The Blackhawks probably want to forget about the last time they played the Nashville Predators.
It wasn?t their worst loss, score-wise, as they dropped a 3-2 decision in Nashville on Feb. 14. But it was how they lost that hurt the most: giving up a late goal in a game they had played pretty well, running their winless streak to nine. The Blackhawks? locker room was so stunned, so quiet that night, you could?ve heard a pin think about dropping.
?It was a brutal loss,? said coach Joel Quenneville. ?It was excruciating. It was one of those losses where you sit there and think, ?OK, hopefully this is the end of it.? Eventually things had to change. And they did.?
Yes, things definitely have changed ? for both teams. The Predators made several moves at the trade deadline. While the Blackhawks made a move themselves ? acquiring defenseman Johnny Oduya ? their biggest change came in how they played.
The Blackhawks had their rock-bottom moment that night in Nashville. And whether it was learning from that night or just waking up out of their winless-streak doldrums, the Blackhawks have been a much better team since.
?That whole time we were trying to hammer home how we had to play on both sides of the puck, take a checking mentality,? Quenneville said. ?The byproduct was what happened the next two games (against New York and Columbus).?
And it?s gone beyond those next two games. The Blackhawks are 13-4-1 since that game, and after trailing the Predators plenty in the Western Conference they?re now right on their tails -- just two points back after Nashville's 3-1 victory over Winnipeg Saturday night.
?It?s a rivalry that?s come into play the last couple of years,? Patrick Kane said. ?You look at the standings; if we can take some points from them and put points on the board for ourselves, it?s huge.?
The Predators, meanwhile, have had more mixed results. They?re 10-6-2 since that Feb. 14 game, including 6-5-1 since the day after the trade deadline.
As for the Blackhawks, they?ve kept up that style of play through health and injury. They?ve grown plenty in their time without Jonathan Toews and have found success in his absence. And they know they?ll need to play their current brand of hockey to have any success against the Predators on Sunday.
?They?re structured, they don?t take too many chances and they play a good team game,? Viktor Stalberg said. ?The way we used to play earlier in the year frustrated us a bit. But the way we?ve played lately, we?re finding ways to win those tight games. That?s going to fit us better playing them.?
The Blackhawks have changed since that Feb. 14 game in Nashville. They ended their brutal losing streak two days later and quelled the foolish coach-and-several-players-must-go talk. They?ve learned from that ?brutal? loss, and they?ve got the Predators in their sights again.
It wasn?t their worst loss, score-wise, as they dropped a 3-2 decision in Nashville on Feb. 14. But it was how they lost that hurt the most: giving up a late goal in a game they had played pretty well, running their winless streak to nine. The Blackhawks? locker room was so stunned, so quiet that night, you could?ve heard a pin think about dropping.
?It was a brutal loss,? said coach Joel Quenneville. ?It was excruciating. It was one of those losses where you sit there and think, ?OK, hopefully this is the end of it.? Eventually things had to change. And they did.?
Yes, things definitely have changed ? for both teams. The Predators made several moves at the trade deadline. While the Blackhawks made a move themselves ? acquiring defenseman Johnny Oduya ? their biggest change came in how they played.
The Blackhawks had their rock-bottom moment that night in Nashville. And whether it was learning from that night or just waking up out of their winless-streak doldrums, the Blackhawks have been a much better team since.
?That whole time we were trying to hammer home how we had to play on both sides of the puck, take a checking mentality,? Quenneville said. ?The byproduct was what happened the next two games (against New York and Columbus).?
And it?s gone beyond those next two games. The Blackhawks are 13-4-1 since that game, and after trailing the Predators plenty in the Western Conference they?re now right on their tails -- just two points back after Nashville's 3-1 victory over Winnipeg Saturday night.
?It?s a rivalry that?s come into play the last couple of years,? Patrick Kane said. ?You look at the standings; if we can take some points from them and put points on the board for ourselves, it?s huge.?
The Predators, meanwhile, have had more mixed results. They?re 10-6-2 since that Feb. 14 game, including 6-5-1 since the day after the trade deadline.
As for the Blackhawks, they?ve kept up that style of play through health and injury. They?ve grown plenty in their time without Jonathan Toews and have found success in his absence. And they know they?ll need to play their current brand of hockey to have any success against the Predators on Sunday.
?They?re structured, they don?t take too many chances and they play a good team game,? Viktor Stalberg said. ?The way we used to play earlier in the year frustrated us a bit. But the way we?ve played lately, we?re finding ways to win those tight games. That?s going to fit us better playing them.?
The Blackhawks have changed since that Feb. 14 game in Nashville. They ended their brutal losing streak two days later and quelled the foolish coach-and-several-players-must-go talk. They?ve learned from that ?brutal? loss, and they?ve got the Predators in their sights again.
