CHICAGO - In the hours before a must-have Game 4 at the Garden in Boston, a struggling Jonathan Toews was approached in conversation at the team hotel by his senior teammate, 28-year-old Brent Seabrook. "I answered it wrong one time because he just asked me What are you thinking about? and I was like Nothing, what are you thinking about?" Toews recalled of a discussion which would later prove significant. "And he looked at me and I realized what he wanted me to say and I snapped back and I said Scoring goals. And he was like There you go." Tied for the team lead with 23 goals during the regular season, Toews would go on to do just that Wednesday night, erasing a frustrating 10-game spell with just his second goal of the playoffs, the second marker of a wild 6-5 overtime victory. The moment uplifted not only the Chicago captain, but his teammates. They knew the weight of the burden he carried on those 25-year-old shoulders and in spite of the many intangibles he continued to bring, there was something about scoring they knew would ease the increasing pressure and most of all, help the team out from a growing offensive rut. And so it was that Seabrook, who would later blast his second overtime winner of the playoffs, would so bluntly express to Toews what needed to happen. "To be completely honest I was sick and tired hearing about everything that Johnnys doing right," Seabrook declared with refreshing honesty. "Hes a great player; hes one of the best in the league. [But] I just told him that hes got to stop thinking about that too. Hes got to stop thinking about everything that hes doing right and stop worrying about not scoring goals. "Hes got to score goals for us," the veteran defender continued. "It wasnt about the little things that he does. It wasnt about his leadership that he brings. I just thought that maybe he needed to start thinking about scoring goals." Harassed by the forces of Milan Lucic as he drove wide to the net in the second frame of Game 4, Toews flung the puck threw the blue paint and off the side wall where it caromed to the tape of Michal Rozsival at the right point. Instinctively, Toews would plant himself to the left of Tuukka Rask, getting just a piece of a blast that would beat the Bruins netminder, one of an improbable six to do so. "It doesnt make much sense when you say that a puck going off your stick from the point…can liberate you as a player and help you play the rest of the game with less pressure," he said, "but it does. Thats the difference it makes for you. I think anyone will tell you the same thing." When he lifted the Conn Smythe Trophy in 2010, Toews had tallied seven goals and an impressive 22 assists en route to a long-awaited Cup. Entering Game 4 of the Final in 2013, hed amassed just the single marker along with eight helpers. The stiff defensive work opposite the once scorching David Krejci trio couldnt be discounted, nor could the tireless efforts on the draw or killing penalties or even the unique traits that define him as a leader. He knew he needed to score. "You play hard, you try and do the little things right, but at a certain point its not enough," Toews offered of the budding pressure to score. "Youre considered an offensive player, a key player on your team; youve got to find a way to do something." The difference, he detailed, is imbued in confidence and a subsequent shift in the split-second decision-making process. "It just comes down to having that killer instinct when youre around the net," he continued with hearty insight, "to take the puck to the net or hang onto it that extra second instead of just making a safe play and cycling it down behind their net … Its just having that confidence that Hey you can go out there, youve got the puck, dont be afraid, take a chance, throw it on net or take it to the net…" Known as one of the more vocal Hawks, for his fiery preparations before and in the midst of games, Seabrook was trying to stoke that "confidence" from his beleaguered captain, drive it forth from the depths of the dry spell. "He wasnt trying to get on me I dont think; he was definitely just trying to spark me a little bit," said Toews, rooming with Seabrook as a rookie in 2007-2008. "Hes always kind of looked after me that way. He cares about his teammates and he wants guys to have success. And just as much or more than anybody he wants to win this thing. He did what he had to do." Without a goal in the first nine games of the postseason this spring, Toews finally broke under such weight in Game 4 of the Hawks second round series with Detroit. He was hauled off to the box on three consecutive shifts in the second frame, the frustration bubbling over as Chicago went down 3-1 before rallying to top the Wings in seven games. Faced with similar circumstance in Game 4 of the Finals - down 2-1 with the Bruins stifling the Hawks defensively - Toews did not buckle. Instead, he found a spark and made an impact. And with a best-of-three looming and the Cup on the line, Chicago has its leader feeling good once more. "He knows what winnings all about," said Chicago coach Joel Quenneville, "and thats his focus and thats his motivation." Air Max Kaufen Schweiz . The Barrie Colts defenceman, who impressed many with his play for Canada at the World Junior Hockey Championship, is the top-ranked skater in the February rankings. He has 19 goals and 24 assists for 43 points in 45 games with the Colts this season. Air Max Outlet Schweiz . Canada is now down to its 22-player