DALLAS — The Chicago Blackhawks could focus on the positives.
Tyler Johnson flirted with a hat trick, Jason Dickinson had a goal and an assist in his return to Dallas and the Hawks rallied from a two-goal deficit in the third period.
Or the Hawks could focus on the negatives.
They blew an early two-goal lead, Roope Hintz completed a hat trick and the Hawks never got a shot on goal during overtime of Friday’s 5-4 loss to the Stars.
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“It’s partly the other team’s a good team and they come at you,” Hawks coach Luke Richardson said. “But partly we let them have a little room too.
“It’s just got to be focus and desire to play the same way for 60 minutes,” he said. “And it’s hard but you’ve got to keep reminding them and these are good examples. We got a point out of it tonight, but if we could play like we did in the third period and the start of the first, you’re looking at two points a lot of times in this league.
“So we’ve got to spell that out and make sure it sinks in.”
For Dickinson, it was a night of mixed feelings.
He had another strong performance, assisting on Johnson’s first goal and sparking the rally with a third-period goal.
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“Great pass by Gutty (Cole Guttman) to find me there,” Dickinson said. “And then T.J. driving the net for the first goal, I get a secondary (assist).”
“Great pass by Gutty to find me there. And then TJ driving the net for the first goal, I get a secondary. It’s great, but I’d love for us to get the win.”
Dickinson took time to take in the atmosphere at American Airlines Center, a sellout crowd of 18,532.
“I’m used to hearing the chant on my side, but I loved playing here,” he said. “Feels like home still and still hearing them chant the “Stars” during the anthem, it gives me a little something extra.”
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Here are seven takeaways from the loss.
Dallas would backtrack, looking for the right rush opportunity, circle around and do it all over again.
It was as if they were out there to get in a workout — and not exactly scintillating to watch.
“That’s how you should play,” Johnson said pointedly. “I know they brought 3-on-3 to try to be exciting and everything, but through all the history that I’ve played in 3-on-3, it is possession. The more you can wear a team down, catch guys tired, that’s when you get your odd-man opportunities.
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“You really shouldn’t just take shots to take shots. Three-on-three hockey, what everyone wants it to be, if you want to win it, you can’t really play that way. They did what they needed to do to win.”
It worked. Hintz scored his third goal of the game on a tip-in with 7.9 seconds left.
“It’s tough,” Richardson said. “That’s a big team that’s strong on pucks and they have good speed, so that’s pretty lethal when there’s a lot of room out there three-on-three.”
Dickinson felt the Hawks had defended well and kept the Stars to the outside till the end.
“We could’ve taken a page out of their book when we did have the puck, we could have held onto it a little bit longer and created more extended possession time ourselves,” he said.
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“You really shouldn’t just take shots to take shots. Three-on-3 hockey, what everyone wants it to be, if you want to win it, you can’t really play that way. They did what they needed to do to win.”
Some in the NHL aren’t fond of the tactic the Stars used, and it’s not fan friendly. But what can you do about it?
Implement a rule stating teams would have to stay in the offensive zone? Give the NHL a shot clock like the NBA?
“I don’t have an answer for that,” Johnson said, “because you can’t have the guys playing overtime forever with the schedule and everything. If you did a five-on-five OT, you’re not going to get a lot of goals. You could go directly to a shootout, but I don’t think a shootout should determine a lot of points either.”
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Dickinson said he wouldn’t change the format either.
“Because you change it one way and teams find another way to counter it,” he said. “So we’ve got the devil that we know, right?”
Johnson scored his eighth goal of the season 7 minutes, 56 seconds into the game, assisted by Anthony Beauvillier and Dickinson.
It represented the 19th time the Hawks have scored the opening goal — 11 in December alone — but they have just a 7-10-2 record in those games (.368).
(By the way, Connor Bedard is tied with Sidney Crosby with six game-opening goals.)
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Johnson said it comes down to structure and discipline.
“We have the lead but instead of not necessarily sitting back and protecting — I don’t think that’s ever good — but making those right decisions of not doing those hope plays, not doing those plays of ‘this might work, this might not,’ ” he said. “When you have the lead, you have to make the for-sure play, the simple play.
“Sometimes it’s not sexy, sometimes it’s not going to create anything, but at least you’re not going to have something go against you. We’re just taking too many chances.”
