Game Time: Tuesday, December 30, 2025
Location: United Center, Chicago
TV: ESPN+, NBCS Chicago
Here we are, the second-to-last game of 2025, and the Chicago Blackhawks are sitting at 14-18-6. The New York Islanders are coming to town with a 21-14-4 record, and honestly? I’m just hoping we don’t embarrass ourselves on home ice before the new year.
Look, I’m not going to pretend this is a matchup between two playoff juggernauts. We’re 14-18-6. We’re eight games under .500 in late December. The Islanders are legitimately good, sitting in the thick of the Metropolitan Division playoff race. On paper, they should beat us.
But here’s the thing—they’re on a four-game road losing streak, and we’re at home. So maybe, just maybe, we’ve got a shot.
Current Records and What They Mean
Blackhawks: 14-18-6 (7-8-3 at home)
Islanders: 21-14-4 (9-7-2 on the road)
Let’s be honest about where we are. We’re bad. Not “worst team in the league” bad anymore, but definitely “rebuilding and it shows” bad. Connor Bedard is spectacular, but one 18-year-old can’t carry an entire NHL team, even if he’s the generational talent we’ve been waiting for.
The Islanders are a completely different story. They’re 21-14-4 and fighting for a playoff spot in the Metro Division. They’re disciplined, they play structured defense, and they’ve got legitimate scoring depth.
But—and this is the glimmer of hope I’m clinging to—they’re 9-7-2 on the road, and they’ve lost their last FOUR road games in a row. That’s not a minor slump. That’s a team that can’t figure out how to win away from home right now.
We’re 7-8-3 at the United Center. Not good, but not terrible. And if there’s ever a time to catch the Islanders, it’s when they’re struggling on the road and we’re at home.
Connor Bedard: The Only Reason We’re Still Watching
Let’s just get this out of the way—Connor Bedard is the only reason most of us are still tuning in.
The kid is 18 years old and already playing like he belongs in the NHL. His puck handling is elite. His hockey IQ is off the charts. When he’s on the ice, anything can happen. He creates chances out of nothing, makes passes that shouldn’t exist, and occasionally reminds you why we tanked for him.
Against the Islanders’ structured defense, Bedard is going to have to work for everything. The Isles don’t give up easy scoring chances, and they’re going to try to contain him all night. But if there’s one thing we’ve learned this season, it’s that Bedard finds ways to create offense even when teams are keying on him.
If Bedard has one of those magical games where everything clicks, we can absolutely win this. If he’s frustrated and shut down? It’s going to be a long night.
The Islanders: Good, Disciplined, and Struggling on the Road
New York is 21-14-4 because they play smart, structured hockey. They don’t beat themselves. They clog the neutral zone, limit high-danger chances, and capitalize on their opportunities. It’s boring, but it works.
Bo Horvat and Mathew Barzal: The Islanders’ Offensive Threats
Bo Horvat has been excellent for the Islanders this season. He’s a legitimate top-line center who can score, facilitate, and win faceoffs. Against our young, inexperienced defense, he’s going to create problems.
Mathew Barzal is the wild card. When he’s on, he’s one of the most dynamic players in the league. His speed and creativity can break games open. If Barzal finds his rhythm early, we’re in trouble.
Ilya Sorokin: The Goalie We Don’t Want to Face
Ilya Sorokin is one of the best goalies in the NHL. He’s the kind of netminder who can steal games by himself, and that’s terrifying when you’re trying to score on him with our offense.
We’re averaging 2.71 goals per game. The Islanders are giving up 2.89 goals per game. That means we need to be efficient with our chances because we’re probably not going to get many clean looks against Sorokin.
The Four-Game Road Losing Streak
Here’s our hope: the Islanders are 0-4 in their last four road games. They can’t figure out how to win away from home right now, and that’s a real problem for them.
Road slumps are mental. Teams start pressing, making mistakes, and second-guessing themselves. If we can jump on them early, get the United Center crowd into it, and force them to play from behind, maybe—just maybe—that losing streak extends to five.
What Needs to Happen for the Blackhawks to Win
1. Connor Bedard Needs to Create Magic
This is obvious, but it’s true. Bedard is our best player by a mile, and we need him to do Bedard things. If he can create a few high-danger chances and capitalize on one or two, we’re in business.
2. Petr Mrazek Needs to Stand on His Head
Petr Mrazek is our goalie, and he’s been… fine. Not great, not terrible. Just fine. Tonight, we need him to be better than fine. We need him to make the saves he’s supposed to make and steal a couple he probably shouldn’t.
If Mrazek can match Sorokin save-for-save, we’ve got a chance in a low-scoring game.
3. Stay Out of the Penalty Box
The Islanders have a 21.1% power play success rate. We have a 76.8% penalty kill rate. Do the math—if we’re spending half the game killing penalties, we’re going to lose.
