Saturday, June 15, 2013

Stanley Cup Final vs Bruins: Game 2



(image credit)
Thursday, the City with Broad Shoulders basked in the afterglow of Game 1.  It may simply be vicarious, but we fans live the mental and physical rigor of playoff hockey, and as exhausted as we were from that two-game Stanley Cup opener, it was all good.  I needed three hours of decompression, glued as I was to several post-game interviews, then I slept like a log into the first handful of hours of morning.

All was good, indeed.  From Andrew Shaw's apparent 'F-bomb,' in an interview with NBC Pierre McGuire (I thought he said 'puck').  From Tom Thibodeau texting Joel Quenneville, forming part of the Chicago coaches fraternity.  To amusing news from Marian Hossa and a feel-good chat with Patrick Kane.

I offered this to our Fans community.

Behind-the-scenes stuff for the Hawks players last night: The guys were grateful for the equipment staff and trainers, who helped them recover, replenish and retool in the OT intermissions.

I don't remember playing any OT in little league hockey. Obviously we didn't have the luxury that the pros have: Just a head coach, plus one assistant were all we had. We took care of our own gear, and once we were strapped-in and taped-up at the beginning, we stayed that way in between periods.

But I can appreciate how good it feels to have some fresh clothes and dry equipment on, before getting back on the ice.

The Hawks trainers apparently did a fabulous job, too, in making sure the guys were in top-notch conditioning the whole season. So let's give them an assist on that long-awaited, winning Shawzie goal!

But Game 2 was upon us soon enough.
Game 2 (June 15th 2013)

In Chicago, we mostly favor the local coverage by CSN on TV and WGN on the radio.  But the video highlights and color commentary from stalwarts in the media business were awesome:  NBCSN and ESPN.  So have a look-see at championship hockey.  

Barry Melrose is the hockey analyst I enjoy most, for his astute, colorful commentary (image credit)
Another sellout madness on Madison Street, as the fans sought another thrilling victory (image credit)
Game 1 was now ancient history, and the question was, What kind of game were we going to witness from these gladiators of the frozen pond?  

Answer:  The Hawks came out firing on all cylinders, seeming to rain shots on Tuukka Rask from the United Center rafters.  The Bruins seemed still-hungover from the protracted, dramatic loss, and Barry Melrose quipped that they must've mistook the game for a later start.  Fortunately for them, their netminder did show up to play and knew the NHL schedule like the back of his blocker.  

ESPN Box Score
That first period was reminiscent of the first period in Game 1 against the Kings.  The Hawks outshot the Bruins (19 - 4), and were like beasts ravaging a lone prey.  But then they went dumbfoundingly cold the rest of the match, as they had only 15 more shots-on-goal over two periods, plus 13:48 of OT.  They gave away (16) as much as they took away (17), and they lost key battles of the dot (33 - 39).

Maybe the Hawks wore themselves down in that first period flurry.  Nick Leddy stated the obvious, after the game, that his team lost track of their game plan.  They're an up-tempo, finesse team, which opponents can barely match.  But as they slowed down, it favored the Bruins' more methodic, hard-hitting game.  So, you may be a deer, or even a gazelle, but if you aren't moving those little hooves, you will get sniped, captured and ravaged.  Hence, the hits parade on the Hawks, courtesy of the Bruins (50 - 34).

Rask was more the goalie whom fans watched in their Penguins series, as he kept the deeply-talented, high-octane Hawks offense off the books.  Except for one tally by Patrick Sharp, more on him later.  Through Game 2, Rask trails Corey Crawford by a mere .01 on goals-against-average (1.75 - 1.74), and leads him by .09 on save percent (94.4% - 93.5%).  While the two teams are very different teams, these close figures for their goaltenders are one reason why they're so evenly matched.  Specifically, so evenly great.  

So time to give some love to the Finnish goaltender, in photos and highlights from the NHL Network.

Tuukka Rask covered the puck with his body, in a controversial no-goal  in the first period (image credit) 
Tuukka Rask gloved a point-blank shot by Nick Leddy in lightning fashion (image credit)
Tuukka Rask was partially screen, but ably saved a radar slapshot by Marian Hossa (image credit)
So, on the one hand, Rask was nothing short of awesome.

On the other hand, the Hawks could've punched through one or two more goals in that blitzkrieg first period, beyond Sharp's tally, and the game would've averted OT and ended in our favor.  Actually, in fact, they did punch in one puck, on a shot by Marian Hossa, which replays showed crossed the goal line.  But after a lengthy review, it was called off, because the whistle, that no one heard and that Hossa himself did not hear, had been blown already. 

