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Double Standard

Posted by O9 On April - 30 - 2009

One of the playoffs’ livelier topics of conversation concerns the double standard which exists in the NHL’s judicial system between tough guys and stars.

You can guess where the Canucks’ Darcy Hordichuk falls out in that debate.

“You come to expect it when you play that role,” says the Canucks’ winger. “You know you’re going to get more than anyone else. It’s definitely unfair. You look at what (Calgary’s Mike) Cammalleri did (to Chicago’s Martin Havlat in the first round). Talk about a double standard. That’s a perfect example.”

Hordichuk, of course, was reacting to the controversy surrounding the six-game suspension handed out to Washington’s Donald Brashear for his head shot on the Rangers’ Blair Betts in the first round.

Cammalleri’s head shot to Havlat, meanwhile, went unpunished and the league is still deliberating over a similar incident involving Anaheim’s Corey Perry.

Brashear, like Hordichuk, is a tough guy. Cammalleri and Perry are frontlliners.

“I don’t want to accept it,” says Hordichuk. “But the reality is, every time someone like me steps on the ice, we really have to be careful. It’s so easy to say three years ago you did this or two years you did that.

“It’s just my opinion but I think a lot of guys around the league share that opinion.”

Chipping In

Posted by O9 On December - 14 - 2008

You’ve heard of the Gordie Howe hat trick, right? But how about the enforcer’s points streak?
“Right now I’ve got a little points streak going, but I know my role and I love my role,” Darcy Hordichuk said.

Hordichuk is on a tear — two goals and three points, and a plus-three to boot, over his past five games — three of them skating with a painful broken bone in his foot.

If it’s not quite a streak in the literal sense of the word — Hordichuk was kept off the scoresheet in two of the five games — it’s a streak of sorts for a guy whose goal total already this season matches his combined total for the past two seasons.

And really, his last game, at Nashville on Tuesday, shouldn’t even count since because of the way the penalties unfolded, he only got onto the ice for 3:09.

A mere four shifts, when he averages about 10 or so.

It’s a shame because he was really looking forward to showing his old employers they made a mistake by not re-signing him. (Plus it’s probably where he and his wife will retire to once hockey’s done, so much did they love his three seasons with the Predators.)

“It’s a long season,” Hordichuk said. “When we go back there in December [for a New Year's Day game] we’ll have our fun again and hopefully I can make an impact.”

Alain Vigneault takes a lot of heat over his trigger-happy penchant for shaking up lines.

The Sedins will likely retire without ever playing a season with a regular right winger again.

But Vigneault’s decision to throw Hordichuk, Jannik Hansen and Moose call-up Jason Jaffray together on the fourth line — to say nothing of putting Steve Bernier with Alex Burrows and Ryan Kesler on the third line — has looked so far like a stroke of genius.

“I’m just feeling more confident and getting more comfortable,” said Hordichuk, who set up Jaffray’s first NHL goal of the season. “It’s fun.

“Getting a chance to play with Jaffs, he’s being playing real well, and Jannik, it’s just a different outlook on the fourth line.”

Hordichuk missed two games on the road trip — at Columbus and Detroit — after taking a shot to the laces.

The puck broke his second metatarsal, one of the five long bones in the forefoot which attach to the toes. He wears a protective shield over the front of his left skate and it’s actually less painful to skate than it is to walk (it’s the up-down lifting motion that hurts most).

Doctors have told him it’ll be sometime in mid-January before the bone is fully healed.

“When you’re skating you’re pushing off sideways,” he said, “except sometimes when you’re turning you can really feel it.

“But I’ve doubled my goals from last year already, so that’s not a bad thing. It’s funny that I’ve played some of my best hockey with a broken foot.”

Hordichuk Sucks it Up

Posted by O9 On December - 7 - 2008

Darcy Hordichuk plans to keep playing even with a fractured bone in his foot that means he can’t walk without wearing a protective boot off the ice.

He doesn’t think he has much of a choice, not after his teammate Ryan Johnson played for a month with a similar injury.

“What are you going to do? You suck it up, right,” Hordichuk said. “Everyone keeps saying how R.J. played through it.

“I still can’t walk without the boot. Guys are laughing at me, but I can’t put the pressure on it. The swelling has gone down, which is nice. But I think I’ll be in this boot for a while.”

Hordichuk missed a week before returning Friday with teammates calling him a “warrior.”

He had a good game against the Wild, skated hard and helped set up Jason Jaffray’s game-winning goal.

He said playing through the foot injury has been easier than when he was playing despite a banged up knee earlier in the season.

“When I was taping up my knee, I didn’t feel like I was playing my game,” Hordichuk said. “Now, it’s a foot. But it feels a lot better than the knee. I think I’m back on my game, running around and being physical.”

Hordichuk now has a goal and an assist on the season, both points came in his past three games.

“It’s not expected but I feel confident out there,” Hordichuk said. “I just have to be a little bit more patient with the puck. I think that’s what our line has been doing well.

“I do feel good but I don’t know how soon I’m going to be able to drop the gloves.”

Hordi Hurt

Posted by O9 On December - 2 - 2008

The Canucks have lost winger Darcy Hordichuk for an undetermined period with what coach Alain Vigneault called a slight foot fracture. Hordichuk suffered the injury when he blocked a shot in Saturday night’s 3-1 loss in Calgary. Winger Mike Brown took his spot in the Vancouver lineup.

Perogies and Borscht

Posted by O9 On October - 28 - 2008

1 on 1 with Darcy Hordichuk and Elliott Pap of the Vancouver Sun.

