The Oklahoman

Kane’s hat trick sends Chicago to Cup Final

- BY JAY COHEN

CHICAGO — Patrick Kane scored his third goal of the game 11:40 into the second overtime period, and the Chicago Blackhawks beat the defending champion Los Angeles Kings 4-3 to advance to the Stanley Cup Final on Saturday night.

Corey Crawford made 33 saves, and Duncan Keith scored in his return from a suspension as the top-seeded Blackhawks eliminated the Kings in five games in the Western Conference finals.

Chicago will host the Eastern champion Boston Bruins in Game 1 on Wednesday night. Boston completed a sweep of the Pittsburgh Penguins on Friday night.

This is the first Stanley Cup Final matchup of NHL Original Six franchises since 1979, and it will pit two of the last three champions against each other.

Chicago won the Cup in 2010, ending a 49-year drought. Boston captured the title the following year.

Anze Kopitar and Mike Richards scored in the third period for Los Angeles, which managed to recover after trailing 2-0 in the first period and 3-2 late in regulation. Jonathan Quick finished with 31 saves.

After Crawford made a couple of big saves in the first overtime, Jonathan Toews carried the puck up the left side during a 2on-1 rush in the second extra session. He then made a cross-ice pass to Kane, who one-timed a shot past Quick and into the right side.

“Johnny made a great pass, and I tried to get it off as quick as I could,” Kane said of the winning goal.

The rollicking sellout crowd of 22,237 erupted in joy as Kane skated back toward the middle of the ice and slid on his knees as hats rained down. A distraught Quick laid down as his teammates emptied from the bench for the post-series handshakes.

Chicago was poised to finish off Los Angeles in regulation when the Kings scored the tying goal with 9.4 seconds remaining. Kopitar took a long shot from the right side and Richards managed to tip it by Crawford, leading to a celebratio­n for the Kings while the crowd groaned in disbelief.

“So emotional,” Kane said of the lost lead. “You start thinking about it when it goes to 14 seconds away from going to the Final. It stuck with us for the first overtime. It was nice to close it out for sure.”

Richards had a goal and an assist in his first game since he took a big hit from Chicago’s Dave Bolland in the series opener, shelving the center with a suspected concussion.

Crawford recovered from the dramatic tying goal and made a couple of nice plays in overtime, using his glove to deny Williams and Jake Muzzin in rapid succession midway through the period. Bickell had an opportunit­y to end the game at the other end, but he was unable to corral Kane’s pass on a rush to the net. The lost lead at the end of regulation turned into a minor inconvenie­nce for the Blackhawks when Kane finished his second career postseason hat trick.

Los Angeles also trailed 2-0 after one, but Wil- liams’ strong charge up the left side set up Dwight King’s short-handed goal at 9:28 of the second. The Kings tied it 2-2 when Kopitar pushed a rebound through Crawford’s legs 3½ minutes into the third.

It was Kopitar’s first point of the series and snapped a six-game goal drought. It also was the third power-play goal allowed by the Blackhawks in 58 playoff chances.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Chicago’s Patrick Kane, left, scored three goals, including the game-winner, to send the Blackhawks and Andrew Shaw, right, to the Stanley Cup Final with a 4-3 win over Los Angeles on Saturday night.
AP PHOTO Chicago’s Patrick Kane, left, scored three goals, including the game-winner, to send the Blackhawks and Andrew Shaw, right, to the Stanley Cup Final with a 4-3 win over Los Angeles on Saturday night.

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