Apocalypse Now and Then: Sabres 4, Blackhawks 3
Photo by Bill Wippert/NHLI via Getty Images
An ugly loss on Saturday night in Buffalo. The Chicago Blackhawks probably had their worst night of the young season on Saturday in western New York, blowing a 3-1 lead en route to a 4-3 overtime loss to the Buffalo Sabres.
It was a weird start in an overall weird game, as Victor Olofsson scored a goal early in the first, had it overturned after video review determined the play was offsides, then scored another goal to give the Sabres an early 1-0 lead with a power-play tally.
About four minutes later, a mad scramble in front of the Buffalo net ended with a goal that was initially credited to MacKenzie Entwistle but later given to Jason Dickinson:
confusion ➡️ happiness pic.twitter.com/Nc3StqAfKh— Chicago Blackhawks (@NHLBlackhawks) October 29, 2022
The game was tied at one after one before Sam Lafferty fired home a rebound at the 4:49 mark of the second:
Sam Lafferty cleans up the rebound for his third goal of the season. #Blackhawks pic.twitter.com/BJb1mpGQVP— Charlie Roumeliotis (@CRoumeliotis) October 30, 2022
About 90 seconds later, Taylor Raddysh scored to give the Blackhawks a 3-1 lead despite Chicago not having much control over the flow of play at this point:
for your viewing pleasure pic.twitter.com/b08MvLVUGY— Chicago Blackhawks (@NHLBlackhawks) October 30, 2022
That trend continued into the third, as Buffalo had a 23-3 advantage in shot attempts and a 13-3 advantage in shots on goal during 14:57 of 5-on-5 play in the third. The result? A pair of goals for Tage Thompson, which forced overtime. The second goal from Thompson was a nifty swing at a puck in mid-air that connected:
Tage Thompson scores against the Chicago Blackhawks to make it 3-3 #BUFvsCHI #LetsGoBuffalo #Blackhawks pic.twitter.com/KC0XZGmWlC— nopClips (@nopClips) October 30, 2022
A bad Jonathan Toews penalty late in the third carried into that overtime period and Olofsson ended the game with his second power-play tally of the night:
Victor Olofsson's second of the night is also an @Energizer overtime winner for the @BuffaloSabres! pic.twitter.com/wArkuVbccI— NHL (@NHL) October 30, 2022
Notes
Easily the most disappointing result of the Blackhawks first eight games this season. Buffalo has a healthy amount of young talent but it’s far from a proven commodity. Still, the Sabres owned the back half of this game, making Chicago’s 3-1 lead slowly disappear.
Let’s get to a positive: Arvid Soderblom was very good in this one. He did not have too many stellar moments when forced into action last season, but the young Swedish netminder was solid this evening. He’s an interesting foil for Alex Stalock’s highwire act, as Soderblom plays a more solid, steady style that relies on being in the right position at the right time to make the save. It worked quite well against the Sabres and this game may have been a lopsided loss were it not for his efforts. He faced FORTY-FIVE freaking shots in this game, stopping 41.
Teams are always going to press when trailing by a goal or two in the third period but the degree to which Buffalo dominated the final period was disheartening. Won’t be something to harp on, though, as long as it remains an exception to the rule.
Richardson: "We were trying to protect the lead instead of just keep playing and playing smartly. Those are lessons. The other night, we gave away 2 points, and tonight we gave away 1 point... We gave them their opportunities in the 3rd period, which is disappointing."— Ben Pope (@BenPopeCST) October 30, 2022
The one good piece of news related to those struggles in the back half of the game is that they seemed to stem from the Blackhawks throwing the puck away all over the ice, which is something that can be corrected in a fairly easy matter. Again, not much cause for concern yet. Just a real annoying way to lose a game.
All the shorthanded goals scored by the Hawks were fun in the first few weeks but the penalty kill has surrendered five goals in the last two games. That can’t happen.
The Toews’ penalty which led to the GWG is unacceptable, but his line with Raddysh and Philipp Kurashev was Chicago’s best. It had advantages of 9-2 in shot attempts, 8-2 in shots on goal, 6-1 in scoring chances, 4-1 in high-danger chances and scored one goal without allowing one. It also started in the offensive zone just 37.5 percent of the time, so it’s not like the minutes were sheltered. More of that line, please. Also, just gonna leave this tweet here, which came right after Raddysh’s goal:
Kurashev just keeps getting better and better this season. He looks so comfortable. He was instrumental on that shift.— Ben Pope (@BenPopeCST) October 30, 2022
#PlayKurashevMore, dammit!
A rebound performance against Minnesota on Sunday night will make this one easy to forget. The Wild played (and lost) in Detroit on Saturday night, so neither team will have the advantage of rest.
Game Charts
Three Stars
Tage Thompson (BUF) — 2 goals, 1 assist
Victor Olofsson (BUF) — 2 goals
Arvid Soderblom (CHI) — 41 saves on 45 shots (.911 SV%)
What’s next?
The Blackhawks are back at the United Center on Sunday night to host the Minnesota Wild for another 6 p.m. start.
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