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Blackhawks plan on playing with urgency

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The Blackhawks' Marian Hossa works out with teammates Monday at Johnny's IceHouse in Chicago. (Sarah Nader – snader@shawmedia.com)

CHICAGO — Like any other NHL goaltender, Corey Crawford has found a certain level of comfort working inside hockey's biggest pressure cooker.

But after Sunday's verbal agreement between the players association and owners tentatively ended the 113-day lockout and leaving the league with a shortened regular season, NHL teams – including the Blackhawks – are feeling the crunch not to waste any time.

Teams are expected to begin training camp this weekend once the deal is ratified, officially allowing hockey business to resume. But as several Hawks players worked out privately Monday morning at Johnny's IceHouse on the city's near west side, they had already started to think ahead, understanding with their season basically cut almost in half, time will be of the essence.

And for Crawford, who had a 2.72 goals-against-average in 57 appearances last season, getting back in game shape begins with getting his head right.

"Pressure? You're talking about that already?" Crawford said after Monday morning's skate, drawing a laugh from the horde of reporters and TV cameras surrounding him. "But no – this is fun what we do. I'm looking forward to what's coming up."

What awaits players, though, will be much different than in years past when training camp and the preseason allowed teams to ease into an 82-game regular season. But now, with the season slated to start as early as Jan. 15 following a lockout that lasted nearly four months, players admitted Monday they're moving into uncertain waters.

While players such as Hawks leading scorer Marian Hossa have been working out individually for weeks, returning to full strength as a team will take some time before the abbreviated regular season begins possibly less than a a week after players are reunited officially with their coaches.

The league's Board of Governors is expected to vote on the tentative 10-year deal Wednesday.

And as long as players have been been waiting to return to work, establishing a sense of urgency won't be difficult for the Hawks after being knocked out of the playoffs in the first round by Phoenix.

For Hossa, who said Monday he received a few offers to play in Europe during the lockout after being cleared medically to play in November after suffering a concussion in April, returning to the ice with his teammates can't come fast enough, especially given the relative shortness of the upcoming regular season.

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