In Clarke we trustAs a sixth round draft pick (156th overall) Silovs has already wildly exceeded his draft expectations.
Not a lot of sixth round picks ever even play an NHL game. Silovs has played NHL games at the tail end of both last season; and this season. And figures to have the inside track on the backup position for the Canucks next September.
Definitely a 'win' for the Canucks amateur scouting staff.
I suppose it's happened in the Cup playoffs before.....but I can't remember. Canucks have used three different starting goalies in four games.
Unfathomable. When it comes to the crease, 'it's the next man up'.
This. We're talking about a guy here who will never again have to pay for a beer in Riga because he's already a national hero for his wild performance in the WHC PLAYING IN FRONT OF HIS HOME CROWD (comprised of Latvians, possibly the craziest hockey fans in the world). He has known pressure like nobody on this team and has shown he can deal with it. If, as John Garrett suggests, the Canucks go back to DeSmith the second he isn't considered hurt the Canucks deserve everything they get. Silovs is hot, ride him until he isn't.Silovs is still young, but he's hardly lacking in big-game playoff experience. He's been the playoff starter for two consecutive years in the AHL with Abbotsford.
But saved his best work for Latvia in last spring's World Hockey Championships, where he was named tournament MVP and backstopped Lativa to a bronze medal with a win over the U.S. Apparently half a million people thronged the streets of Riga to salute the team and revel in the only hockey medal Latvia has ever won.
So the pressure of playing his first Stanley Cup playoff game didn't seem too big a stage for him at all.
To decide on who to start is simple, ask Ian Clark.This. We're talking about a guy here who will never again have to pay for a beer in Riga because he's already a national hero for his wild performance in the WHC PLAYING IN FRONT OF HIS HOME CROWD (comprised of Latvians, possibly the craziest hockey fans in the world). He has known pressure like nobody on this team and has shown he can deal with it. If, as John Garrett suggests, the Canucks go back to DeSmith the second he isn't considered hurt the Canucks deserve everything they get. Silovs is hot, ride him until he isn't.
Why are people just thanking Ian Clark and no love to Marko Torenius?
we thank them both?Why are people just thanking Ian Clark and no love to Marko Torenius?
Too soon.Is Arturs Silovs the Canucks No. 1 goalie of the future?.....maybe even the 'immediate future'?
Demko is a finalist for the Vezina, although he's unlikely to win it. But if you were to trade him, it would be literally be at 'the top of the market'. Some goalie starved team out there might be willing to part with some picks, prospects or both.
Maybe the Canucks might even recover some of the their prospect pipeline that they had to hollow out to acquire the likes of Zadorov and Lindholm.
If the recent Stanley Cup playoffs have proven anything, teams are winning the top prize with some pretty average goaltending. And for context, the Av's Alexandar Georgiev just bested Connor Hellebucyk, another Vezina finalist this year, and the likely winner.
Its a little pre-mature to consider trading Demko just because Silvos has a few decent game, no?Is Arturs Silovs the Canucks No. 1 goalie of the future?.....maybe even the 'immediate future'?
Demko is a finalist for the Vezina, although he's unlikely to win it. But if you were to trade him, it would be literally be at 'the top of the market'. Some goalie starved team out there might be willing to part with some picks, prospects or both.
Maybe the Canucks might even recover some of the their prospect pipeline that they had to hollow out to acquire the likes of Zadorov and Lindholm.
If the recent Stanley Cup playoffs have proven anything, teams are winning the top prize with some pretty average goaltending. And for context, the Av's Alexandar Georgiev just bested Connor Hellebucyk, another Vezina finalist this year, and the likely winner.