Chicago Sun-Times

CROW GROUNDED

CRAWFORD TO MISS 2- 3 WEEKS AFTER APPENDECTO­MY

- MARK LAZERUS Email: mlazerus@ suntimes. com

PHILADELPH­IA — Scott Darling’s first thought when he woke up to the news that Corey Crawford had been taken to a Philadelph­ia hospital for an emergency appendecto­my wasn’t about his unexpected start but rather his friend.

“For me, it stinks because he’s a good friend, and I want him to be well and be able to play and help the team,” Darling said after the Blackhawks’ 3- 1 loss to the Flyers.

The Hawks might have to manage without Crawford, who has been their best player this season, for 11 games. Coach Joel Quennevill­e said Crawford’s appendix did not burst, and team doctor Michael Terry said Crawford should be able to return to “restricted hockey activities” in two to three weeks.

The Ducks’ Ryan Getzlaf missed four games after an appendecto­my last season; the Lightning’s Ryan Callahan returned to practice just three days after his in May 2015; and Patrick Sharp returned to training camp 18 days after an appendecto­my in September 2011.

The last NHL goalie to have an appendecto­my was the Blues’ Chris Mason in October 2008. He missed 10 days of practice and played his first game 13 days after the operation. Seven days after his surgery for a burst — he used the term “exploded” — appendix in October 2008, Mason decided it was time to see if he was ready to play again. So he strapped on all his gear, skated to his net in front of assistant coach Rick Wamsley and hoped for the best.

“I was down in the butterfly, and he just started blasting shots right at my incision wound on my stomach to see if I could take it,” Mason recalled in a phone interview Saturday. “I was ready to go.”

Mason spent three days in the hospital and was in considerab­le discomfort during that time. Simply moving around was difficult. But a day after he returned home, he suddenly felt “drasticall­y” better. His energy returned, and so did his appetite, which was key considerin­g he lost about 15 pounds.

Mason said he had no long- term effects from the surgery.

“I was ready like two days after I started practicing,” Mason said. “The only thing that was a bit uncomforta­ble was if I dove out and really stretched my incision — I could feel that. That was uncomforta­ble. But I was good to go.”

Crawford’s absence thrusts Darling back into the starting role. Darling suffered his first loss Saturday but has been solid this season and has been particular­ly strong when he has the net to himself. He went 3- 1- 0 during a brief stretch as the main guy in December 2014, led the Hawks to a first- round victory over the Predators after taking the net from Crawford in April 2015 and went 6- 3- 2 down the stretch last season when Crawford was out with a head injury.

Darling said he feels it’s “easier” to be the starter rather than the backup.

“It’s mentally way less stressful,” he said.

The Hawks likely will call up 29- year- old goaltender Lars Johansson, who is 6- 7- 1 with a .911 save percentage and 2.63 goalsagain­st average with the Rockford IceHogs. But without Crawford — whom Darling deemed “the best goalie in the league” alongside the Canadiens’ Carey Price — it’ll be Darling’s net for a while.

“We have plenty of confidence in Darls,” defenseman Niklas Hjalmarsso­n said. “We all know how well he can play, and I think he’s more than ready for an opportunit­y to play some games in a row.”

Follow me on Twitter @ MarkLazeru­s.

 ?? | JONATHAN DANIEL/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Goalie Corey Crawford was scheduled to start Saturday, but he missed the game after having an emergency appendecto­my at a Philadelph­ia hospital.
| JONATHAN DANIEL/ GETTY IMAGES Goalie Corey Crawford was scheduled to start Saturday, but he missed the game after having an emergency appendecto­my at a Philadelph­ia hospital.
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