Cory Schneider will start for the Vancouver Canucks Tuesday night as they host the Phoenix Coyotes at Rogers Arena.
The team will also be without defenceman Kevin Bieksa for the second straight game. Bieksa injured his groin in the Canucks’ shutout win over the Predators Friday night.
#canucks Bieksa out (groin) Alberts stays in, Booth back in so Volpatti sits. Schneider starts versus #coyotes
— Dan Murphy (@sportsnetmurph) February 26, 2013
Schneider turned aside 56 of 57 shots in the two matchups in Glendale against Phoenix last season, with each club winning once.
The Northwest Division leaders will try to rebound from their worst defensive effort of the season and avoid their first three-game home slide in two seasons.
The Canucks gave up a season high-tying three power-play goals on Sunday all coming in the second period.
Watch the Vancouver Canucks battle the Phoenix Coyotes on Sportsnet Pacific with coverage starting at 6 p.m. PT.
Captain Henrik Sedin feels that the Canucks overlooked their last opponent.
Back from a 2-1-1 trip that ended with Sunday’s 8-3 loss to Detroit, Sedin could offer only one explanation why the Canucks (10-4-4) gave up six unanswered goals after his twin brother, Daniel, scored twice, and Chris Higgins, found the back of the net in the first period.
“I think it was just a matter of us maybe taking it like it was the last game of the road trip, and I don’t think we were 100 percent focused on the game,” Sedin, who had two assists in the loss to raise his team-best total to 15, said on Monday. “That shouldn’t happen, but that’s what happened.”
Losing at Rogers Arena is also something the Canucks don’t expect, but they’ve dropped their last two there by 4-3 margins after winning five straight against visitors by a combined 13-5 score. Vancouver’s last three-game home slide was an 0-0-3 stretch from Jan. 8-22, 2011.
Phoenix (8-7-3) has won three of four in Vancouver since recording two victories and a tie in its previous 17 visits, but the team arrives with no momentum after giving up another lead. The Coyotes had a 2-0 second-period advantage in Saturday’s 3-2 shootout defeat in Edmonton then yielded two goals in the final two minutes of Sunday’s 5-4 loss to Calgary.
“That’s two games in a row that we had a lead and we gave it away,” said coach Dave Tippett, whose team was on a 7-2-2 run heading into its trip. “We have to find a way to close these games out. That’s not who we are as a team. Very uncharacteristic of us.”
Perhaps improving on the power play would help the Coyotes avoid a season-worst third straight defeat. They are 3 for 32 in those situations over the last seven games. It’s uncertain if Radim Vrbata (lower body) — the club leader with seven power-play points — or team goal scoring leader (seven) Martin Hanzal (upper body) will be back in the lineup to help that unit.
Phoenix’s Mike Smith, who has started the last 11 games, was in net for the last two between these teams in 2011-12, both Coyotes victories.