The Predators did what they do best Sunday at United Center. They delivered another gut-wrenching loss to the Blackhawks, who were shut out 2-0 by Nashville thanks to a dominant 29 saves by goaltender Pekka Rinne. Chicago failed to keep pace with the St. Louis Blues in the race for first place in the Central Division. It was the Predators' third win in four games this season against Chicago (41-16-15), which dropped to 10-12-3 against Central Division opponents, its worst record against any division in the NHL.
"They have a really good team, but we seem
to match up against them pretty well," Rinne said after his
first shutout of the season. "We have to play a defensive
style of hockey against them. They have a lot of individuals who can
change the momentum and change the game, but that team seems to get
the best out of us."
The Blackhawks, who outshot the Predators 29-17,
were missing two key players due to injury: right wing Patrick
Kane (lower body) and left wing Bryan
Bickell (upper body). Rinne, a towering 6-foot-5, 204-pound
Finnish goalie, looked like he did prior to hip surgery last spring
that led to an infection that kept him out 51 games this season. He
swallowed up most of the shots that were on target, played the puck
well, and withstood a furious few minutes toward the end of the game
to keep the Blackhawks scoreless. Nashville finished 2-2-0 on a tough
four-game road trip that tested Rinne with some atypical outings.
"Personally, I've struggled the last
couple games on this road trip, and it's been tough for me, so it for
sure feels good after tonight's win," Rinne said. "The
guys played extremely hard. Against a top team like that, it's going
to get the best out of you, and I think we showed that as a team
tonight."
Mike
Fisher and Gabriel
Bourque scored for the Predators (31-31-10), who are still alive
in the chase for a spot in the Stanley Cup Playoffs. Nashville did
get some bad news when rookie defenseman Seth
Jones couldn't play the second or third periods because of
concussion-like symptoms. Jones took a hit along the boards from
Chicago forward Andrew
Shaw 6:37 into the game and didn't return for the second. He
logged 5:48 of ice time on eight shifts. Corey
Crawford made 15 saves for Chicago, which is six points behind
St. Louis following the Blues' 1-0 win against the Pittsburgh
Penguins on Sunday. The Blackhawks went 0-for-4 on the power play and
have failed to score on nine man-advantage opportunities in the past
two games without Kane.
"Obviously, we know points are at stake,"
Chicago defenseman Duncan
Keith said. "We want to keep getting those points and we
left two on the table tonight, but for whatever reason we've had
trouble against these guys. I can't pinpoint what it is. We've played
good games the last little while and we've played good team games, so
I don't know. It's tough when you don't score a goal to win the
game."
Nashville took a 1-0 lead on Fisher's 18th goal,
which he scored with 1:22 to go in the first by tipping a slap pass
from Ryan
Ellis past Crawford at the side of the crease. The goal negated a
solid start by the Blackhawks, who were out for revenge following a
3-2 loss to the Predators on March 14 and led in shots 11-4 after 20
minutes.
"We had a good start and we had a couple
of great looks at the net," Blackhawks coach Joel
Quenneville said. "[We] missed the net, missed the
opportunities there, and they scored first. What happened after was
exactly what happened [March 14]. They get the lead and they go into
a check-fest and they check well."
The second period mirrored the first. Aided by
three power plays, the Blackhawks ran their advantage in shots to
20-11 after 40 minutes but trailed 2-0 thanks to Bourque's goal at
17:35. His seventh goal capped a 2-on-1 rush created when he took a
short pass from rookie Calle
Jarnkrok and headed up ice. Jarnkrok, who got his second assist
in as many NHL games, used a burst of speed to beat Blackhawks
defenseman Brent
Seabrook in the neutral zone and charged toward the net. Bourque
zipped a wrister from the left circle that sailed over Crawford's
left shoulder into the right corner of the net, deflating the
Blackhawks going into the locker room yet again.
"That was big," Bourque said of
Jarnkrok's effort. "He gave me more space and made the goalie
on edge. Crawford didn't know if I'd pass or not, so that was a
really good job. He's fast and uses his speed."
Rinne took it from there, dazzling in the third
period by stopping nine Chicago shots, including an intense goalmouth
scramble with 50 seconds left. It was one of several times the
Blackhawks skated away shaking their heads.
"It was a good bounce-back game for him,"
Nashville coach Barry Trotz said. "You saw tonight exactly
what Pekka
Rinne can do for you. I thought we spent a lot of time in our
zone, but I thought we kept them to the outside for the most part.
They didn't get those second and third looks that sometimes they
can."
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