Richardson said it’s the growing pains of what the Hawks are building.
“Do we have as much depth as some teams? Maybe not,” he said. “But our focus (should be) keeping that game plan going like we talked about earlier, playing that 60 minutes. …
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“We’ll live with the mistakes if we’re playing aggressive. It’s us, not backing up, (but) it’s maybe losing a little bit of focus on how we got those good starts and letting the other team have a chance to get back in the game. So it’s something to learn from.”
The Hawks stayed in Dallas for a second straight game — 7 p.m. Sunday, NBCSCH — a rare scheduling quirk that’s more akin to a baseball series.
“It’s a little different but it’s good,” Bedard said. “We haven’t played these guys yet (before Friday), so it’s always fun coming to new buildings for myself and playing new teams.”
Taylor Raddysh said to the best of his recollection he had never played such a schedule, with one exception.
“I know the COVID year with the NHL you played two games just to try to limit the traveling,” he said. “It’s kind of nice you get to play one game and stay in the city. … You don’t have to worry about traveling and tiredness.”
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You would think Dickinson, who called American Airlines Center home for six seasons, would love it.
“It’s got its pros and cons, just like anything,” he said. “It’s nice to be able to settle into a city and not be constantly on a plane and traveling because it does take a toll on you.
“But we’ll see how the rivalry is for the Sunday game — that’s the problem right there. Either the game gets really jacked up and really intense because of tonight, or it ends up flat and the fans aren’t interested. They’re like, ‘Oh, we already saw them play Friday,’ and it’s not as exciting of a game.”
Dickinson said he hopes “it’s a bit more of a dogfight on Sunday.”
Raddysh left after his second shift early in the first period and didn’t return. The Hawks on Saturday placed him on injured reserve with a left groin strain and called up Boris Katchouk.
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The Hawks are still waiting for Joey Anderson, Seth Jones and Andreas Athanasiou to return from IR.
Tinordi had a minus-3 rating, but that’s just a hint at the kind of night he had.
His first-period interference penalty gave the Stars their power play, which led to their first goal, which gave them momentum as they rattled off three more scores.
Tinordi was on the ice for all three, getting turnstiled by Jamie Benn on the last one. Tinordi was riding pine after that point.
“It was just not his night,” Richardson said. “He’s a battler for us. He knows he probably didn’t have a good night. He’s a veteran guy, he doesn’t have to be told those little things. …
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“We can work with a player trying and when there’s mistakes and you can correct those. It’s when people give up on themselves and I know there’s no give-up in him.”
Midway through the second period, Joe Pavelski and Hintz scored 20 seconds apart.
It was the fourth time the Hawks coughed up two opponent goals within 30 seconds.
Here’s a breakdown of each occurrence.
Friday at Dallas: 20 seconds, Pavelski and Hintz
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Dec. 14 at Seattle: 21 seconds, Jared McCann and Pierre-Edouard Bellemare
Dec. 23 at St. Louis: 23 seconds, Jake Neighbours and Jordan Kyrou
Dec. 5 vs. Nashville: 26 seconds, Luke Evangelista and Mark Jankowski
All resulted in losses.
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“The second period, we just had too much D-zone time,” Richardson said. “We just backed off for some reason. We just played a little bit more defensive, meaning not attacking them, even in the D-zone.
“It’s a big team that can skate so that’s not a good recipe for us.”
“We’ll live with the mistakes if we’re playing aggressive. I think it’s us, not backing up, it’s maybe losing a little bit of focus on how we got those good starts.”
—Luke Richardson on scoring the opening goal for the 19th time, but having just a 7-10-2 record pic.twitter.com/RqJPjLopZl
“Everyone went crazy in the plane. It was bonkers. Everyone was yelling, and at the end, the pilot made the announcement and everyone started chanting ‘new crew, new crew’,” Ruhlman.
“I have to go to work. I’m obviously not going to be able to work on Monday. I was supposed to arrive in Auckland on Friday morning,” Ruhlman said.
Carina Fischer, of Remuera, described the scene in the terminal as “a nightmare”.
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Fischer said: “Everyone is crying. Kids are screaming.”
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She said a relative had helped her buy a hotel room, but she had been washing her clothes in the sink and drying them with a hairdryer.
She was also worried about her child who has ADHD, saying he was without his medication as well.
