The Edmonton Oilers did everything they usually do against the Chicago Blackhawks, except win. The Oilers again played well against Chicago, but the Blackhawks got late goals from Marcus Kruger and Duncan Keith and held on for a 5-4 victory Sunday night at United Center.
"It was a funny night,"
Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville said. "I thought we checked
well in the first period. After that, they scored a goal and they can
come [at you]. Their power play ignited their offense tonight, but
still it was one of those games where we stuck with it, which was
important. [We] found a way to win against a team that enjoys playing
us and has some success against us, so we'll take the points."
Edmonton scored on both of its power plays, a day
after Chicago killed off all six it faced on the road against the
Dallas Stars. The effort came the same day the Blackhawks saw the New
York Islanders slide past them as the NHL's worst penalty-killing
team. Being at or even near the bottom of the League on the penalty
kill might sink some teams, but not the Blackhawks (12-2-4). They won
for their third straight and swept their third of four back-to-back
sets on the schedule. Brandon
Saad (one goal, one assist), Andrew
Shaw and Bryan
Bickell also scored for Chicago, which has recorded at least a
point in a season-high seven straight games and scored at least five
goals in six of its past nine contests.
"The first couple weeks, or month, we were
winning 3-2 or 2-1, and now it's kind of like the opposite,"
said Bickell, whose goal early in the third gave the Blackhawks a 3-2
lead. "It's nice to get the offense, but I know it's not
always going to be like that. We need to play defense first and keep
the puck out of our net, and I think the offense will come."
Corey
Crawford is certainly helping defensively. He started both ends
of a back-to-back for a second consecutive weekend and picked up a
pair of wins to improve to 11-2-3 in 16 games. After a 5-2 win
Saturday night in Dallas, Crawford made 19 saves against the pesky
Oilers (4-13-2), including a stop on a penalty shot by Sam
Gagner in the second period. Crawford is now 3-for-3 against
penalty shots this season and 8-for-8 in his career. Gagner could've
broken a 1-1 tie, but he made one too many dekes and lost the puck
after Crawford's slide across the crease forced him to go wide.
"We always look at guys' penalty shots
before the game on video," Crawford said. "It's good
to keep in the back of your mind, but for the most part, it's read
and react. I kind of felt that move was coming, so when he went to
the backhand I was ready to push to the other side before he even got
there."
The Oilers have been swept in all three of their
back-to-back sets and dropped their third straight game. They won
just once on a four-game road trip and now head home for five of
their next six games.
"Right now, it's tough for me to stand
here and say what we did wrong and what we did right," said
Philip Larsen,
who finished with three assists. "Bottom line is that we
didn't get any points, and that's what matters right now. We have to
bounce back somehow."
Devan
Dubnyk took the loss for Edmonton. He also was starting for the
second time in as many days in net. The Oilers did not go quietly
after falling behind 5-3 with 6:21 left in the third. Jordan
Eberle's shorthanded goal with 1:28 remaining made it a one-goal
game, but that's where the comeback bid ended. Ryan
Nugent-Hopkins, Nail
Yakupov and David
Perron also scored for the Oilers. Seven of the game's eight
goals were scored in the second and third periods after a first that
was scarce on quality scoring chances. The Blackhawks took a 1-0 lead
on Saad's goal with 1:37 left in the first. After getting knocked off
his feet near the right point in the Edmonton zone while keeping a
play alive, Saad got up and cruised to the low slot, where he swatted
the puck over Dubnyk's right pad off a deflected pass attempt by
Brandon Pirri.
It didn't take the Oilers long to respond. Nugent-Hopkins tied it
with his fifth goal 54 seconds into the second off a hard wrister
from the left circle that beat Crawford high to the short side.
Chicago bounced right back to swarm the Oilers' net but couldn't
score off a couple good scoring chances for Patrick
Kane and Shaw. The Oilers used the resulting momentum to take a
2-1 lead on Yakupov's power-play goal at 8:55, four minutes after
Gagner was denied on the penalty shot. It was Yakupov's second of the
season and first since Oct. 27 against the Los Angeles Kings. It was
the first power-play goal against Chicago in five games, ending a
string of nine straight successful kills that included a 6-for-6
performance Saturday. The score stayed that way until Saad and Shaw
combined to tie it 2-2 with 2:42 left in the second. Shaw snapped his
fourth goal of the season past Dubnyk from the low slot off a
cross-ice pass from Saad, which set the stage for the third. The
final period was more fitting of a game between these teams, with
five combined goals. Bickell and Perron traded goals for a 3-3 score
with 12:02 left before Kruger put Chicago up to stay with his second
goal of the season. He scooped a pass from the boards by Ben
Smith and tucked it between Dubnyk's right skate and the post.
Keith made it 5-3 almost five minutes later off a point blast. The
veteran defenseman's first goal of the season ended up being the
game-winner.
"Obviously, they're a younger team and
they probably get excited [playing us]," Keith said of the
Oilers. "It's a fun atmosphere to play in, and I know they've
got some guys on their team that are friends with other guys on our
team, so there's competitiveness there. We made it a little
interesting there at the end, but we got the win."
Late in the third, Blackhawks defenseman Michal
Rozsival was hit in the mouth by Perron's dump-in attempt as he
sat on the bench. Quenneville expects him to be OK, but did say the
blueliner was "getting some work done" after the
game.
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