"When they're not going in, you kind of grip a little tight, but when they're going in they seem to open the floodgates," Saad said after the win. "The last game I had some chances. It was only a matter of time before they go in."For Saad to have scored his first two goals of the season against Anaheim, he had to play like Marian Hossa and this season’s version of Toews. On the first goal, the Hawks were on a powerplay with Saad standing in front of Ducks goalie John Gibson. DeBrincat was drifting in with the puck at the right faceoff circle. DeBrincat passed it to Saad and within two whacks, Saad records his first goal of the year. You could hear a sigh of relief for the Pittsburgh native, as well as all of us extremely patient Saad observers. On the third and final goal for the Hawks, it was an empty-netter for Saad but he, along with Toews, showed great awareness, speed and defensive skill to force a Ducks turnover at the blue line. Saad finished the game with a Corsi rating of 56.8 percent, meaning he and his linemates were shooting and possessing the puck on the ice at a higher percentage than their opponents. Saad has continued to score by being a man-child in the loss to the Vancouver Canucks on Halloween and in another loss to the Calgary Flames. Now it may seem that Saad scoring does not bode well for win-loss column, but I’m trying to remain positive here. Believe me, at this point, it is not easy. However, if the games against Anaheim, Vancouver and Calgary have showed anything, it is a hopeful glimpse in to what Saad needs to be for this team to become a playoff team again. Head coach Joel Quennville was obviously not happy with Saad’s game to start the year. And can you really blame him? Saad was playing too passively. Too many moments in games when he tried to look like a beefier version of Patrick Kane, in which he would want to carry the puck and score with speed. As a result, Saad would turnover the puck way too often and would be forced to play defense the majority of the time he was on the ice. That is not who Saad is. Can he win with speed? Of course. Can he excel with skill? You bet. But for him to score, and return to Stanley Cup winner Brandon Saad, he must be aggressive and play more like the power forward that made him successful in the first place. Saad should know his hockey identity, let it power his way for the Hawks who so desperately need him now more than ever.
Comments
Join the discussion below. Keep it civil and focused on the content.








Loading comments...