It was a rugby scrum right on Tukka Rask's doorstep, as Patrick Sharp shot a seeing-eye goal (image credit)
The NHL agreed Marian Hossa's shot crossed the line, but the whistle had blown already (image credit) 
The officiating notwithstanding, Sharp and Hossa each had seven shots-on-goal and each scored a goal.  But our young stars, Patrick Kane and Jonathan Toews, ended the match with just two shots, and made it difficult for the team to win on just a lone score.  

Toews does a lot of things on the ice, which don't figure on the stats sheet, and Joel Quenneville has every faith and confidence in him.  But it would be good for him to lift his positively paltry one-goal, eight-assist performance in the playoffs a few notches up.  Against the superb Bruins, it would undoubtedly be crucial for him to light up the stats sheet.  

Patrick Kane assisted on the Patrick Sharp goal, but looked to apply magic on the ice (image credit)
Jonathan Toews won the Selke Trophy for best defensive forward, so congratulations to the Captain (image credit)
Meanwhile back to the gold-and-black.  After just four shots-on-goal in the first period, the Bruins kept their focus and discipline, and had eight in each of the remaining periods, including the OT frame.  Credit Chris Kelly and Daniel Paille for making those shots count. 

In particular, the game winner began with a failed clearing attempt by Brandon Bollig.  Adam McQuaid kept the puck in our zone, passed to Tyler Seguin, who found Paille by the right circle.  It was vintage Hawks containment, passing and firepower.  Except it wasn't the Hawks.

After a nifty deke and shot by Daniel Paille, Chris Kelly punched in the tying goal in the 2nd period (image credit)
After a Hawks turnover, Daniel Paille fired a knuckler of a wrister past Corey Crawford (image credit)
The Hawks travel to Boston on Sunday, in what is now a best-of-five Stanley Cup Finals.  They held serve against the Wild and Kings, so they were up 2 - 0 in the series before their road trip.  As with the Bruins, they lost Game 2 to the Wings, due to lackluster, took-it-for-granted play.  They fell into a deep hole at Joe Louis Arena in Detroit, but of course the stuff that legends are made of is writ on the ice.  The Hawks came back in heart-pounding, soul-thrilling fashion, nailing that series in a Game 7 OT victory.

What more could anyone ask of Corey Crawford?  (image credit)
But the Bruins are not the Wings, so the Hawks must grab at least one game at the TD Garden.  The most realistic scenario right now, given how evenly matched they are, is a 2 - 2 series, coming out of the Garden.  There will be a Game 5 at home, and if this scenario is indeed reality, then it's a best-of-three, with the home-ice advantage on our side.

The crowd had the first period to cheer about, then a third nail-biter OT in a row (image credit)
Turn off the laser show, empty the seats and concession stands, and put the ice to sleep (image credit)
Of course, the Hawks can come back home up 3 - 1, then finish it up in Game 5 and hoist the Cup in one week.  It's possible.  Why not?  We fans can dream, can't we. 

Thank you for reading, and let me know what you think!

Ron Villejo, PhD

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Stanley Cup Final vs Bruins: Game 1


Patrick Kane was the unquestioned hero in the series-winning Game 5 against the Kings (image credit)
Here we are.

The Blackhawks faceoff with a fellow Original Six team, and we longtime hockey fans can really appreciate this.  NHL is definitely thrilled.  In fact, I told a friend on Google+, well before the playoffs, that I wouldn't mind a Hawks-Bruins Finals.  Here we are, indeed.

It was good to have four days off between the exit of one team and the entry of another at the United Center. The Bruins handed the Penguins a stunning sweep, and were in rest-and-recovery mode when the Hawks played the Kings in Game 5.  Fortunately the Hawks shifted into their own much-needed respite after this game as well.

I was thankful for those four days, too, as it gave me time to mentally step back from the intensity and catch up on a lot of blogging.  I imagine that a lot of other fans felt the same as I did.  For Game 1 arrived soon enough.  

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ESPN ScoreCenter
The United Center was a sea of red, the ice gleaming silver, and the atmosphere electric (image credit)
Jim Cornelison, right, always sings a stirring National Anthem (image credit)
Well over a month since the playoffs started, the puck dropped for the final two, Original Six teams (image credit)
The opening period looked like two prized fighters feeling each other out.  The Hawks pushed the pace, but the Bruins were solid and patient.  We have the best up-ice defensemen, who have speed and can hit the well-positioned or streaking forward with a long, laser pass.  Of course, the Bruins knew this, and defended the zone between the blue lines very well.  In fact, to a large extent, they cut off, or interfered with, our passing and shooting lanes.

