CHICAGO - Frans Nielsen had a goal and an assist and the Detroit Red Wings beat the Chicago Blackhawks 5-3 on Saturday night for their second straight victory.
Bobby Ryan, Darren Helm, Christian Djoos and Evgeny Svechnikov also scored for Detroit, which won for the third time in four games after a 4-12-3 start. The Blackhawks had won two straight and five of their previous six.
"We’ve scored five goals in back-to-back games now, and it’s something we’ve really struggled with," Nielsen said. "For sure it feels good."
Alex DeBrincat, Mattias Janmark and Dominik Kubalik scored for Chicago.
Detroit scored twice in a 4:18 span late in the second period to take a 3-1 lead. Helm beat goalie Malcolm Subban from the slot at 14:09, just 16 seconds after the DeBrincat had tied the game. Helm was left alone when both Chicago defenseman chased the puck behind the net, only to see center Luke Clendening hit Helm on the tape with a pass.
The Red Wings made it 3-1 with their first power-play goal in 15 games with 1:33 left in the second. Djoos used Chicago’s David Kampf as a screen and fired a wrist shot over Subban’s right shoulder. It was the third power-play goal of the year for Detroit.
"That was a huge part of the game," Detroit coach Jeff Blashill said. "To score, and then there was a really big kill. I thought the power play was really good before it scored."
DeBrincat scored with 6:07 left in the second. He hopped off the bench when the Red Wings’ defenders weren’t looking and beat goalie Jonathan Bernier with a wrist shot from the slot on a breakaway. Bernier stopped 29 shots for his sixth win of the season.
The Red Wings’ Svechnikov beat Subban from the doorstep for a 4-1 lead 2:33 into the third. Subban stopped 31 shots.
"I was working very hard for it, patient, but I stuck with it," said Svechnikov, who broke into the lineup after a conditioning stint in the minors. "It was tough for a couple weeks in Grand Rapids, but I stayed with it."
Janmark tipped a Carl Soderberg pass by Bernier to cut the lead to 4-2 two minutes later, but Nielsen scored his first goal of the season with a hard wrist shot at 8:!5 to put the Red Wings ahead 5-2.
Kubalik scored with 12 seconds remaining for Chicago.
"Overall, I like a lot of what we did, but am disappointed with the sharpness around our net defensively," Chicago coach Jeremy Colliton said.
Ryan opened the scoring midway through the first period, his quick wrist shot beating Subban from the slot. Until that point, the Blackhawks had outshot the Red Wings 11-2. But, Ryan’s goal shifted the momentum.
"I feel we came out pretty good," Janmark said. "We played decent tonight, but a little sloppy at times and we got punished for it."
Chicago standout Patrick Kane managed five shots, but failed to score in his first game chasing his 400th career goal.
CHASING 400
Patrick Kane, the first pick in the 2007 draft, will be the fourth player in Blackhawks’ history to score 400 goals with the team, joining Hall of Famers Bobby Hull and Stan Mikita and longtime threat Steve Larmer. Kane won the Calder Trophy as the NHL’s top rookie in 2007-08 and picked up the Hart as the NHL’s most valuable player in 2015-16, the first American to do so.
POWERLESS NO MORE
Detroit’s power-play languished at the bottom of the NHL before the game, connecting on only 6.1 percent of its chances. Christian Djoos’ second-period goal was the first man-advantage score for the Red Wings in 40 attempts, dating to a Jan. 28 score in a 7-3 loss at Dallas.
UP NEXT
The Red Wings and Blackhawks meet again at United Center on Sunday night.