As evidenced by his play at the IIHF World Championship last spring, Craig Smith can be a very productive player when he's at the top of his game. Smith totaled 14 points in 10 games for the United States in that tournament, including five in a quarterfinal win against Russia. In the NHL, Smith has proved maddeningly streaky, capable of lengthy unproductive stretches. With his Nashville Predators struggling to score, Smith ranked among the team's least productive players, with one point in his previous eight games. On Saturday, he helped his line and his team break out with a vengeance, scoring a goal and adding two assists in a 7-2 win against the Chicago Blackhawks at Bridgestone Arena. The win, which came in the Predators' first home game following a seven-game, 17-day road trip, snapped Nashville's four-game losing streak. Each member of Smith's line, he played right wing with Nick Spaling on the left and Matt Cullen at center, scored even-strength goals.
"I think Craig was really skating,"
Spaling said. "He was creating a lot of pressure and Cully
was making plays. It was just a good night that way. It was just a
sustaining pressure."
Nashville coach Barry Trotz agreed, also
acknowledging Smith's speed, perhaps his greatest asset.
"I thought Smitty was really, really
moving his legs tonight. He stayed on pucks and was really hard to
handle. He was creating things."
Smith appeared visibly relieved to have helped
Nashville pick up the win and end the team's arid goal-scoring
stretch. Entering the game, Nashville had lost four straight by a
combined score of 17-2.
"Yes, it felt great," Smith said.
"It's been a long time. It's been a tough couple of games. I
thought we did a great job sticking with it."
Chicago suffered its first regulation loss in
three weeks, and also by far its worst defeat of the season, and had
a four-game winning streak snapped. The Blackhawks had gone 7-0-1 in
their previous eight and had not suffered a regulation loss since
Oct. 26, a 5-3 win for the Minnesota Wild. The Blackhawks, who have a
home game Sunday against the San Jose Sharks before embarking on a
seven-game, 11-day road trip of their own, suffered a couple of key
injuries Saturday. Right wing Marian
Hossa participated in warm-ups but decided afterward that he
could not play with a lower-body injury. Chicago coach Joel
Quenneville appeared to leave the door open to Hossa's playing on
Sunday, saying he was day-to-day. Goalie Nikolai
Khabibulin, who suffered a lower-body injury and had to leave the
game with 4:27 left in the first period, seems a different situation.
"We'll know more tomorrow, but it could be
a bit," Quenneville said.
Khabibulin, who had not played since allowing four
goals on 22 shots in 31 minutes against the Ottawa Senators on Oct.
29, injured himself as he went into his butterfly when Nashville's
Shea Weber
shot wide from the point. Khabibulin fell to the ice and lay prone,
later making a stop on Nashville's Patric
Hornqvist. With the puck in the corner, the officials immediately
stopped play, and Blackhawks medical staff attended to Khabibulin,
who was hunched over as he skated off the ice. Khabibulin allowed two
goals on eight shots, but it was Corey
Crawford who took the loss after allowing five goals on 22 shots.
While Nashville has had trouble scoring, for the second straight
game, the Predators notched the game's first goal. At 7:28 of the
first period, Cullen ended a run of 10 games without a point by
diving to tip in a rebound of Smith's slap shot off a 3-on-2 rush.
Less than a minute later, the same line connected again to put
Nashville ahead 2-0 when Spaling ripped a wrist shot from the right
faceoff circle over Khabibulin's catching glove at 8:25. Nashville
got its first goal past Crawford at 9:02 of the second period on the
power play to take a 3-0 lead. Roman
Josi scorched a slap shot from the left side that Patric
Hornqvist deflected to beat Crawford high to the blocker side.
The goal was Hornqvist's team-leading sixth. Weber picked up an
assist on Hornqvist's goal, earning his 300th NHL point in the
process. Brandon
Bollig was in the penalty box for a delay of game penalty that he
received for shooting the puck over the glass behind the Predators
goal from inside his own blue line, about 125 feet away. Smith scored
his fourth goal at 18:18 of the second after Cullen intercepted a
pass by Marcus
Kruger in Chicago's zone. Cullen sent the puck low to Smith, who
was all alone and roofed a backhander. Chicago cut the score to 4-1
just 26 seconds later when Patrick
Kane banked the puck off the right-wing boards and skated in
alone. His low wrist shot evaded Nashville rookie goalie Marek
Mazanec, who made 39 saves to earn his first NHL victory. In the
third period, Brandon
Pirri stuffed home a rebound of Brent
Seabrook's shot four seconds after a penalty to Nashville's David
Legwand had expired. The goal at 6:14 cut the Predators' lead to
4-2. Nashville answered almost immediately with a 2-on-1 strike.
Viktor
Stalberg, playing his first game against his former team, swatted
in a high backhander from Gabriel
Bourque 15 seconds later.
"Obviously, it was exciting for me,"
Stalberg said. "I was there for a few years, and I have some
good friends on that team. It feels good to beat them in our first
game (as opponents)."
At 12:19, Mike
Fisher swiped in a feed from Hornqvist, who had stripped a
Chicago player of the puck along the boards, to make it 6-2. Weber
slapped in a power-play goal, his fifth of the season, at 14:07 for
the final goal Despite all the offensive fireworks for Nashville,
Mazanec's contribution proved critical. Trotz elected to start him
for the second time in two nights, even though Carter
Hutton had played several years with the Blackhawks organization
until Nashville signed him in July. Mazanec, playing his first game
in Bridgestone Arena, said he was surprised by Trotz's decision.
"Yeah, I was," he said. "The
game before was not really good. I think Hutton was going to play
this game. I appreciate that I get a chance and that coach trust in
me. It's really important for me."
With No. 1 goalie Pekka
Rinne out indefinitely with an infection in his hip, the
Predators have needed a steadying force in goal. Trotz said he
thought the offense Saturday was a result of solid defense. If
Mazanec can do the job, maybe he could be the lift the Predators
need.
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