Blackhawks advance to the 1st round of the NHL playoffs after beating the Oilers 3-2 in Game 4
Oilers #Oilers
No need to use the “play-in” disclaimer anymore, the Chicago Blackhawks are officially a playoff team.
The 12th-seeded Hawks beat the No. 5 Edmonton Oilers 3-2 on a strike by Dominik Kubalik to advance to the Western Conference first round, where, as the lowest seed, they’ll play the winner of Saturday’s round-robin game between the Colorado Avalanche and the Vegas Golden Knights.
Kubalik is the first Hawks rookie to score multiple game-winning goals in a postseason.
It’s the first time the Hawks have won a postseason series since winning the 2015 Stanley Cup. They were swept by the Nashville Predators in their 2017 first-round series and lost to the Blues in seven games in the first round of the 2016 playoffs.
The Hawks are now 57-30-3 in potential series-clinching games. They’ve won seven of 12 in best-of-series and six of seven Game 4s in those series.
The Hawks were down 1-0 on Josh Archibald’s goal 45 seconds into the game, but they answered with first-period goals by Brandon Saad and Matthew Highmore, who snuck a deflection into the net for a second straight game.
Corey Crawford had an outstanding second period, facing 15 shots — with six high-danger chances, according to NaturalStatTrick.com — stopping all but a goal by Ryan Nugent-Hopkins that happened seconds after an Oilers power play expired. The Hawks had just nine shots on Mikko Koskinen in the period after putting up 12 in the first.
Alex DeBrincat drew a five-minute major for boarding Ethan Bear in the second period, but Edmonton’s Darnell Nurse killed off two minutes of his team’s power play by interfering with Drake Caggiula.
The Hawks dodged a bullet in the third when Andreas Athanasiou hit the post on an open shot on Crawford’s left side.
Also in the third, Crawford gloved what looked like a sure rebound goal by Zack Kassian.
Crawford had 43 saves in the game, including all eight shots he faced during Oilers power plays.
The Hawks got a power play with two minutes remaining after the Oilers were called for too many men on the ice but opted to kill the clock.
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