Their most important kill came late in the third
period after Michael
Frolik, usually one of Chicago's top penalty-killing forwards,
was sent off for high sticking Dustin
Brown. The Kings did not get a shot on goal during the two-minute
advantage. They had two shots on goal in the entire third period.
Defenseman Slava
Voynov gave L.A. a 1-0 lead 3:28 into the first period with his
sixth goal of the playoffs, the most among all defenseman. Left wing
Dustin Penner
scored his first goal in 11 games 2:12 into the second period to make
it 2-1. Justin
Williams had a chance to make it 3-1 with a breakaway less than
two minutes after Penner scored, but Crawford came up with a
game-changing poke check to keep the deficit at a manageable one
goal. It remained 2-1 until Kane swiped the puck into the net off the
goal line with 1:39 left in the second period. Bickell was inches
from getting his second goal of the night after he got a piece of
Hjalmarsson's shot from the top of the zone; the puck was trickling
on the goal line, behind Kings goalie Jonathan
Quick (25 saves), when Kane dove in from the left side and
knocked it in. Kane was much more involved and energetic in Game 4
than he was in any of the three previous games against the Kings. He
finished with a game-high seven shots on goal. Hossa scored the
winner 1:10 into the third period as the Kings were in the midst of
an ill-advised line change. Oduya found center Michal
Handzus in open ice as the Kings were changing following a
successful penalty kill, and Handzus found Hossa on his right side
for a pass that turned into a one-time blast past Quick. Kings
defenseman Jake
Muzzin was the lone player back for L.A. as defenseman Drew
Doughty was caught too high up in the neutral zone because he was
about to go off the ice for a change. Once he saw Handzus with the
puck, Doughty couldn't turn around in time to stop the rush.
Bickell's game-tying goal 13:16 into the first period was one Quick
would like to have back. Both teams were changing lines when
Hjalmarsson lifted the puck into the neutral zone. Frolik, who was en
route to the bench, chipped the puck back to Bickell, who took one
stride and fired a slow, knuckling wrist shot that handcuffed Quick
and went off his glove and into the net. The Blackhawks saw it as a
fortunate game-tying goal. They also got one late in the second
period from Kane. After Hossa scored in the third, Chicago shut it
down and rarely let the Kings even get a sniff of the net. Now all
the Blackhawks can smell is a trip to the Stanley Cup Final. They can
book it Saturday night.
NHL coverage from the United Kingdom, by Hockey Nerd 'Sergei Adamov' Follow me on Facebook.com/Hockey-From-Across-the-Pond Twitter: @SergeiAdamov
Friday, 7 June 2013
Playoffs - Thu, 06 Jun - Results
Chicago v Los Angeles 3-2 - Game 4 - The Chicago
Blackhawks came to Southern California looking for at least a
split against the Los
Angeles Kings. They got it, the hard way. After being outplayed
in a 3-1 loss in Game 3 of the Western Conference Final on Tuesday,
the Blackhawks rebounded with a strong effort in Game 4 on Thursday
at Staples Center. Forward Marian
Hossa scored the game-winner 70 seconds into the third period as
Chicago twice rallied from one-goal deficits to beat the Kings 3-2.
The Blackhawks snapped L.A.'s home winning streak at 15 games and
moved within one victory of a trip to the Stanley Cup Final. They
have a 3-1 lead in the best-of-7 series with Game 5 set for Saturday
at United Center (8 p.m. ET; NBC, CBC, RDS). Los Angeles is 1-7 on
the road in the Stanley Cup Playoffs. It hadn't lost at home since
March 23. Chicago had to play Game 4 without top defenseman Duncan
Keith, who was suspended by the NHL's Department of Player Safety
for his high-stick on Kings center Jeff
Carter in Game 3. Michal
Rozsival moved into the top four and accounted for 25:28 of ice
time, the most he's played in any 60-minute game this season. Brent
Seabrook (game-high 26:20) and Niklas
Hjalmarsson (24:57) also logged the most ice time they've played
in any game in the Stanley Cup Playoffs. Johnny
Oduya played nearly 23 minutes. Hjalmarsson had assists on goals
by Bryan
Bickell and Patrick
Kane. Oduya had an assist on Hossa's game-winner. Kane scored for
the first time in eight games; Bickell's goal in the first period was
his third in as many games. He also had an assist on Kane's goal,
giving him his first two-point game of the Stanley Cup Playoffs.
Hossa's goal was his second of the series. Chicago's power play was
scoreless in four chances, including a 53-second 5-on-3 in the second
period, but the Blackhawks killed off all three of L.A.'s power
plays, improving their League-best penalty kill to 14-for-15 in the
series and 54-for-56 in the playoffs.
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