Friday, March 19, 2010

Blackhawks' Best Plan of Attack? Just Win

It seems everyone is picking on the Blackhawks this week, or at least playing like they have a huge target on their backs. Not only did Jay Leno have fun at their expense in his opening monologue Tuesday night, but twice in the past week, opponents have knocked out Hawks players with brutal hits.

Defenseman Brian Campbell suffered a broken collarbone Sunday after the Caps’ superstar Alex Ovechkin shoved him into the boards. Campbell will be out the rest of the season, and Ovechkin got a game misconduct and two-game suspension.

Wednesday night in Anaheim, the Ducks’ James Wisniewski charged into Brent Seabrook, who fell to the ice apparently unconscious. Seabrook left the game and hasn’t played since. Wisniewski served a two-minute charging penalty and an eight-game suspension for hitting Seabrook, who didn’t have possession of the puck at the time.

Now the players are vowing to fight back, but within the rules, so they say. While it’s important for the Hawks to remain tough and stand tall in the face of these aggressive hits, it’s not necessary to form a goon squad. Hockey is a tough enough sport without having to resort to overly aggressive retaliation tactics that serve no purpose other than to detract the team from its ultimate goal -- winning the Stanley Cup. Besides, they’d only be stooping to the same low levels as Wisniewski and Ovechkin.

As last night's 3-0 shutout of the L.A. Kings proves, the best revenge is to simply win. Hit opponents where it hurts most – on the scoreboard. Make a statement if you have to, but don’t sink to the opponents’ level of stupidity and nonsense.

Ironically, the hits on Seabrook and Campbell may be the very thing the Hawks need to snap out of the post-Olympic doldrums. Since the Olympics, the Hawks are 4-4-1, and they have not played well as a team during that time. Nothing brings a team together more quickly and more tightly than adversity, and these incidents may serve as a reminder to play with the same level of intensity and purpose as they have since the season started and do the things that got them this far – puck possession and strong defense. If they focus on playing their best hockey, the goaltending issues may resolve themselves, and players like Wisniewski and Ovechkin may finally get off their backs.

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