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Blackhawks' win earns franchise's first 6-0 start

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Blackhawks' Duncan Keith (left) is congratulated by goalie Corey Crawford in the first period after Keith scored against the Detroit Red Wings on Sunday in Chicago, (AP photo)

CHICAGO – Introducing the Original Six and O.

The Blackhawks’ season is all of nine days old, and already it has achieved history. Before Sunday, no group in the 87-year history of the franchise had won each of its first six games.

That changed when Hawks defenseman Nick Leddy ripped a shot past Detroit Red Wings goaltender Jimmy Howard to clinch a 2-1 overtime victory Sunday at the United Center. The Hawks improved to a league-best 6-0-0 with 42 games remaining in a shortened season.

Of course, the Hawks have loftier goals than a fast start.

But they still can embrace the moment. They still can embrace history.

“That’s awesome,” Leddy said when told that the Hawks broke a 41-year-old team record for the best start to a season. “I heard that stat before the game. It’s definitely one of a kind.”

And the Hawks are finding every kind of way to win.

On Sunday, it wasn’t glamorous. It was grueling.

The Hawks were playing for the sixth time in nine days as part of the NHL’s rapid-fire schedule, and after killing off six penalties in two periods, energy started to fade.

The first sign of the fatigue arrived about halfway through the third period.

Hawks forward Bryan Bickell blew a tire in the offensive zone. He tripped over his skates, stumbled a couple of steps forward, and crash-landed into the goal post so hard that it came off of its moorings.

A referee’s whistle blew, and play stopped while the net was restored to its proper place.

No one saw Bickell’s miscue except for 21,607 fans and dozens of grinning teammates.

“He has a tendency to do some funny things every now and then,” forward Viktor Stalberg said with a laugh. “But that’s the first time I’ve seen a toe-pick-take-the-goal-post-out.”

Stalberg couldn’t stop chuckling at the replay in his head.

“I’m sure we’ll get a highlight reel out of that for tomorrow’s video session,” he said.

These are happy times for the Hawks.

How could they not be?

After the win, Hawks coach Joel Quenneville deflected all praise for the team’s historic start to his players. This wasn’t about line changes or coaching strategy. This was about effort.

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