The Chicago Blackhawks welcomed a speedy new forward from Finland into the mix Tuesday night, but their victory against the Dallas Stars overshadowed Teuvo Teravainen's first NHL game. Led by a balanced offensive attack that produced 42 shots on goal, the Blackhawks picked up an important two points with a 4-2 win at United Center.
"It was a big win tonight," said
Blackhawks defenseman Duncan
Keith, who had a goal and an assist. "They’re a hungry
team. They’re fighting for their playoff lives, and we knew that.
We talked about that coming into tonight. I thought we came out, had
a pretty good start. We were able to get one on the power play, which
was nice to get jump-started."
That goal with the man advantage was scored by
Andrew Shaw
at 19:42 of the first for a 1-0 lead. The Blackhawks, who won four of
five games against the Stars in the season series, are now 34-1-7
when scoring the first goal of a game. With the win, Chicago
maintained its three-point lead for second place in the Central
Division on the Colorado Avalanche, who beat the Nashville Predators
in a shootout. The Blackhawks also kept pace with the St. Louis
Blues, who won at the Toronto Maple Leafs and lead Chicago by six
points for the division lead.
"I think everybody's got motivation down
the stretch," Chicago coach Joel Quenneville said. "We'd
like to push ahead. Colorado just won, so that will keep our
attention for sure. You've got to play the right way to get points in
our League, so that's our focus ... because we know our opponents are
going to have some purpose behind them trying to get those two
points, as well."
Kris
Versteeg and Marian
Hossa also scored for Chicago (42-16-15), which got two-point
games out of Shaw (one goal, one assist) and Patrick
Sharp (two assists). Ryan
Garbutt scored his 13th and 14th goals for the Stars (34-27-11),
who played for the second time in as many days. Blackhawks goaltender
Corey Crawford
(25 saves) got the win, and Kari
Lehtonen (38 saves) took the loss for the Stars. Dallas fell
three points back of the Phoenix Coyotes for the second of two
Western Conference wild-card spots into the Stanley Cup Playoffs. The
Coyotes beat the Pittsburgh Penguins.
"You have to play a full 60 minutes
consistently, the right way," Stars forward Jamie
Benn said. "We have three or four more of these
back-to-backs. They’re not easy games to play. The last 10 [games]
we have aren’t going to be easy. We’re going to have to find a
way to stick together and try to get as many points as we can."
The Blackhawks have the same outlook. They also
have a new face in the lineup. Teravainen didn't register a point or
shot while centering Chicago's second line, but the highly touted
19-year-old won all seven faceoffs he took and spent time on the
Blackhawks’ top power-play unit. Several times he flashed the speed
and skill that created a buzz about him with Jokerit of the Finnish
Liiga this season.
Quenneville liked what he saw from the youngster
at both ends of the ice, but Teravainen thought it could've gone
better. "I felt like I could really play in this league and
try to really help this team, but I think still that wasn't my best
game out there. I tried to play simple and do [the] small things
right. I really think I can play better. I tried to focus on faceoffs
and [defense]. I think I need to play more offense too, but I think
my defense was OK."
As it turned out, Chicago's sustained offensive
pressure made Teravainen's lack of production seem like nitpicking.
It was Shaw who finally broke through against Lehtonen to give the
Blackhawks a 1-0 lead heading into the first intermission. Shaw’s
19th goal, with 18 seconds left in the first, capped a power play
when he finished with a high-skill play. Following a point shot by
Sharp, he scooped the rebound and scored with a nice backhand from
his knees. It was the lone goal of the opening period only because of
outstanding goaltending. Crawford made several highlight-reel stops
in the first, including a glove save to turn away a breakaway by
Garbutt 2:10 into the game. He flashed the glove again to snag a
wrist shot by Benn with 5:01 left in the first before turning Garbutt
away again two minutes later with a deft left-pad save. Lehtonen was
nearly as sharp. His best effort in the first came at the expense of
Blackhawks captain Jonathan
Toews, who found himself alone in front of the net late in the
period after a pass from Hossa. Toews tried to lift a backhand shot
over Lehtonen's left pad, but the Stars goalie just got a piece of it
with his glove to keep it out.
"I thought he played very well for us,"
Stars coach Lindy Ruff said of Lehtonen. "I think it's a real
good sign. It was a busy game for him, probably his busiest game in a
long time. He faced over 40 shots, and there were multiple
opportunities where the goalie's got to be moving."
Versteeg made it 2-0 at 4:12 of the second with
his 12th goal. After Dallas left wing Antoine
Roussel's turnover put the puck on Versteeg's stick in the right
circle, the ensuing shot deflected off Roussel's stick blade and
snuck past Lehtonen. Garbutt got Dallas on the scoreboard at 10:56 of
the second, scored off a nice backhand, but Keith re-established the
two-goal lead for the Blackhawks at 14:15 with a shot from the point
that sailed through traffic for a 3-1 Chicago advantage. It was
Keith's sixth goal, third in the past five games. It was also the
second primary assist of the game for Sharp, who has two goals and 10
assists in the past 12 games. In the third, Crawford and the
Blackhawks defense protected the 3-1 lead until Garbutt struck again
with 5:40 left to bring Dallas within a goal and make the final five
minutes interesting. After fending off another quick Dallas scoring
opportunity, Chicago appeared to have the win secured with an
empty-net goal by Niklas
Hjalmarsson with 59 seconds left. It was disallowed when Brandon
Bollig was called for playing the puck with a high stick, but
Hossa scored into an empty-net at 19:26 to seal it with his 26th
goal. Before the game, a moment of silence was observed for Tim
Sassone, of the Arlington Heights, IL Daily Herald, who died
Monday morning at the age of 58. Sassone covered the Blackhawks beat
for 26 seasons, including their Stanley Cup championships in 2010 and
2013.
No comments:
Post a Comment