Milan Lucic drew first blood, after nifty passes from David Krejci and Nathan Horton (image credit)
After a steal at center ice, and skating the puck in, Milan Lucic was déjà vu all over again (image credit)
The Bruins' solid defense and superb patience laid the groundwork for tallies by Lucic (above).  A glancing :51 into the second period, and just like that the Hawks were down 2 - 0.  Krejci, Horton and Lucic are one, two, three among points leaders in the playoffs, and it was firsthand fireworks on the Hawks.  

Brandon Saad had a stellar rookie season.  Wearing his age on his jersey (#20), he had been called a "man-child" by Jonathan Toews for his big body, aggressive play, and offensive prowess.  But three tough series under his suspenders, and he hadn't lit the lamp, yet.  Good things do come, however, for those who persist.  Just 2:17 after the déjà vu by Lucic, he whistled a half-slapper, half-wrister past Tuukka Rask.  The scoreboard was now 2 - 1, with a lot of hockey left.      

Brandon Saad celebrated his first-ever playoff goal, which kept the Hawks in the game (image credit) 
Tuukka Rask stopped Patrick Sharp, twice up close, and Adam McQuaid took exception (image credit)
By the third period, Hawks cracked their fortress of a defense.  For example, they altered their up-ice strategy by having a puck-handler like Patrick Kane come down closer to our zone, and take a shorter pass.  He would skate up ice, and bring the puck into the Bruins zone; or find a skater, make another short pass in the neutral zone, and closely tag-team the rush.  

Patrice Bergeron regained the two-goal margin for the Bruins (image credit)
Through 6:09 of the third period, when the Bruins went up 3 - 1, the game was clearly on hand and theirs to lose.  Conveniently for the giant of a man, Michael Frolik got his stick entangled, and down went the towering Zdeno Chara.  Literally just seconds into their power play, Bergeron shot far post on Corey Crawford and it clanked loudly on metal for a score.      

Hawks Chairman Rocky Wirtz looked on, as a thrilling Stanley Cup match unfolded (image credit)
The United Center crowd did plenty of nail-biting, and cheered cautiously it seemed (image credit)
It didn't look good, did it, to be down 3 - 1 to the topnotch Bruins.  Ah, but the Hawks must've been quietly salivating at seeing streaks of daylight in their vaunted defense.  So just 6:05 after that third goal by Bergeron, the Hawks had tied the game, with tallies by Dave Bolland and Johnny Oduya.  Suddenly, it was a brand new game.  Tuukka Rask and the layers of defense in front of him gave up a mere two goals in their Penguins sweep, but the Hawks had already scored more than that in Game 1.

With Andrew Shaw's steal, patience and pass, Dave Bolland finished off a great effort  (image credit) 
Johnny Oduya's blueline slapshot found the lucky skate of Andrew Ference, and bounced in (Twitter feed)
It was such a thrill to watch the Hawks in the Stanley Cup, as a long-time fan, and to be treated to the best hockey that the NHL could offer.  Two gladiators, both, I tweeted to a friend.  This was championship hockey, baby, I posted.  But little did any of us know, at this point in the third period, that there would be absolutely no scoring for more than 60 minutes of play.   

The NHL Network featured Corey Crawford in several highlights, and for good reason as the stellar netminder made one unbelievable stop after another.  So he is our man of the hour.

Corey Crawford was King Cobra with the glove, off a Brad Marchand shot (image credit)
Another one in the glove for the Crow-cum-Cobra, who was all eyes on that puck (image credit)
Corey Crawford was well-positioned for a close-up shot by Shawn Thornton (image credit)
In the first OT, Crawford was a brick wall on a point blank shot by Rich Peverley and a quick rebound shot by Seguin.  Bolland made an awesome clearing to settle the chaos in front of the net and to preserve the Hawks chance to win it. 



In the waning seconds of that second OT, Chara shot from the blue line, which deflected off Jaromir Jagr's skate, then clanked off the right post.  Lucic had a Hat Trick chance, but the puck was bouncing end-over-end, and he fanned on an open-net shot.  The puck wound around, and back to Bergeron, who had a great look on a shot.  But Crawford was on the spot, once again.  

Then, in the third OT, an amazing sequence of moves unfolded in front of desperately a stretched out Crawford.  A timely poke check by Oduya, who was himself sprawled out on the ice, averted disaster, as Kaspars Daugavins had an open net to shoot into.  Here is the sequence in photos:

(image credit)
The Hawks and Bruins nearly played a second game, and NBC was unwavering in its extended coverage.  For the second game in a row, we went deep into OT.

