Two of the Canucksā centres are sitting on the shelf with injuries and Alex Burmistrov couldnāt stay in the lineup.
Itās a situation that likely leaves neither the Canucks nor Burmistrov happy and after his latest healthy scratch ā sitting in the press box while the Canucks juggled seven defencemen instead ā Burmistrovās agent has informed us that the young Russian forward has retired from the NHL.
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Alexander Burmistrov of Āé¶¹“«Ć½Ó³»Canucks has retired from the NHL. Announcement on future will follow in the coming days.
ā Dan Milstein-Hockey (@HockeyAgent1)
Itās a surprising decision ā itās unusual for a 26-year-old to retire in the middle of the NHL season ā but perhaps itās less of a surprise when you listen to Burmistrovās own words.
Before the start of the season, , with Henrik Sedin specifically mentioning his skill with the man advantage. He had connected with Newell Brown on the power play with the Coyotes, and with the power play coach back in the Canucksā fold, it seemed possible that Burmistrov would get more of an opportunity in Āé¶¹“«Ć½Ó³»than he did elsewhere.
āāThey just gave me a chance to play,ā he said of his time with the Coyotes. ā[Winnipeg] didnāt look at me as a power play guy, a score-goal guy, but Arizona, they told me to play my game and I just played my game.ā
Burmistrov didnāt play much on the power play, with fewer than 16 minutes total with the man advantage, but when he did get a chance, he produced. Among Canucksā forwards, , behind only Brock Boeser and Thomas Vanek.
But it seemed that the Canucks didnāt necessarily see Burmistrov as āa score-goal guy.ā When the Canucks reoriented their power play units in mid-November, Burmistrov was on the outside looking in, and, when the power play started clicking at a league-leading percentage, he had no chance to get back in.
The bigger issue was that they couldnāt find a spot for him to play at even-strength.
āI wasnāt coming here to be a fourth-line player,ā Burmistrov told me during training camp, but thatās where he ended up when he was in the lineup.
Burmistrov had the lowest average ice time on the Canucks other than Utica call-ups like Jayson Megna, Michael Chaput, and Reid Boucher. The fact that he couldnāt get in the lineup with Bo Horvat, Sven Baertschi, Brandon Sutter, and Derek Dorsett all out speaks volumes.
The final straw may have come on Thursday against the San Jose Sharks. Burmistrov got benched after Timo Meierās 2-1 goal. On the shift leading up to the goal, Burmistrov got caught out of position several times, leading to two good scoring chances before the goal itself. Those were some of , and, in Greenās words, āthey ****ing matter.ā
earlier in the month.
āThe frustrating thing is you know you can play at this level and every day and every night you walk into the dressing room and you donāt know if youāre playing or not,ā he said. āYou kind of want to know youāre playing or be sure to be confident in yourself and feel like youāre part of the team.
āThen you walk into the dressing room and youāre not playing and youāre thinking: āWhat is it going to be like tomorrow?ā Iām trying to work hard but this is hard.ā
But Burmistrov didnāt want anything handed to him. He said it before the season ā āIāve just got to earn that spot, you know?ā ā and he made it clear again.
āThe worst thing is to see Bo hurt and then youāre back in, but you basically didnāt earn that spot,ā he said.
Green claimed he had been clear with Burmistrov: āItās the same message Iāve given all year: play a strong 200-foot game and be a guy whoās reliable that I can play in any situation and be strong on faceoffs and the penalty kill. And if we get injuries, we bump him up on the power play. Those kind of players are invaluable who can play in your bottom six and, if you need, in your top six. That message has been very clear since Day 1.ā
Burmistrov won 48.1% of his faceoffs ā better than Henrik Sedin, Markus Granlund, and Nic Dowd ā but just 44.6% of his faceoffs in the defensive zone, the lowest percentage on the Canucks. Green likely felt he couldnāt rely on Burmistrov for those key draws, an element missing from the lineup with Horvat and Sutter on the injured reserve.
On top of that, Burmistrov struggled on the penalty kill. What had been a strength of his game early in his career turned into a liability: among Canucksā penalty killers, Burmistrov allowed the highest rate of unblocked shot attempts and the highest rate of goals against.
Green wanted Burmistrov to be a player he could rely on āin any situation,ā but he couldnāt. Overall, is he a better player than Nic Dowd? Absolutely. But Green wanted him to be reliable in specific situations to earn more offensive opportunities.
Itās tempting to look at this situation and see the Russian factor ā and Nikita Tryamkin bolted for the KHL this past off-season ā and that raises questions about Nikolay Goldobinās future with the team. The talented young winger has been in and out of the lineup since getting called up from the Comets. Are Burmistrov and Tryamkin a sign that there is a bigger problem in the Canucks organization? Are Russian players made to feel unwelcome by the Canucks?
That said, you can see from Burmistrovās own words that he wanted to earn offensive opportunities ā to be a āscore-goal guyā ā and you can see from Greenās words and the statistics that he didnāt really accomplish that goal. Could the Canucks have given him more chances to prove himself? Perhaps. But Burmistrov didnāt necessarily want to be gifted ice time. This could just be a situation with an individual player.
The retirement leaves Burmistrov free to sign back in Russia and, if Russia hadnāt been banned, to play in the Olympics. It seems likely that at 26, his NHL career is permanently done.
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