limit, although but players wont be registered until Christmas Day. Changes could still be made as a result of a suspension or injury. http://www.airmaxschweizonline.ch/ . John Lucas, signed as a mentor for rookie Trey Burke, showed he can score if required, scoring 12 points of his 16 points in the second quarter as Utah built an 18-point lead. Air Max Günstig Schweiz . Vettel was 0.168 seconds faster than Red Bull teammate Mark Webber around the Suzuka circuit. Mercedes driver Nico Rosberg was two tenths of a second off Vettel. "The car balance is decent, but I think we can still improve," Vettel said. Air Max Schweiz .S District Court against Major League Baseball, the Office of the Commissioner and his own union, the MLBPA. SPRINGFIELD, Mass. -- When Shaquille ONeal was 10 years old, his father made a prediction.Friday night when his son became a Hall of Famer, it was realized.Shaq and Allen Iverson headlined the 10-member Class of 2016 enshrined into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. One of the most star-packed classes in recent memory, it also featured international star Yao Ming, WNBA great Sheryl Swoopes, coach Tom Izzo, and owner Jerry Reinsdorf, an architect in the Michael Jordan-led Chicago Bulls championship teams of the 1990s.If I know my father, hes up there arguing with Wilt (Chamberlain) that his son is the best big man in the game, Shaq said.Posthumous honorees were: 27-year NBA referee Darell Garretson; John McLendon, the first African-American coach in a professional league; Zelmo Beaty, the former NBA and ABA star who led Prairie View to an NAIA title in 1962; and Cumberland Posey, who is also a member of the Baseball Hall of Fame.Shaq was an instant box office draw during his career because of his mammoth frame and rim-shaking dunks. But he also exhibited a personality that was as playful was it was engaging. He showed off all of it on Friday.He had the final speech of the night, a humorous dissertation that spanned his long journey in the sport.His speech had serious moments like thanking his parents, Phil Harrison and Lucille ONeal, for giving him the discipline and drive that drove his NBA dream.But he also tossed in light moments. He thanked former Lakers teammate Kobe Bryant for helping him win three NBA titles, but also for getting me pushed off the team and traded to Miami.Before host Ahmad Rashad could even introduce Iverson, the first mention of his name started a roar of cheers throughout the assembled audience.Dressed in all black, former MVP known as A.I., blew kisses has tears began to form in his eyes.Thank God for loving me and blessing me, Iverson said, to be the man that I am and having no regrets for the man that I am. A man that my family loves, my teammates love and my fans love.Fighting tears throughout, Iverson thanked former Georgetown coach John Thompson for saving my life.(After) the incident happened in high school and all that was taken away...no other schools would recruit me anymore, Iverson recalled. My mom went to Georgetown and begged him to give me a chance. And he did.He said he later left Georgetown only as an OK basketball player.But once I started to lissten to Larry Brown and take constructive criticism, I learned how much of a great, great coach that he really is.dddddddddddd ... Thats when I became an MVP.Iverson saved his final thank you for wife Tawanna.Youre just the best to me, he said. I want you to walk around and be proud of yourself that you are a Hall of Famer.Two of the themes on the night were family and journeys. That was the essence of Swoopes speech, who was thankful of her path from tiny Brownsfield, Texas, and that her cancer-stricken mother, Louise, was able to see it.What a ride its been, she said.The 7-foot-6 Yaos arrival from China to the NBA in 2002 instantly helped bring the game to a broader international audience.He was Fridays first inductee, an honor which he joked that should have gone to Iverson.You know why? Because I need more practice than him, Yao said to applause from the crowd and a laugh from Iverson.Yao also thanked his early mentors in China, former NBA Commissioner David Stern for his vision in wanting Yao to play in the league, as well his first teammates on the Houston Rockets. He also singled is former NBA coaches, including Rudy Tomjonavich and Jeff Van Gundy.I will always consider you my family, Yao said. I am Texan and Houston Rocket for life.Izzo has become the face of the blue-collar Michigan State team while leading it to seven Final Fours and the NCAA championship in 2000.He thanked his parents, Carl and Dororthy, for being his first mentors. The 90-year-old Dorothy was in attendance, but Carl passed away last September.Izzo briefly got choked up as he spoke of his father, who he said instilled in him a work ethic that remains with him today.The seven Final Fours and championship are just frosting on the cake, Izzo said.Reinsdorf, the longtime Bulls owner, chronicled what led him to purchase the Bulls in 1984. It was a move he said legendary New York Yankees coach George Steinbrenner panned, telling him hed never make any money.He enjoyed proving him wrong.Its been a great life, he said. I know its the fourth quarter, but Im hoping for overtime.Like his father, Shaq too has a wish.One day when some father quizzes his sons on the greats of the game, I hope Shaquille ONeal will be the answer, he said.---Follow Kyle Hightower on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/khightower ' ' '