Chicago Sun-Times

ONE TO CROW ABOUT

Crawford staves off eliminatio­n with spectacula­r 48-save performanc­e

- BEN POPE BLACKHAWKS BEAT bpope@suntimes.com | @BenPopeCST

Shortly after 5:50 p.m., Corey Crawford made his first save Sunday.

About 2oe hours later, Crawford made his 48th and final save, completing one of the most miraculous goaltendin­g performanc­es of his career.

Crawford’s heroics helped the Blackhawks eke out a 3-1 victory against the Golden Knights in Game 4. And because of it, Crawford and the Hawks went to sleep later in Edmonton with their season still alive.

“It’s as good as he’s ever been,” defenseman Duncan Keith said. “I don’t know what the shots were, but they had a lot of shots, and he made himself big every time. Wasn’t a whole lot of rebounds laying around, either. That was a big part of that. He was our best player tonight.”

Keith was correct on two counts: Crawford was absolutely the Hawks’ best player, and there were a lot of shots.

The Knights out-attempted the Hawks 9445, outshot the Hawks 49-25 and out-chanced the Hawks 41-14.

Those are all numbers one would normally only see in a video game — and on beginner difficulty, at that. The 94 shot attempts tied for the most the Hawks have allowed in a regulation game since at least 2007, the start of Natural Stat Trick’s shot-attempt data. The scoring-chance ratio was the sixth-worst by any NHL team in any game, regular or postseason, this year.

“When they’ve been better than us, they’ve been way better than us,” coach Jeremy Colliton said. “That’s a big reason [for] the discrepanc­y in the chances and the shots . . . . We’ve got to do a better job of, when they’re better than us, weathering the storm and giving up a little bit less.”

On the offensive end, there were a few bright spots. Olli Maatta and Matthew Highmore continued their unexpected offensive

surges, and Drake Caggiula and Alex DeBrincat (albeit on an empty-netter) finally scored their first goals of the 2020 playoffs.

Other than that, though, Crawford stole the victory for the Hawks.

“He was outstandin­g,” Highmore said. “He made countless saves, whether it be rebound chances, slot shots, backdoor. He was great for us, just settling us down back there. He was just fantastic.”

Crawford’s 48 saves tied for his most in a regulation game and were his outright most in a regulation playoff game, breaking the record he had set in Game 4 against the Oilers.

His highlight-reel robberies included a pair of stops on a rush by William Carrier in the first period, a goal-line save with his mask on William Karlsson in the third period and a backdoor glove snare on Zach Whitecloud later in the third. By the final minutes, the Hawks seemed certain to win because Crawford seemed certain to stop anything and everything he faced.

Crawford, characteri­stically, deferred most of the credit to his defense after the game. But he was named the game’s simultaneo­us first, second and third star on the NBC Sports Chicago broadcast for a reason.

“For the most part, we kept them to the outside when they did have those looks where they had maybe a second or two to hold it and shoot,” Crawford said. “It really wasn’t coming from the middle. That helps me a lot to be on the angle and give up less net.”

Keith, asked about the defensive performanc­e, put it better: “It’s always good when Corey’s making those types of saves.”

As a result, the Hawks will return to Rogers Place at 9:30 p.m. Tuesday for Game 5.

They have one man — and one man alone — to thank for that privilege.

BLACKHAWKS 3, GOLDEN KNIGHTS 1

Vegas 1 0 0—1

BLACKHAWKS 2 0 1—3

First Period—1, HAWKS, Caggiula 1 (Maatta, Dach), 4:08. 2, HAWKS, Highmore 3 (Keith), 13:40. 3, Vegas, Theodore 4 (Martinez, Reaves), 13:58. Penalties—Cousins, LV (Slashing), 8:26; Strome, HAWKS (Slashing), 15:30.

Second Period—None. Penalties—Boqvist, HAWKS (Holding), 7:16; Saad, HAWKS (Slashing), 11:17; Whitecloud, LV (Holding), 15:51.

Third Period—4, HAWKS, DeBrincat 1 (Murphy), 19:49 (en). Penalties—Theodore, LV (Hooking), 5:28.

Shots on Goal—Vegas 20-16-11—47. HAWKS 8-7-10—25.

Power-play opportunit­ies—Vegas 0 of 3; HAWKS 0of3.

Goalies—Vegas, Lehner 4-1-0 (24 shots-22 saves). HAWKS, Crawford 4-3-1 (47-46).

Referees—Jon Mclsaac, Chris Rooney. Linesmen— Brad Kovachik, Libor Suchanek. T—2:22.

 ?? JEFF VINNICK/GETTY IMAGES ?? Corey Crawford makes a glove save in the second period Sunday.
JEFF VINNICK/GETTY IMAGES Corey Crawford makes a glove save in the second period Sunday.
 ?? AP ?? Corey Crawford deflects a shot by the Golden Knights’ William Carrier with his mask in the first period. Crawford made 48 saves in the Blackhawks’ victory.
AP Corey Crawford deflects a shot by the Golden Knights’ William Carrier with his mask in the first period. Crawford made 48 saves in the Blackhawks’ victory.
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 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Drake Caggiula (right) is congratula­ted on his first-period goal by Hawks mate Kirby Dach.
GETTY IMAGES Drake Caggiula (right) is congratula­ted on his first-period goal by Hawks mate Kirby Dach.

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