Jan 25, 2026
Not much happened for a while at the United Center on Sunday. The Chicago Blackhawks hosted the back-to-back Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers, whom they opened the season against, and neither team could gain an advantage for two periods. The shots, scoring chances, forechecks and goalie saves w ere neck-and-neck through periods one and two. Defenseman Tobias Bjornfot silenced the crowd with a goal at 15:33 that squeaked past Spencer Knight (20 saves, .833 save percentage), giving the champs a 1-0 second-period lead. Tyler Bertuzzi sounded the horn for the 25th time this year with 30 seconds to spare in the second, scoring the much-needed answer to end the period tied at one. Maybe not a playoff-type of atmosphere, but it was a postseason-type of game. The Panthers have had a lot of those, so it was the Hawks’ turn to see how they handled the pressure of a contender. Having not lost a playoff series in almost three years gives Florida the confidence to handle these situations. The confidence that the young Hawks are currently looking to build. “It’s the learning curve for us as a young team, understanding how to build your confidence and who we are,” team captain Nick Foligno said. “Sometimes as a young player — and even us as older players — you get a little bored with it because it’s not breaking, it’s not happening, and you don’t trust that it’s going to happen. That’s just because we don’t have experience.” Column: Random thoughts on a budding Chicago sports bromance and other hot topics The Hawks (21-23-8) saw their three-game point streak end at the paws of the Panthers 5-1 on Sunday. The defending champs (28-20-3) scored four unanswered goals in the third period, making the box score uglier than the game action. “It wasn’t a good enough third period for sure, (and) there have been times when we’ve had really good thirds,” Hawks coach Jeff Blashill said. “This is how it’s going to be if we want to be a good team.” Knight saw a second puck slide in slow motion behind him at 5:22 in the third, where defenseman Wyatt Kaiser was inches away from stopping right winger Mackie Samoskevich’s goal. The Hawks lost all momentum from that point, as Carter Verhaeghe (7:24), Sam Reinhart (18:11) and Bjornfot (19:38) added salt to the wound. “I think when something goes wrong, it’s still understanding we have to keep making plays and keep playing our game,” Kaiser said. “There’s a fine line between being very simple and also having poise with the puck, clean breakouts, making plays through the neutral zone, when to dump it in.” It’s a tale of two faces when it comes to the Hawks’ special teams. The Hawks still own the NHL’s best penalty kill (85.5%) after killing defenseman Louis Crevier’s hooking penalty. On the other hand, the Hawks are in the middle of the league in power play success (20.5%). That percentage is rapidly dropping because the Hawks are goalless in their last 18 man advantages. Shots aren’t flying as they should be, and the chemistry seems to be off in that area. “I don’t think our breakouts have been very good, probably our breakouts and retrievals haven’t been good enough,” said Blashill, who mentioned a power-play confidence hit before Sunday’s game. “Ultimately, we have to break the puck in better and we have to win more loose puck recoveries.” Related Articles Column: Random thoughts on a budding Chicago sports bromance and other hot topics Injury questions linger for many of the top men’s hockey teams at the Olympics Chicago Blackhawks push scorching-hot Tampa Bay Lightning to the limit but fall 2-1 in a shootout Photos: Tampa Bay Lightning 2, Chicago Blackhawks 1 (SO) Oliver Moore’s shootout goal on his 21st birthday gives Chicago Blackhawks a 4-3 win over Carolina Hurricanes The Panthers showed the up-and-coming Hawks what it takes to be a championship-level team. They’ll take the gut punch of a lesson in stride. “They’re really confident in who they are and the way they play, so they know that, over time they’re going to break you down or get those opportunities,” Foligno said. “It’s a good lesson for us, if there’s anything you can take away from this game, (it’s) how you have to stay with it (like) how championship teams do it.” The United Center had a purple tint as the Hawks held their annual Hockey Fights Cancer night. Cancer survivors were honored, including a kid named Drew, who rang the bell in front of 19,313 fans to celebrate the end of his cancer treatment. Included in the honors was former Hawks center Troy Murray, who announced his cancer diagnosis on Aug. 9, 2021. He played the first 12 years of his career with the Hawks — scoring 488 points (197 goals, 291 assists) and winning the Selke Trophy in the 1985-86 season — and is currently the Hawks color analyst for WGN radio. “With the love and support of my family, friends, the Wirtz family, the Chicago Blackhawks organization and WGN radio I’m confident that together, we will beat this,” Murray had said in a 2021 statement. WGN Hawks studio host Charlie Roumeliotis, CHSN and NHL on TNT analyst Darren Pang and others held up their light purple “I fight for” signs with different variations of Murray’s name. The United Center crowd held a standing ovation in support of Murray during a tribute video. ...read more read less
Respond, make new discussions, see other discussions and customize your news...

To add this website to your home screen:

1. Tap tutorialsPoint

2. Select 'Add to Home screen' or 'Install app'.

3. Follow the on-scrren instructions.

Feedback
FAQ
Privacy Policy
Terms of Service