Q. Early in September, our paper ran a sports front photo of you and your fluffy little Shih Tzu dogs Franklin and Chandler. As the new tough guy on the Canucks, did that draw some reaction?

A. The reaction was the boys were a little hard on me in the dressing room because they really didn’t know me yet. It was fun. You don’t get to be on the front page of the sports section in Tennessee too many times. In Nashville, it’s a little tougher to get recognized but here everybody knows the game and loves the game. I was happy to share the photo with my dogs.

Q. You have you own website, www.darcyhordichuk.com, which chronicles your exploits in hockey. How did it all come about?

A. It goes back to my Orlando Solar Bear days [2000-01] when the team folded. The lady who was in charge of the Solar Bears website had nothing to do so she got my domain name and ended up starting the website because people were always calling her to see how I was doing. It kind of snowballed from there.

Q. Are you still working with that lady and how much time do you spend on your website during the season?

A. No, I’m not with her anymore. Another company kind of ended up revamping it a little bit. Actually, it’s not a company but somebody who does athletes’ websites. I work on it when I have some down time — we do Q&As and we’ve got a blog going and some of my fights — but it’s been tough lately because I’m still trying to get my furniture to Vancouver.

Q. Your first NHL coach with the Atlanta Thrashers was Curt Fraser, who was originally a Canuck and also wore No. 24. Did Curt ever tell you how tough he was?

A. No, he never talked about himself too much but I heard stories. Everybody I talked to said he was a guy who could hurt you. It’s funny because my first couple of years with him in Atlanta, there wasn’t too much of a system for me. It was just kind of run around and kill guys and do whatever you want. I think that was kind of his style and he saw a little bit of himself in me. Curt’s a great person but I’ve lost touch with him now.

Q. You’re from a Ukrainian background and you love your perogies and cabbage rolls and borscht. Is your wife also of Ukrainian descent?

A. No, she’s got some Swedish in her and some Irish. She’s an American, from Fresno, California. I met her in Phoenix when I was playing for the Coyotes.

Q. Have you managed to convince her of the delights of Ukrainian food? Is she a fan?

A. Oh, yeah. That’s one of the things you have to do if you want to be a Hordichuk. You have to like my Baba’s cooking. [Baba is grandmother in Ukrainian.] It’s tough on my wife because I want her to make the perogies and borscht and she can’t do it quite like Baba. The standards are pretty high.

Source

Darcy Bit by Injury Bug

Posted by O9 On October - 21 - 2008

The Vancouver Canucks have been hit by a slew of injuries on their current road trip.

Forward Rick Rypien (viral infection) was sick enough to be sent home before Sunday’s 4-2 loss to the Blackhawks for further examination.

Canuck coach Alain Vigneault said Darcy Hordichuk will be out 7-10 days with a sprained ACL after colliding with teammate Ryan Johnson, while Sami Salo (pulled groin) and Pavol Demitra (torso injury) will be reexamined today in Columbus, where Vancouver ends its road trip on Tuesday.

It seems unlikely, however, that any of the injured will be back by then.

Recently demoted Kyle Wellwood and Matt Pettinger are expected to be recalled from the Canucks farm team in Manitoba.

Hordichuk’s a Hit

Posted by O9 On October - 17 - 2008

The return of Darcy Hordichuk to the fourth line and the removal of Kyle Wellwood seemed to re-energize this team, so perhaps the second guessers may have had a point. The best thing about Hordichuk is that he gives you energy, he gives this team presence and courage — and he does so without taking minor penalties. How a team can let that kind of player just walk out of town is a mystery.

Source: Tony Gallagher, The Province

Darcy Expects to Two-Step in Calgary

Posted by O9 On October - 11 - 2008

One of the hardest things in hockey for Darcy Hordichuk is turning down a fight.

He did just that in Thursday night’s regular-season opener, but it’s not likely to happen again tonight when the Vancouver Canucks and Calgary Flames meet for what figures to be a spirited rematch at the Pengrowth Saddledome.

Hordichuk skated away when Flames’ tough guy Andre Roy issued him a dance invitation during the second period of Thursday night’s 6-0 Vancouver win. The Canucks had a 3-0 lead at the time.

“If it was just up to me, I’d do it,” Hordichuk said Friday. “I can’t back down from a fight, but you have to listen to what the team wants and what the coaching staff wants. I kind of looked at the bench to see if they wanted me to go and if I get the nod, I’m going to do it. “But at that point it’s not about me, it’s about the team and not changing the momentum. . . It’s 3-0, there’s really no point.”

Tonight figures to be different. The Flames were sliced and diced by the local media after Thursday night’s lopsided loss and figure to try to run the Canucks right out of the Saddledome.

Hordichuk, who has been around the block a time or two as a NHL enforcer, knows he’s likely going to have to drop ‘em tonight.

“If it’s there, I’ll take it,” he said. “It’s different, it’s not 3-0 anymore. That’s my role and I think it’s going to be a fun game tomorrow.”

Full Story: Brad Ziemer, Vancouver Sun

Off for the Summer

Posted by Darcy Hordichuk
May-14-2009

Catching Up

Posted by Darcy Hordichuk
Apr-25-2009

Quick Check-in

Posted by Darcy Hordichuk
Apr-11-2009

Like Father, Like Son

Posted by Darcy Hordichuk
Mar-16-2009

Dice and Ice

Posted by Darcy Hordichuk
Feb-7-2009