Crawford last played in the Blackhawks' 5-0 loss to the Los Angeles Kings at United Center on March 14. He allowed all five goals on 25 shots and backed up Scott Darling in Chicago's 3-2 loss to the Philadelphia Flyers on March 16.
The injury was announced the next day and the Blackhawks said Crawford was day-to-day. It sounded like a minor injury at the time, but Crawford has missed almost a month.
"It's frustrating, but it is what it is," said Crawford, who declined to discuss the nature of the injury or when it occurred. "Right now, I'm just. ... I can feel it getting closer and I'm just excited about getting back."
Crawford was having the best regular season of his career prior to the injury. He is 35-18-4 with a 2.32 goals-against average and .926 save percentage and leads the League with seven shutouts. He set new career-highs in wins and starts (57), and he's two games short of tying his NHL career high in appearances.
Crawford will have one more if he's able to start in Columbus to close out the regular season.
"That would always be nice," Crawford said. "I think the little details kind of go away a little bit the longer you miss, but who knows? Practices have been pretty hard, pretty intense, technical stuff with [Waite] I've been working on. It feels good. Today felt good with the shots. I'll just go day-by-day, but right now, after today, I felt good out there seeing stuff."
Quenneville and Crawford's teammates like what they've seen, especially Monday.
"It shows progress," Blackhawks captain Jonathan Toews said. "I think sometimes it can get frustrating if you feel you're seeing some recovery and then all of the sudden you digress on other days. But it's good to have [him] back out there with the boys and know that he's on the right path."
The next step is returning for a game, whenever that might be.
"I think with him getting on the ice, seeing pucks, getting the pace in front of him, [there's] nothing better than a game situation," Quenneville said. "We're looking to get him that chance and we'll go from there."