Patrick Kane became the fifth American to reach 500 NHL goals with a pair of scores in the Detroit Red Wings' 5-1 victory over the Vancouver Canucks. The win extended Detroit's strong run since late November, while Vancouver extended its skid to five straight losses amid injuries. Kane's milestone highlighted a dominant performance by the Red Wings against a struggling Canucks squad.
The Detroit Red Wings defeated the Vancouver Canucks 5-1 on Thursday night at Little Caesars Arena, showcasing a resurgence that has seen them go 13-4-3 since November 28. Patrick Kane starred with two goals, including his 500th career NHL goal on a power play with 29 seconds left in the first period, making him just the fifth American to achieve the feat. His empty-netter sealed the win after Vancouver pulled goalie Kevin Lankinen with 5:08 remaining in the third.
Vancouver, mired in a seven-losses-in-eight-games slump following a four-game winning streak before Christmas, struggled without three injured centers and relied on young prospects in the bottom of their lineup. The Canucks played competitively in the first period but faltered defensively in the second, allowing goals from Axel Sandin-Pellikka at 5:09 and J.T. Compher at 10:10 on odd-man rushes. Jake DeBrusk scored Vancouver's lone goal on a power-play assist from Kiefer Sherwood.
Penalties hurt Vancouver late in the first, with David Kampf's tripping minor and Zeev Buium's high stick leading to a five-on-three that shifted momentum. Lankinen faced multiple two-on-one chances but could not prevent the lopsided result.
"Our details just aren't good enough," Canucks defenseman Tyler Myers said. "We're giving odd-man after odd-man rush... it comes down to the guys here in the room. We've got to be much better with our details."
Forward Brock Boeser added: "You get to five-on-three and give up a goal, and I think that kind of took our momentum away."
Jake DeBrusk noted the psychological toll: "The puck goes in your net a lot, you don't play the same way... when you play on your heels in this league, bad things happen."
Boeser praised Kane: "It's a supercool accomplishment... he shows you that he's probably one of the best, if not the best, American player to ever play the game."
The loss leaves Vancouver pointless early in their season-long six-game road trip, with a rest day Friday before facing the Toronto Maple Leafs on Saturday.