Manitoba

Vilardi scores twice as Jets double up NHL-leading Canucks 4-2

Mark Scheifele had a goal and three assists, Gabriel Vilardi had two goals and an assist, Kyler Connor had two assists, and Sean Monahan scored his first goal for the Jets in a 4-2 road victory over the Canucks on Saturday.

Winnipeg has won 3 straight, sits 2nd in Central Division standings

One hockey players shoots the puck past a goaltender.
Winnipeg Jets forward Gabriel Vilardi backhands the puck past Vancouver Canucks goalie Thatcher Demko as Nikita Zadorov defends during the second period of an NHL hockey game in Vancouver on Saturday night. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

Winnipeg Jets forward Mark Scheifele summed up his team's 4-2 win over the Vancouver Canucks as "an absolute blast."

Scheifele had a hand in all four of his team's goals on Saturday night in a game featuring one player being ejected and a number of punishing hits.

"It was awesome. It was fun. That's what you want when you got two Canadian teams going at it. That's what everyone wants to see and it was an absolute blast," he said.

Scheifele had a goal and three assists, Gabriel Vilardi had two goals and an assist, Kyler Connor had two assists, and Sean Monahan scored his first goal for Winnipeg (33-14-5), which has won three straight.

Tyler Myers and Noah Juulsen scored for the NHL-best Canucks (37-13-6), while Conor Garland and Ilya Mikheyev earned assists.

The winning goal came as Juulsen went to lay out Scheifele, creating a three-on-one with Connor sliding a pass to an open Vilardi at 7:47 of the third period.

A hockey player celebrates a goal.
Winnipeg Jets forward Sean Monahan celebrates his first goal with his new team as Vancouver Canucks goalie Thatcher Demko, back left, and Elias Lindholm, right, look on. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

Jets coach Rick Bowness praised his team's performance, adding that this sort of matchup was a sign of things to come.

"That's what it's gonna be like from here on out. It's teams fighting for playoff spots, positioning in the league and there's only 30 games to go for us and every one is going to be a battle," he said. "That was a hard-fought win and that's the type of hockey it's going to be from here on out."

Thatcher Demko stopped 24 of 28 shots for Vancouver while Connor Hellebuyck stopped 35 of 37 for Winnipeg.

Vilardi said his team owes much of its success to Hellebuyck and the offence wanted to step up and help.

"[Hellebuyck] can only do so much. We got to score and it was nice that the power play finally contributed and we need to keep that going," Vilardi said.

Scheifele doubled the lead two minutes later, breaking away from Juulsen to tuck home a pass from Connor for the insurance goal.

The drama and action started in the second after a quiet opening frame.

The Jets took the lead at 9:25 of the second period through Monahan, immediately after Canucks forward Phil Di Giuseppe was given a game misconduct, and an instigator penalty, for fighting with Adam Lowry.

Two hockey players fight.
Vancouver Canucks winger Phillip Di Giuseppe, back left, and Winnipeg Jets captain Adam Lowry fight during the second period of Saturday's game. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

Scheifele wristed a pass to Vilardi at the side of the net who fed it to an open Monahan.

Myers evened it up at 14:19, dancing his way to the net to score a backhand goal past Hellebuyck.

Juulsen opened the scoring for the Canucks 19 seconds into the second period, driving to the net and finding a loose pass from Garland which he roofed past a stranded Hellebuyck. It was his first goal as a Canuck and first in 72 games.

"I mean the goal doesn't matter at all obviously. You know the third one I went for the hit and it ended up in the back of our net and the fourth one is on me as well," said Juulsen after the game, pinning the loss on his miscues.

Canucks coach Rick Tocchet disputed his defenceman's assessment in taking responsibility for the loss, adding it was a learning lesson for his team as a whole.

"I think we're getting frustrated with some things out there," he said.

"We've got to build a resolve when you're in tight situations that you are going to make sure you keep your head."

But the Jets tied the game midway through the period, on the power play, with Scheifele finding an open Vilardi alone in front of Demko who had no trouble slipping his shot past the Canucks netminder.

The first period started slowly, before Scheifele thought he opened the scoring seven minutes into the game, only for the referees to wave the goal off and determining he pushed Demko into the net.

The Canucks best chance in the opening frame also came on the power play, with Elias Lindholm open at the far post but couldn't beat Hellebuyck with six minutes left.

Winnipeg, which sits second in the Central Division, visits the Calgary Flames on Monday.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Nick Wells is a writer with The Canadian Press.