The Blackhawks spent about 15-20 minutes after the loss holding a team meeting inside the locker room at the United Center. Without a win in the first six games and three straight multi-goal losses at home, the leadership group led the charge as frustrations were aired across the board.
"Specifics of what's said in the locker room always stays in the locker room, but you can imagine that we're trying to dig ourselves out of the hole that we've gotten ourselves in for six games here," Toews said. "It's not a good feeling. At the end of the day, the solution is in our locker room. It's everybody. I think everyone's trying to take responsibility on how they can be better and help our team and get in the win column."
"That's the only way to get out of something like this: together. It's not one line or two lines or one pair of D or our goalies standing on their heads," Jones said. "Every guy has got to be better for us. We all have to be on the same page with what needs to happen and I think we will be going forward."
When asked by reporters if there's still faith in Colliton as the leader of the group in the room, both Toews and Jones unequivocally said yes.
"Of course," Toews quickly answered. "At this point, there's details to our game that when we've done them, when we've stuck to them, we have four lines rolling that do things right, it's a fun way to play and everyone feeds off it. We just haven't done it enough. As a group, we want to decide to do that, commit ourselves to each other. It's not like we decided to wait six games to do it, but there's been times where we have, it just hasn't been enough and it hasn't been good enough. We've got to find a way to commit to each other and that's what we want to do. We want to start winning games, we want to start having fun playing hockey because we know we're performing much less than we can. It's underwhelming."
"One hundred percent this team has faith in Jeremy," Jones added. "I've only been here a short time, but his message has been great for us. When it really comes down to it, there's only so much coaching he can do. He's not going to lace them up for you... At the end of the day, this isn't a coaching problem. This is a locker room thing. This is the players on the ice playing the game. We have to find a way to all get on the same page and have a common goal on how we want to play and what our identity is."