Its not everyday you can accept your team taking a 5-1 loss but Saturday was one of them. I had wanted the Pens and Hawks to match up in the Stanley Cup finals last season, after all they were the best two teams during that regular season but they never met due to the lock-out enforced shortened season (or because Gary Bettman is an ass). Since then both teams have struggled at times this season and haven't been able to dominate like they did in 2013. Pittsburgh's crippling injury crisis has threatened to de-rail their search for a fourth Stanley Cup and at times Chicago have lost games they really should have won. That being said, having watched Chicago first-hand this season in Arizona, they put on a dominant display that evening that showed the Hawks are still the team to beat, as they look to retain Lord Stanley's Cup. While in Houston I met a Hawks fan called Kyle, who has become a very good friend of mine, and he was one of the lucky fans in attendance at Soldier Field.
The stars of the Chicago
Blackhawks didn't let a little snow stop them from putting on a
show. Captain Jonathan
Toews had a highlight-reel goal among his three points, Patrick
Kane set up another picture-perfect goal and the Blackhawks
defeated the Pittsburgh
Penguins 5-1 in their Coors Light 2014 NHL Stadium Series game
Saturday night in front of 62,921 at the home of the NFL's Chicago
Bears.
"We felt like we could find a way to score
every time we got the puck," Toews said. "It
honestly did feel like we were playing shinny hockey in the backyard.
We were playing smart in our end like we normally would, but we were
making plays and just throwing everything on net and hoping for the
best."
The snow began falling a couple of hours before
puck drop at the stadium a few hundred feet from the Lake Michigan
shore and did not stop. It fell heavily early in the game and for a
stretch during the second period. Large quantities of snow were
shoveled off the playing surface during stoppages of play, and long
passes along the ice left trails in their wake, but the Blackhawks
did not appear troubled by the conditions. Chicago asserted its
dominance early in this contest and did not relent.
"It was a lot of fun," said
forward Kris
Versteeg, whose goal came off Kane's pretty pass and became the
first player to score at United Center, Wrigley Field (in the 2009
NHL Winter Classic) and Soldier Field. "Handling the puck was
a little bit difficult, but I think if you asked all of the guys I
don't think they'd have wanted it any other way. This was just the
whole aura of the stadium and the snow coming down and seeing two of
the best teams and some of the best players in the entire world
playing; it was just really exciting to be a part of."
Patrick
Sharp gave the Blackhawks the lead at 15:35 of the opening
period. Toews sent a pass from behind the net to Sharp in the right
circle, and he snapped a shot into the top left corner of the net for
his 29th goal of the season.
"It felt like a real outdoor game. There
was no systems or structure to our game," Sharp said. "We
were just kind of hoisting the puck around, slapping the puck around
and having fun doing it. It was a fun experience and I'm glad I got
to be part of it."
Toews made it 2-0 midway through the second period
with possibly the prettiest goal scored in an NHL outdoor game. The
Blackhawks' captain collected the puck at center ice and blew past
Pittsburgh defenseman Brooks
Orpik with a backhand-forehand deke before slipping a backhanded
shot through goaltender Marc-Andre
Fleury's legs for his 20th goal. Sharp leapt into Toews' arms
after the first goal. There was a bit of a delayed reaction from
everyone else on the second, but Toews knew his goal had crossed the
line. After going to one knee for a fist pump, the guy known as
"Captain Serious" jumped into his teammates' arms at the
Blackhawks' bench.
"I've been trying to lose that for a
while," Toews said of the nickname. "The celebration
on the first goal, I already saw a pretty funny picture where I knew
[Sharp] was going to jump into me and I think Nick
Leddy got caught right in the middle. We were just excited to
score goals."
Shortly after the Penguins' best shift of the
first two periods, the Blackhawks scored a counter-punch goal to make
it 3-0. Pittsburgh had an extended shift in the offensive zone, and
seconds later was pushing again but got caught with too many players
in deep. The Blackhawks collected the puck and went the other way on
a 3-on-1 break. Kane carried it into the offensive zone and waited
for Versteeg to reach the far post before feathering a pass to the
blade of his stick for a lay-up at 16:43 of the second. James
Neal was credited with Pittsburgh's lone goal when Chicago
defenseman Brent
Seabrook put the puck in his own net early in the third period,
but a goal from Bryan
Bickell and a second from Toews made the score line reflect the
dominance the Blackhawks displayed.
"It wouldn't have mattered if we played
this game inside or outside or if there was snow or no snow,"
Pittsburgh coach Dan Bylsma said. "They were better and more
prepared to play, whatever the conditions were. Our team wasn't good
enough. Our team wasn't at the level we needed to be, and they were.
And you saw that pretty much right from the get-go in this game."
The victory pushed the Blackhawks two points in
front of the St. Louis Blues in the race for first place in the
Central Division, though the team that just acquired goaltender Ryan
Miller and forward Steve Ott has three games in hand. Miller will
make his debut for the Blues on Sunday on the road against the
Phoenix Coyotes. While the Blues face off in the desert, the
Blackhawks can kick back and relax after a dominant performance.
"It will be nice to go home, relax and see
the family, check in with my kids," said Sharp, who was one
of 10 Blackhawks who just returned from Russia after participating in
the 2014 Sochi Olympics. "I think they've got their drivers
licenses by now, I haven't seen them in so long. There were some
pretty special games in a short amount of time, but we're definitely
excited about our final 20 games here. It is going to be a battle for
position in the Western Conference. You see some of the moves teams
are making. They're loading up, so we are excited to get back to
normal, sleep in our own beds and play some hockey at the United
Center."
Pittsburgh has lost back-to-back games since the
NHL returned from the Olympic break and is 0-2-1 in its past three.
Still, the Penguins are comfortably in front of the Metropolitan
Division and tops in the Eastern Conference. Missing several key
players because of injury has been a theme for much of this season,
but the Penguins looked like a team that was missing its top two
defensemen and a first-line forward against the deep and talented
Blackhawks.
"The setting coming out was amazing,"
Penguins captain Sidney
Crosby said. "Regardless of the puck being slow when we
were passing it, it was an awesome setting but it always better when
you win. I had much more fun in Buffalo winning [at the 2008 NHL
Winter Classic] than losing in Pittsburgh [at the 2011 Winter
Classic] and here. I thought everyone did a great job organizing this
event. It looked good from everyone else's vantage point, but it is
always more fun when you win."
A huge thank you goes to Kyle Jackolin for providing the excellent photos.
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