The Oilers took a two-goal lead when Ryan Nugent-Hopkins took advantage of a 2-on-1 with McDavid and beat Silovs with :40 remaining in the second period.

Some of Canuck Nation blamed Canuck defenseman Noah Juulsen for the odd-man rush as he stepped up and delivered a big hit on Edmontonā€™s Mattias Ekholm. It was obviously the wrong decision but you canā€™t be too critical of Juulsen for a couple of reasons. One, it was his first game in nearly three weeks so timing may have been an issue. Second, and more importantly, he made the mistake going 100% which you can never be overly critical of a player.

ā€œThe second goal at the end of the period was a killer. You canā€™t do that,ā€ said Tocchet, who also praised Juulsen for his overall performance.

Another area of concern has to be special teams.

The Canucks received a four-minute power play when Edmontonā€™s Evander Kane was called for high-sticking on Vancouverā€™s Tyler Myers at 14:12 of the first. With an opportunity to tie the game - and possibly take the lead ā€“ Vancouverā€™s power play was abysmal and managed just one shot during the four minutes. The power play actually gave the Oilers momentum and took it away from Vancouver.

ā€œIt just wasnā€™t good enough. They know it. I donā€™t think they worked hard. They mismanaged the puck. Itā€™s a four-minute power play. You have to have a work ethic. You have to hold pucks and I just donā€™t think we did,ā€ said Tocchet.

ā€œIā€™m just going to be honest with you. Iā€™m tired of talking about it. Iā€™m just going to tell you the same thing,ā€ said a clearly frustrated Miller when the subject of the power play was broached.

Meanwhile, the Oilers power play continued to operate a peak efficiency with the Draisaitl goal, going one-for-two on the night and is now five-for-ten on the series.

The series is now a best-of-three with Vancouver holding home-ice advantage with game five on Thursday night in Vancouver at Rogers Arena.

Hopefully, the Canucks wonā€™t have any passengers on Thursday.

If they do, it might be the last home game of the season.

OVERTIME

* Silovs made 27 saves for Vancouver while Pickard, making his first-ever playoff start in place of Stuart Skinner, stopped 19 shots for the Oilers.

* It was the eighth straight one-goal game playoff game that the Canucks have been involved in. The Canucks record in those games is 5-3.

* Tocchet hinted at making one or two possible lineup changes. Look for Nils Hoglander to be possibly re-inserted with Sam Lafferty a potential scratch. Lafferty didnā€™t see the ice in the last half of the third period and finished with a team-low 7:23 of ice time.

Veteran B.C. sports personality Bob ā€œthe Mojā€ Marjanovich writes twice weekly for Black Press Media.

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