She claimed American Airlines was “not helpful, not helpful at all”.
Ruhlman echoed that sentiment: “They literally don’t care that they ruined people’s holidays and so many plans – and sanity.”
She said a group of passengers were planning to write to the airline’s chief executive asking for compensation.
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“I’m so tired and still in my same clothes as Wednesday. It’s Monday …”
American Airlines was approached for comment on Saturday, but had yet to respond by Monday morning.
Another passenger, Sarah Botwright was due to be in New Zealand for a holiday to see her friend, said she had to be home in Ohio and she would likely have to cancel her whole trip to Godzone.
“My luggage will be going to New Zealand regardless of whether I go or not, though,” she said.
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“It’s just insane,” she said of the situation.
Local daily paper the Dallas Morning News reported more than 600 flights to and from Dallas Fort Worth International Airport and Dallas Love Field had been cancelled as of 5pm Friday (12pm, Saturday, NZ).
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More than 800 flights were also delayed. American Airlines flights were the most impacted by the delays, the Dallas Morning News said.
The paper said the delays were due to a snowstorm in North Texas on Thursday which left a dumping of snow and icy conditions.
Raphael Franks is an Auckland-based reporter who covers breaking news. He joined the Herald as a Te Rito cadet in 2022.
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Dallas Stars (27-13-1, in the Central Division) vs. Ottawa Senators (20-18-3, in the Atlantic Division)
Ottawa, Ontario; Sunday, 5 p.m. EST
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BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Stars -138, Senators +117; over/under is 5.5
BOTTOM LINE: The Ottawa Senators host the Dallas Stars after the Stars defeated the Montreal Canadiens 2-1 in a shootout.
Ottawa has a 10-7-1 record in home games and a 20-18-3 record overall. The Senators have gone 11-5-2 in games their opponents commit more penalties.
Dallas has an 11-8-0 record in road games and a 27-13-1 record overall. The Stars have gone 13-6-1 in games their opponents commit more penalties.
The matchup Sunday is the second time these teams square off this season. The Stars won 4-2 in the last matchup. Roope Hintz led the Stars with two goals.
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TOP PERFORMERS: Joshua Norris has scored 14 goals with nine assists for the Senators. Ridly Greig has four goals and one assist over the past 10 games.
Jason Robertson has 10 goals and 24 assists for the Stars. Wyatt Johnston has four goals and seven assists over the last 10 games.
LAST 10 GAMES: Senators: 4-5-1, averaging 2.3 goals, 3.6 assists, 4.4 penalties and 10.2 penalty minutes while giving up 2.9 goals per game.
Stars: 8-1-1, averaging 3.2 goals, 5.6 assists, 2.4 penalties and 4.8 penalty minutes while giving up two goals per game.
INJURIES: Senators: None listed.
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Stars: None listed.
___
The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.
DALLAS — Volunteers laced up their sneakers and beautified Dallas’ Fair Park neighborhood Saturday morning as part of the MLK Fest Dallas 2025, which aims to reduce blight and promote public art.
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Volunteers started off at the MLK Community Center and were assigned to clean up one of eight zones in South Dallas. People mowed grass, renovated homes, and painted a mural.
“It brings community together. A good friend of mine says community and unity are common unity, so we love all of it. We just want to be able to revitalize this place and give the community a sense of pride or ownership and give that back to all,” said Paul Franklin, community outreach director with the Walls Project.
Hundreds of volunteers braved the cold and came together for the large-scale community cleanup. The event brought together people from non-profits, churches, and businesses. The event aims to clean up blight while honoring the life of Martin Luther King Jr.
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“This is just another part of how our community celebrates the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, to exemplify how important that is and how that connects us all to each other,” said Shawna Nesbitt, vice president of UT Southwestern Medical Center.
UT Southwestern Medical Center had about 160 volunteers who signed up. One of their projects included painting a mail room and bike rack at an apartment complex. Volunteers also picked up trash, cleared weeds, and spoke with those experiencing homelessness.
“I’m going to speak to the people that we see that are possibly unsheltered in tents and inform them of the center here at Fair Park that just recently opened the shelter,” said Jeremy Connally, an owner with the Epiphany Foundation.
The day ends with a block party at the MLK Community Center and a gala at the Renaissance Center.