ru24.pro
News in English
Сентябрь
2024

Blackhawks trying new breakaway play popularized by Bruins star David Pastrnak

0

Inspired by one of the most memorable goals from the 2024 NHL playoffs, coach Luke Richardson made a small system tweak that he believes will take advantage of the Blackhawks’ abundant team speed this season.

In short, he’s giving Hawks wingers the green light in certain situations to take off behind the opposing defense and try to create more breakaways.

If two Hawks forwards are battling for the puck along the boards in the neutral zone, for example, he wants them to try to win the puck backward to a waiting defenseman. In the meantime, he wants the weak-side winger to take off toward the far goal, creating an opportunity for the defenseman to hit him with a stretch pass or fire the puck off the far end-wall as a kind of bank pass.

That’s exactly what won Game 7 for the Bruins against the Maple Leafs this past spring: David Pastrnak burst down the boards early in overtime, Hampus Lindholm ripped a puck in from the neutral zone and Pastrnak gathered it on the ricochet and scored one-on-one against the goalie.

Two new Hawks — ex-Leaf Tyler Bertuzzi and ex-Bruin Pat Maroon — saw that in person, but it might prove to be a revolutionary play throughout hockey. Richardson recalls watching Leafs forward Mitch Marner and Rangers forward Chris Kreider try it before, too.

“A lot of teams are starting to go to that stretch-and-blow [play] and look for a long bomb and catch a team sleeping,” Richardson said Saturday. “We have to make sure we’re always ready for that but also put that into our game plan.”

In one training-camp scrimmage this week, Seth Jones tried to hit a streaking Andreas Athanasiou with that exact play, but it was called offside. Athanasiou, Ilya Mikheyev and Lukas Reichel are three Hawks wingers fast enough to make it possible.

Camp continues

The Hawks promised a more competitive camp this year, and they held true to their word by holding scrimmages on each of the first three days. After a day off Sunday, they’ll scrimmage again Monday before focusing more on system intricacies and special-teams work Tuesday ahead of their preseason opener Wednesday against the Red Wings.

Taylor Hall has particularly stood out in the scrimmages, winning praise from Richardson. Landon Slaggert, even though he’s likely Rockford-bound, also has been hustling.

Once the preseason slate starts, roster cuts will begin. But Richardson said players on the roster bubble will be allowed to play in four, five or even all six preseason games to give them the most time to make their cases.

200-foot Nazar

The Hawks have made it clear that Frank Nazar will need to significantly exceed expectations to make the team by putting him on an all-prospect line with Colton Dach and Nick Lardis.

He has nonetheless been noticeable, demonstrating his speed, offensive craftiness in tight spaces and dedication to getting back on defense. Every forward describes himself as a 200-foot player, but Nazar truly exemplifies that cliché — even though it comes with a cost in terms of energy exertion.

“He likes to be in on the forecheck, and he likes to be down low in the D-zone,” Richardson said. “That’s a lot of skating, so he’s going to have to take short shifts.”

It’s also obvious that he’s still learning what he can and can’t get away with against NHL defensemen. He futilely tries to skate one-on-two down the slot too often — something Connor Bedard did early last season, too.