NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The Blackhawks’ power play did everything Saturday that should make them successful.
Jonathan Toews won seven of eight faceoffs. Patrick Kane and Alex DeBrincat connected on a number of cross-seam passes. Seth Jones was trigger-happy with his one-timer. Kirby Dach retrieved loose pucks effectively.
But the end result was another dissatisfying outcome — another 0-for-4 stat line, contrasting sharply with the Predators’ 2-for-3 line in the 6-1 loss — in a largely dissatisfying season for the ‘PP.’
“We were moving it pretty well,” Jones said. “For the power play kind of struggling this year, that’s one of the better games we’ve had overall.”
The Hawks attempted 10 shots during one first-period sequence alone and finished with 24 attempts, 12 shots on goal, 11 scoring chances and three high-danger chances in eight minutes of power play time. But they couldn’t get the puck across the line.
They entered the holiday break on a decent run — having gone 7-for-28 over their last nine games — but still rank 20th in the NHL with an 18.0% conversion rate overall this season. That’s in spite of ranking 14th in scoring chances per minute.
“They were getting frustrated,” interim coach Derek King said Saturday. “I was trying to calm them down, [saying] like, ‘You’re getting good looks.’ A lot of times if you’re not getting looks, that’s when you get a little frustrated. But when you’re getting good looks like that, you’ve just got to stay with it.”
Kurashev rising
Since returning to the Blackhawks’ lineup Dec. 9 after a brief AHL stint, Philipp Kurashev has looked far more like the dynamic, if complementary, offensive weapon he was last season.
Kurashev scored again Saturday, his second goal in four games after going 21 straight without finding the net.
He said Dec. 10 he was trying to be more confident, less tight, when shooting. He has seemingly acted on that mindset change, taking 11 shot attempts and enjoying eight scoring chances over his last three games.
Canadian games in question
Most of the NHL’s most recent game postponements have not been due to COVID outbreaks but rather due to new Canadian fan restrictions or bans. The league, hoping to maximize revenue, will try to reschedule the games when fans will be allowed again.
For the Hawks, that effort has already cost them one game: a scheduled road matchup at the Jets on Wednesday. It could soon cost them another. The Oilers have had numerous home games postponed up through just before the Hawks’ scheduled Jan. 18 visit.
Outside of that, though, the Hawks have just one more Canadian road game this season — March 12 at the Senators.