Had he known beforehand that his team would attempt 68 shots Tuesday, coach Mike Yeo never would have believed the Wild would get shut out by Chicago. Then again, he never would have expected almost 40 percent of those chances to be snuffed out before they got to the net.
The Blackhawks blocked 26 shots as they cruised to a 3-0 victory in Game 4, leaving the Wild searching for ways to avoid a similar fate in Thursday's Game 5 at United Center. Chicago clogged the shooting lanes throughout the game, boosting goaltender Corey Crawford to the second playoff shutout of his career. The Wild has managed only six goals in four games against a defense that allowed a league-low 2.02 goals per game during the regular season.
Yeo speculated that as players grew more tense, they began hesitating, giving the Blackhawks time to slide into shot lanes. The Wild also misfired on 17 shots, and Crawford stopped all 25 that got to him.
"I do think that when you're squeezing the stick a little bit, as some of our players are right now, you hang onto the puck a little bit longer,'' Yeo said. "Or maybe you're trying to be a little too precise with your shot, and the next thing you know, you're missing the net. We just have to kind of clear the mechanism, refocus and push all that stuff aside and just go into the game [Thursday] with the right focus.''
Wild center Kyle Brodziak offered one solution: get moving. The Wild too often stood still, making it easier for the Blackhawks to obstruct shooting lanes. More movement with and without the puck, Brodziak said, can create more two-on-one situations and keep the defense off-balance.
"Speaking from a penalty kill perspective, the hardest power plays to defend against are the ones that are moving,'' Brodziak said. "It's almost impossible to keep track of everyone when there's so much movement. That's when it throws guys out of lanes.
"[It's] not only puck movement, but guys have to be working. That's when you can open up lanes and get more clear shots.''
Cool Corey
During the regular season, Crawford split time with teammate Ray Emery, giving Chicago a stout tandem that surrendered an NHL-low 97 goals. With Emery recovering from a lower-body injury, Crawford has had to go it alone in the playoffs — and he has excelled.