Chicago Sun-Times

PENALTY KILL ISN’T PUTTING UP A FIGHT

Hawks have allowed 7 power- play goals; next- most in NHL is 3

- Follow me on Twitter @MarkLazeru­s. Email: mlazerus@suntimes.com MARK LAZERUS

Hockey players are loath to publicly get into the X’s and O’s of their craft, preferring to pin everything on more intangible aspects such as effort and energy, momentum and confidence. But despite the improvised nature of the sport, everyone has their assignment­s — particular­ly on a unit as critical as the penalty kill.

“There’s obviously a system to be played,” Blackhawks rookie Tyler Motte said. “I don’t think there’s any time we’re just going to wing it, go out there and say, ‘ Hey, don’t get scored on.’ That’s not how the team’s run here. We’ve got a structure.”

Through three games, the Hawks haven’t done a good job of sticking to that structure. They have yielded seven power- play goals on 13 opportunit­ies, for a ghastly 46.2 percent success rate. No other team has allowed more than three power- play goals in the season’s first week.

“It hasn’t been good enough,” Marcus Kruger said. “It’s not even close to being good. We’ve got to battle through it. It’s going to be a process to getting it better.”

At their best, the Hawks pressure the puck carrier in the neutral zone during breakouts, and at the point once the power play is set up. Against some opponents, the Hawks will be more passive in an attempt to coax a dump- in, then work to retrieve the puck and clear it. But through the first three games, the Hawks have been beaten from the perimeter by the St. Louis Blues and up the middle by the Nashville Predators. They have not pressured point men into turnovers, and they have done a poor job of getting in shooting lanes to block or alter shots.

“Every power play is different, which is part of the factors that go into it, as well,” Motte said. “But our system doesn’t change. We’ve just got to know who’s on the ice, what their plays are, and just try to shut it down as much as we can.”

Kruger’s institutio­nal knowledge is key to the Hawks’ success. With Andrew Desjardins injured, Marian Hossa being limited to preserve his ice time, and Artem Anisimov spending as much time in the penalty box as on the penalty kill, the Hawks have used several players in the rotation. Kruger and Motte have worked together, with Jonathan Toews, Hossa, Anisimov, and Dennis Rasmussen getting turns.

“We’re playing enough guys that have been around for the penalty kill before, so I don’t think that’s a big problem,” Kruger said. “We’re going to have tough stretches.”

Indeed, if this happened in, say, the middle of January for a few games, it would probably be less alarming than it is at the start of the season. It also would help if the Hawks stopped taking so many penalties. They have been shorthande­d a whopping 13 times in three games, which is a recipe for disaster. Anisimov alone has taken four minor penalties.

“You always have stretches where the puck is going in,” coach Joel Quennevill­e said. “So it’s a combinatio­n of a few extra penalties we don’t need to take, and [ making] sure that, when there’s time to pressure, we have to pressure.”

Kruger said confidence is an issue for the PK unit. A poor start can creep into your head and affect your decision- making — and when it comes to blocking a shot or diverting a pass, a split second can make all the difference. The Hawks can only hope momentum can swing in a positive direction as emphatical­ly as it’s so far gone in the wrong direction.

“It’s a long season,” Motte said. “A streak here of 10 or so penalties killed off can turn it around for us. Our goal is to have one of the better PKs in the league. That’s something that’s still reachable for us.”

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 ?? | MARK ZALESKI/ AP ?? Center Marcus Kruger didn’t mince words about the ineffectiv­eness of the Hawks’ penalty- killing unit: “It hasn’t been good enough. It’s not even close to being good.”
| MARK ZALESKI/ AP Center Marcus Kruger didn’t mince words about the ineffectiv­eness of the Hawks’ penalty- killing unit: “It hasn’t been good enough. It’s not even close to being good.”
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