In late April, the Bulls took the Nets to triple OT in Round 1 of the NBA playoffs, and came out of the United Center with an insanely thrilling victory.  They were down by a wide margin in the waning minutes of the fourth quarter, then little Nate Robinson made like Superman and pushed the game into OT.

On Wednesday night, which tipped past midnight, the Bulls' fellow athletes on the ice gutted out one of the longest games in NHL history.  I watched from our bedroom TV, and kept my PC in the study.  At an opportune moment, I ran to comment on our open thread in our Google+ community and check my feed on Twitter.

The match simply would not end, as I realized it was getting quite late and my wife had decided to sleep downstairs.  So I ran back-and-forth quietly, and cheered and jeered quietly.  I was bouncing up-and-down in front of the TV, and talking to it like a madman.

Mind you, the Hawks had terrific opportunities as well in the OT sessions.  But Rask was up to the task.

Tuukka Rask was definitely eyes-on-the radar (image credit)
The Hawks and Bruins were a draw on the outright hits (61 - 59), but the physical play extended to mini-battles in the trenches.

Jonathan Toews won 52% of his faceoffs, each one crucial, especially in the OT sessions (image credit)
Johnny Boychuk got away with a holding, cross-checking, or roughing call (image credit)
Andrew Shaw was fearless as usual, even with the giantly Zdeno Chara (image credit)
Andrew Shaw did not seem to care that his mug was pushed around (image credit)
So time now for an Andrew Shaw interlude, and we begin with his dramatic skate in front of the crowd.

Andrew Shaw saluted the crowd, after being named first star of the game (image credit)
More than halfway through the third OT, Shaw and Bryan Bickell played the puck as it came from behind the Bruins net, then sprung it loose for a pass to the blue line.  Michal Rozsival skated sideways to find a shooting lane, and fired a wrister.  It was an amazingly perfect, double deflection:  first off of Bolland's stick, then off Shaw's leg into the net.  Hockey players know that luck, good or bad, is part of the game.  But Bolland and Shaw also knew where to situate themselves best, and at the moment that Rozsival's shot whizzed by, they were a pair of pinball bumpers for the puck.

Here is the aftermath of that terrific win for the Hawks and heartbreak loss for the Bruins.

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His face, cut, Andrew Shaw was an exhausted but happy Hawk after the game (image credit)
"We lost the first two games to Vancouver. It never stopped us," Claude Julien said (image credit)
Andrew Shaw "knows where the front of the net is," Joel Quenneville said (image credit)
ESPN Neil Everett gave a terrific recap of the game, then passed on the microphone to Steve Levy and Barry Melrose for the analysis.

Staying with ESPN, here are Five takeaways from Game 1 by Bruins reporter James Murphy, and Hawks don't back down by award-winning Chicago columnist Melissa Isaacson.

Game 1 finished at 12 M, but because Game 3 was three nights later, the players and coaches had an extended stretch for rest and recovery.  So, in a way, Game 1 was a good one to go triple OT.  Rest day on Thursday, back on the practice ice on Friday, and it was showtime again on Saturday evening.  

13 down, 3 wins left to go, for the privilege of hoisting Lord Stanley above the ice  (image credit)
Thank you for reading, and let me know what you think!

Ron Villejo, PhD

Saturday, June 8, 2013

Blackhawks face crucial Game 5 vs Kings


Some observed that the Kings looked tired and beat-up. They had to dig themselves out of a 2 - 0 hole against the Blues, then had to slog through 7 games against the Sharks. Now, they're in another big hole against the Hawks.

It ain't over til it's over, of course. They're a great team, with a great goalie, and they have the reigning Cup pride on their side.


Here's why I think Game 5 is extra-crucial for the Hawks to win.  When you've got your man against the ropes, you've got to go for the knockout punch. The Wings learned this lesson the hard way, when they dilly-dallied in Game 5 against the Hawks.

More importantly, the Bruins are now in rest-and-recovery mode. After screwing around against the Leafs, they made handy-work of the Rangers and made mincemeat of the land-locked birds from Pittsburgh. What a thrilling last minute of hockey last night, by the way (below)!


Not only will the Hawks need their own rest-and-recovery, but also they need time to study film and strategize for the Bruins. They're bigger and tougher, and they score more goals, than the Kings. Plus, Rask is playing lights-out in front of the net. Neither team had the benefit of gauging each other directly, because of the lockout. But now the Bruins have a leg up on the Hawks in the crucial preparations.

They have the luxury of watching the Hawks with pizza, chips and beer on hand!

So, enough said. Let's go Hawks! Let's finish off this puppy tonight!

Thank you for reading, and let me know what you think!

Ron Villejo, PhD