Following the Chicago Blackhawks' pregame skate Monday afternoon in preparation for its game against the Minnesota Wild at Xcel Energy Center, forward Brandon Saad was hopeful he could find chemistry playing with a pair of linemates he had never played with before. Playing with Patrick Kane and Brandon Pirri on the Hawks' second line, Saad's hope was realized when he and his new linemates led the Blackhawks to a 5-1 victory against the Wild.
"We've had a couple of shifts together
this year, a couple looks, but to play a full game, that's the first
time," Saad said. "Communication was huge. We got
each other the puck and played well. It's a different look for our
team. [We] had never been together, and we jelled well [Monday
night]. That's big for our team."
Saad, Pirri and Kane looked especially lethal in
the third period. With the Hawks up 3-1, Kane took a smooth
spin-o-rama pass from Saad in the slot, then buried his seventh goal
of the season at 2:47, essentially putting the game out of reach.
Almost six minutes later, Saad scored a pretty goal of his own,
taking a pass from Duncan
Keith and slipping the puck through Wild goaltender Niklas
Backstrom's five-hole to make it 5-1. Pirri also picked up an
assist on Kane's goal and tallied a helper on Sheldon
Brookbank's game-winner at 13:21 of the second. Nick
Leddy, an Eden Prairie, Minn., native and 2009 first-round draft
pick of the Wild, ripped a slap shot past Backstrom from the left
point at 16:43 of the second, pushing the Hawks' lead to 3-1. It was
a goal that, for all intents and purposes, broke the Wild's back
shortly before the second intermission.
"The second goal hurt us, but that third
goal seemed to kill us," Wild coach Mike Yeo said.
Patrick
Sharp scored the lone goal of the first period at 17:33 to give
Chicago a 1-0 lead. The goal, Sharp's second of the year, snapped a
personal five-game goal drought. Yeo wasn't thrilled with his team's
execution in the first period, but said his team recovered in the
second. The Wild's second line of Nino
Niederreiter, Mikael
Granlund and Jason
Pominville, the team's best line of the night, knotted the score
at 11:27 of the second when Pominville took a pass from Granlund and
blasted a slap shot past Corey
Crawford for his team-leading seventh of the season. Granlund's
assist gives him the team lead in that category with eight. But a
series of sloppy errors doomed the Wild later in the second.
Brookbank's goal came after Wild defenseman Mathew
Dumba tumbled over Backstrom. The puck squirted free to
Brookbank, who slammed his first of the year into an open net. A
holding penalty on Marco
Scandella put the Blackhawks on the power play 1:39 later. Leddy
took advantage of a failed clearing attempt by Mikko
Koivu for his first goal of the season.
"There were plays out there, that were …
odd," Yeo said. "Execution-wise, we weren't on top
of it."
Leddy's goal extended Chicago's streak of
consecutive games with a power-play goal to five, and several in the
room said afterwards it might have been their most complete game of
the season.
"In all zones, in all areas, we didn't
play like we did the other day," said Blackhawks coach Joel
Quenneville. "I thought we were very loose in our last
couple, three games, and I thought the approach today was good and
the consistency was what we were looking for in our team game. I
thought we may have had the most consistent game we've had."
It was an encouraging sign for a team coming off
perhaps its worst game of the season 48 hours earlier in a 5-3 loss
to the Wild on Saturday at United Center.
"Saturday night, losing at home, that's
not something we want to do," Saad said. "We were
looking for a bounce-back game, and we came out flying from the
beginning."
Corey
Crawford made 29 saves, including 10 in the first and 12 more in
the second, buying the Hawks' offense time to get going. He improved
to 6-2-2 on the season. The win also put the Hawks alone in second
place in the Central Division with 17 points, three behind the
Colorado Avalanche. Backstrom looked sharp early, but allowed five
goals in a game for the first time since an April 19 loss to the San
Jose Sharks, a game the Wild lost 6-1. He stopped 22 shots in the
loss, which was Minnesota's first regulation defeat on home ice this
season.
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