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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Chicago ties Stanley Cup Final with OT win

Jimmy Golen Associated Press

BOSTON – The Chicago Blackhawks kept taking the lead until there were no more chances for Boston to come back and tie it.

Brent Seabrook’s slap shot beat Tuukka Rask with 9:51 gone in overtime and the Blackhawks beat the Bruins 6-5 on Wednesday night to send the Stanley Cup Final back to Chicago tied at two games apiece.

Game 5 of the best-of-seven series will be Saturday night, with Game 6 back in Boston on Monday.

Patrick Kane had a goal and an assist for the Blackhawks, who had only scored five goals total in the first three games of the series and hadn’t put the puck past Rask in more than 129 minutes coming into Game 4. Bryan Bickell and Michal Rozsival had two assists apiece, and Corey Crawford made 28 saves for Chicago.

Patrice Bergeron scored twice, and Zdeno Chara and Jaromir Jagr each had two assists for Boston, which had won 11 of its previous 13 playoff games. Rask made 41 saves but he was screened on the winner, which quickly quieted the building where Boston had earned a dominating, 2-0 victory two nights earlier.

“One of things we have talked about, get pucks to the net,” said Seabrook, a defenseman who also had the overtime goal in Game 7 of the Western Conference semifinals. “I just tried getting it on net. We had a great screen in front. … It just found a way.”

It was the third overtime game in the finals, but it bore little resemblance to the three tightly contested games that opened the series. The teams combined for five goals in the second period – as many as in Games 2 and 3 combined – as Chicago repeatedly sprinted into the lead only to have Boston come back and tie it.

The Blackhawks led 1-0, 4-2 and 5-4, but each time the Bruins evened it up, the last 55 seconds after Chicago took the lead when Johnny Boychuk slapped it over a sliding Johnny Oduya with 7:46 left in regulation. Boychuk, who had never scored more than five goals in a season, has six in the postseason.

The OT was even until the Bruins failed to clear the zone and the puck got to Seabrook at the right point. What seemed like a harmless shot found the back of the net, and the Blackhawks followed with a subdued celebration.

“Both teams are so great defensively. Both have great goalies,” Seabrook said. “I don’t know. It was one of those games. They got some goals on the power play, we got some bounces. It was nice to get some past Tuukka.”

The Bruins had won 11 of their last 13 games and trailed for less than 60 minutes of the almost 900 minutes they had played in the postseason.

But Chicago started strongly this time. Brandon Saad picked Tyler Seguin clean in the defensive zone and brought the puck down the ice before flipping it across to Michal Handzus, who rattled it in off the post to make it 1-0. The Bruins tied it on the power play when Andrew Ference kept the puck in at the blue line, and Rich Peverley finished it off with a wrist shot.The teams really opened things up in the second period. Jonathan Toews came around the back of the net and tipped in Rozsival’s shot to put the Blackhawks back in the lead with 61/2 minutes gone. Just more than 2 minutes later, Chicago took its first two-goal lead of the series when Rask stopped Bickell’s shot but left the rebound for Kane. Rask was too far to his left to get back in front of the second chance that Kane converted to make it 3-1.

It stayed that way for 6 minutes more before Milan Lucic deflected Chara’s shot into Crawford and then put back his rebound to make it a one-goal game. Forty-nine seconds later, Marcus Kruger stuck with the puck until he had poked it past Rask and into the net to make it 4-2.