Our penalty kill has been bad all season. The Islanders’ power play has been good. We cannot give them free opportunities.
4. Secondary Scoring Has to Show Up
Taylor Raddysh is listed as an X-factor, and honestly, we need someone—anyone—to provide scoring beyond Bedard. If the Islanders can just focus on shutting down Bedard and nobody else steps up, we’re cooked.
Raddysh, Tyler Bertuzzi, whoever—someone needs to score a goal that isn’t Bedard-assisted.
5. Win the Special Teams Battle
Our power play is 16.4%. Their penalty kill is 82.5%. Those are not good odds for us.
But if we can sneak a power play goal, it changes the complexion of the game. The Islanders are disciplined, so we might not get many chances. But when we do, we have to capitalize.
The Islanders’ Advantages (Unfortunately, There Are Many)
Let’s not sugarcoat this—the Islanders have significant advantages:
Better record. 21-14-4 vs 14-18-6. They’re a playoff team. We’re not.
Better goaltending. Sorokin is elite. Mrazek is serviceable.
Better special teams. Their power play and penalty kill are both significantly better than ours.
More depth. They’ve got scoring throughout their lineup. We’ve got Bedard and… hope?
Defensive structure. The Islanders play disciplined, smart defense. We’re young and make mistakes.
This is a mismatch on paper. But hockey isn’t played on paper, and the Islanders are struggling on the road.
Why the Blackhawks Might Actually Win
Here’s my case for optimism (because I’m a glutton for punishment):
Home ice. We’re 7-8-3 at the United Center. Not great, but we’re better at home than on the road.
The Islanders’ road struggles. Four straight road losses. They’re in their heads right now.
Connor Bedard. One great player can change a game, and Bedard is that player.
End-of-year desperation. It’s December 30th. We want to end 2025 on a positive note. That emotional motivation matters.
Low-scoring game favors chaos. If this is a 2-1 or 3-2 game, anything can happen. One lucky bounce, one bad penalty, one great save—it all matters.
My Prediction: We Lose, But Maybe Not by Much
Look, I want to believe. I want to say we’re going to ride the Bedard train to victory and send the Islanders packing with their fifth straight road loss.
But I’m also a realist. The Islanders are better than us. Sorokin is a better goalie than Mrazek. They have more depth, better special teams, and a more experienced roster.
Final Score: Islanders 3, Blackhawks 2
I think we keep it close. I think Bedard does Bedard things and gets us on the board. I think Mrazek makes enough saves to keep us in it. But ultimately, I think the Islanders’ depth and structure wins out in the third period.
If I’m wrong and we actually win? I’ll be thrilled. But I’m managing my expectations because this team has broken my heart enough times this season.
Keys to Victory (or at Least Not Getting Embarrassed)
For the Blackhawks to win:
- Bedard with 2+ points (goal and assist minimum)
- Mrazek with a .920+ save percentage
- Stay out of the penalty box (no more than 3 penalties)
- Someone not named Bedard scores a goal
- Win at least one special teams battle
What kills us:
- Sorokin plays lights-out (very possible)
- We take four+ penalties and give up a power play goal
- Barzal gets hot and takes over
- Nobody provides secondary scoring
- Third period collapse (our specialty)
The Honest Blackhawks Fan Take
We’re 14-18-6 in late December. This season is already lost. We’re playing for Connor Bedard’s development and trying to build something for the future.
The Islanders are a good team fighting for a playoff spot. They should beat us. But they’re on a four-game road losing streak, and we’re at home.
Maybe—just maybe—we catch them at the right time. Maybe Bedard has one of those games. Maybe Mrazek stands on his head. Maybe the hockey gods show us mercy for once.
But probably not. Probably we lose 3-2 and spend the rest of the night wondering when this rebuild is going to actually start working.
Prediction: Islanders 3, Blackhawks 2
Go Hawks. Please don’t embarrass us on the last home game of 2025.
Game Info:
- When: Tuesday, December 30, 2025
- Where: United Center, Chicago
- TV: ESPN+, NBCS Chicago
- Records: Blackhawks (14-18-6), Islanders (21-14-4)
Injury Updates: Check back closer to game time for any last-minute scratches.
Quick Stats Comparison
Offense:
- Blackhawks: 2.71 goals per game (not good)
- Islanders: 3.05 goals per game (decent)
Defense:
- Blackhawks: 3.23 goals against per game (yikes)
- Islanders: 2.89 goals against per game (solid)
Special Teams:
- Blackhawks PP: 16.4% | PK: 76.8% (both bad)
- Islanders PP: 21.1% | PK: 82.5% (both good)
Yeah, the stats aren’t encouraging. But that’s why they play the games, right?
Let’s close out 2025 with a win. Or at least make it competitive. Please.
