The Chicago Blackhawks' third-period problems continued Tuesday night against the Florida Panthers, but they were able to pull out the victory in a shootout. Jonathan Toews and Patrick Sharp scored in the tiebreaker to give the Blackhawks a 3-2 victory at BB&T Center.
"We're not happy with giving up leads in
the third period," Sharp said. "We'd like to close
teams out by scoring in the third period and get out of here. But
when the games get tight we seem to play better, and that's
important. It would be a lot worse if we were coming away with no
points instead of two."
Corey
Crawford stopped Jonathan
Huberdeau and Brad
Boyes in the shootout as Chicago (6-1-2) scored both goals in the
tiebreaker, which ended when Sharp deked Jacob
Markstrom before sliding the puck into a half-empty net.
Markstrom came into the game with 2:59 left in regulation after Tim
Thomas left with an apparent lower-body injury. Thomas, who
finished with 25 saves, was making his third start after missing four
games because of a lower-body injury sustained during a 2-1 loss
against the Philadelphia Flyers on Oct. 8. Florida coach Kevin Dineen
had no update on Thomas' condition after the game, but said the
injury was not the same as the one he sustained in Philadelphia.
After a stoppage of play, Thomas skated over to the Florida bench,
flexed his right leg and showed obvious pain, at which time he was
pulled in favor of Markstrom.
"I didn't want him to be able to play out
there, either maybe hurt himself a little bit more or not be able to
play to his full potential," Dineen said.
Crawford made 19 saves in regulation and overtime
and stopped Huberdeau on a penalty shot in the second period.
"We had some good goaltending by Corey in
the shootout and finally were able to get on the board there,"
Toews said. "It's nice to win in a shootout when we let a
two-goal lead slip like that."
It was the second consecutive shootout game for
the Panthers, who beat the Minnesota Wild 2-1 Saturday when Huberdeau
and Boyes both scored. Huberdeau, the reigning Calder Trophy winner,
was 2-for-2 on penalty shots last season to go along with a 3-for-5
career mark in shootouts coming into the game. On his penalty shot,
he tried to beat Crawford with the same
forehand-to-backhand-to-forehand move with which he scored in the
shootout against Minnesota, but Crawford never left the right post
and made a pad save. Huberdeau tried to beat Crawford between the
legs in the shootout, but the goalie got his stick on the puck.
"The first one I came and I think I had
him," Huberdeau said. "I just had to go on my
backhand. I came back to the same move I did the other night and it
didn't work. This one [in the shootout] I tried to go five-hole and
it almost worked, but Crawford is a good goalie. I think he read it
good."
Toews and Bryan
Bickell scored in the second period for the Blackhawks, who
haven't scored a third-period goal since their season opener against
the Washington Capitals and have been outscored 8-3 on the season.
Patrick Kane
had a breakaway in overtime for the Blackhawks but missed the net
with a backhand after a deke.
"I was a little frustrated for a second,
but there was nothing we could do about it," Crawford said
of the Blackhawks squandering their 2-0 lead. "We just moved
on. We had some chances in overtime. I think we were able to brush
that off pretty easy."
Tomas
Fleischmann and Dmitry
Kulikov scored in the third period for the Panthers (3-6-1), who
missed a chance for their first winning streak of the season. Rookie
Aleksander
Barkov assisted on Fleischmann's goal, giving him seven points in
10 games. The Blackhawks have won the last four meetings between the
teams, dating back to the 2010-11 season. Florida trailed 2-0 when
Fleischmann one-timed a centering feed from Barkov, the second pick
in the 2013 NHL draft, past Crawford at 9:04 of the third. Kulikov
tied the score at 11:51 off a defensive zone turnover by Duncan
Keith. He intercepted Keith's diagonal pass above the left
circle, skated in and beat Crawford to the glove side with a wrist
shot.
"I thought it was encouraging that we got
two points out of the game," Chicago coach Joel Quenneville
said. "It was 2-0 and then it was 2-2 and there was a lot of
time left. We stabilized the game at that point and found a way to
get two at the end. We're having trouble scoring in the third period.
I don't think we're playing any different than the first two periods.
I don't think we're sitting on leads. We're not complaining, let's
put it that way."
Toews opened the scoring at 5:18 of the second
period with a power-play goal when he ended a pretty three-way
passing play with Kane and Keith. Bickell made it 2-0 at 16:49 when
he beat Thomas with a wrist shot from the left circle. Bickell's
initial shot was blocked by Kulikov, but the puck came right back to
Bickell, whose second shot went over Thomas' glove. It was the second
consecutive game with a goal for Bickell, who was shut out in
Chicago's first seven games.
"It was nice to see it go in and maybe
he's more comfortable with the puck and hopefully can keep production
with that group," Quenneville said. "That line
(Bickell, Marcus
Kruger, Andrew
Shaw) was effective for us tonight."
The teams played a scoreless first period that was
pretty even despite Chicago's 12-6 shot advantage. Huberdeau had
another good scoring opportunity in that period after some nice
stickhandling allowed him to get off a shot from the slot, but
Crawford came up with a pad save. Florida had 14 blocked shots spread
among nine players in the opening period.
"I liked the overall effort tonight,"
Dineen said. "We pushed hard. We had a little trouble finding
our range. We were spraying [shots] all over the place. We need to
hit the net. But I liked the way we pushed when the score was even,
when we got down a couple. We just kind of kept our composure and
just the tone of the game. At the end, you only end up with one
point, but sometimes as a coach you don't always judge it on the
final outcome. There's a tuckered-out bunch in there. They worked
their tails off."
The Blackhawks, who have the mothers of players,
coaches and staff members along for the trip, will visit the Tampa
Bay Lightning on Thursday. Florida hosts the Buffalo Sabres on Friday
night.
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