Saad among Blackhawks’ solid depth


Associated Press

CHICAGO

Much as they would love to get big contributions from Jonathan Toews and Patrick Kane, the Chicago Blackhawks have shown they can win even when their biggest stars aren’t lighting up the scoreboard.

Depth pays off, and this is the reward.

The Blackhawks are now three wins from their second championship in four years after taking a 4-3 triple-overtime thriller from the Boston Bruins in Game 1.

It didn’t matter that their biggest stars were largely quiet. They got enough from their secondary players to escape with the victory and land the first blow in this clash between Original Six franchises. “I think the whole year it’s been the depth that drives this team through the record and through the great regular season and obviously in the playoffs,” center Michal Handzus said. “Obviously, our top guys are leading and they’ve been great, but you need to have depth.”

It has paid off in the postseason, with Toews and Kane largely being held in check. That was certainly the case in the opener against the Bruins, and the result was a comeback win in a game for the ages.

Whether it was Andrew Shaw picking off a clearing attempt and feeding Dave Bolland to start the rally in the third period or Johnny Oduya scoring the tying goal in regulation from he point, the Blackhawks simply kept finding ways, and all that happened before the game-winner.

You know how that went.

In the third OT, Michael Roszival shot the puck from the point into traffic, and it deflected off Bolland and Shaw before going past Tuukka Rask to finish off the fifth-longest Stanley Cup finals game in history.

“I think it’s just hard work. Everyone wants that Cup,” said Shaw, who has five goals in the playoffs after scoring nine in the regular season. “There are a bunch of veterans on this team that played many years and haven’t been to this point.

“Your career does fly by and you don’t want to take it for granted. So when the opportunity’s there, you have to seize it. [Brandon Saad] had that big goal last night, got the guys rolling. It was huge for him.”

It was huge for the Blackhawks, particularly with their top scorers making little noise.

Toews has just one goal in the postseason after tying Kane for the team lead with 23. And for what it’s worth, Kane hasn’t been lighting it up, either, aside from that hat trick against Los Angeles in Game 5 of the conference finals.

Now, the Blackhawks have the upper hand on the Bruins partly because Saad (A Mahoning Valley Phantom in 2008-09), Bolland, Oduya and Shaw found ways to get the puck into the net when the Blackhawks’ biggest guns couldn’t.

“I think our team depth is huge in this kind of game,” Bolland said. “We’ve got four lines that we can roll on any night and if it’s playing tough or playing skill or playing anything, we’ve got four great lines that can roll. If it’s not our line, it’s Krug’s line. If it’s not Toewser, it’s our line. I think we’ve got great depth on this team to roll with it.”