Demko leads Canucks to shutout victory, forces Game 7

Demko leads Canucks to shutout victory, forces Game 7
Vancouver Canucks / Twitter
Thatcher Demko led the way for the Vancouver Canucks once again, backstopping his club to a 4-0 victory over the Vegas Golden Knights to force Game 7.

Goaltender Thatcher Demko has gone from riding the bench to crafting a storybook playoff season in the span of 72 hours and he’s taking the Vancouver Canucks along for the ride.

Demko, 24, stopped all 48 shots he faced for his first-ever post-season shutout to lead the Canucks to a 4-0 win over the Vegas Golden Knights on Thursday night and force a Game 7 in their NHL playoff series.

It was just Demko’s second playoff start two days after he turned aside 42 shots to preserve a 2-1 victory in Game 5.

The Canucks were once again heavily outshot by the Golden Knights firing squad. The lopsided shots were 48-22 in favour of the Golden Knights, but they simply could not solve the brick wall in the Canucks net.

Over the course of the two games, Demko has faced a whopping 91 shots, turning aside all but one.

And if you count the five shots he faced in mop-up time in Game 1, Vegas has blasted 96 pucks at him and Demko has stopped 95.

“Thatcher’s been our MVP both nights,” said Vancouver forward Jake Virtanen, who scored the game-winning goal less than three minutes into the first period.

“He’s standing on his head back there and he’s making some amazing saves, keeping us in games. You can see the confidence he has back there. He’s just calm and collected, playing his game.”

Demko is playing in place of regular starter Jacob Markstrom, who was deemed unfit to play with an undisclosed injury.

With the shutout, Demko becomes the first Canucks goalie to record a shutout when facing elimination since Kirk McLean back in 1992.

Adding to the accolades, he set a league record for most saves in a playoff shutout that did not go to overtime.

Demko’s last start before the post-season was March 10, two days before the NHL’s regular season was halted, and later cancelled, due to COVID-19.

“I just wanted to come in and try to help out any way I could,” said Demko. “We were down 3-1, our goal was to win one game at a time and eventually get to a Game 7, which we’ve done.”

Game 7 is scheduled to go tonight, September 4, at 6 p.m.

Golden Knights forward Max Pacioretty had praise for Demko’s performance but hoped there were chinks forming in his armour.

“We played a lot in their end tonight, hopefully that will give us some energy to know that we’re a bounce or two away from hopefully scoring some goals,” said Pacioretty. “That being said, their goalie is feeling it right now.”

Thursday was the first time the Golden Knights, the top Western Conference seed, have been shut out in the return to play tournament.

J.T. Miller and Quinn Hughes each had a goal and an assist for Vancouver.

Miller scored early in the third period to make it 2-0, wheeling around in the right face-off circle and firing the puck far side past Lehner. It was his first goal of the series. He has six goals in the post-season. Hughes got the assist, his 14th of the playoffs.

Hughes then got his second goal of the post-season, firing a slapshot from the point past a screened Lehner.

Hughes finished with two points on the night, bringing his postseason total to 16.

With 16 points to his name, he sets the record for most points by a rookie defenceman in a single postseason in NHL history – leapfrogging fellow 2020 Calder Trophy finalist Cale Makar with the Colorado Avalanche.

Captain Bo Horvat scored into an empty net for his playoff-leading 10th goal.

For many Canucks, this is unfamiliar territory. Vancouver has not been in the playoffs since 2015 and this will be its first Game 7 since losing to the Boston Bruins in the Stanley Cup final in 2011.

Half the current Canuck players are in their first NHL playoffs, and now they’re in their first Game 7.

“As a kid, no one really talks about Game 1 or Game 2. I think everyone dreams of Game 7,” said Hughes, a rookie and Calder Trophy candidate.

“To give ourselves a chance after being down 3-1, I think we’re proud of ourselves (but) we’re not satisfied.”

It’s familiar territory for the Golden Knights. They were dispatched in seven games by the San Jose Sharks in the first round last spring after going all the way to the Stanley Cup finals in their inaugural season in 2018.

All Western Conference games are being played without spectators at Rogers Place. The final-four series and Stanley Cup final will also be played in Edmonton.

With files to Canadian Press

Graham CoxGraham Cox

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