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Kane’s shootout goal lifts Blackhawks

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COLUMBUS, Ohio – The crowd was roaring on every play, each side kept piling up scoring chances and goaltenders Corey Crawford and Sergei Bobrovsky were trading breath-taking stops.

After a wildly entertaining overtime, though, the Blackhawks got back to their winning ways.

Patrick Kane set up Johnny Oduya’s goal late in the second period and then got the decisive score in the shootout, leading the Hawks to a 2-1 victory over the Columbus Blue Jackets on Thursday night.

“It was pretty intense,” Kane said of the end-to-end extra minutes. “There were 13 shots total for both teams. It was a pretty interesting overtime, obviously. The goalies made some great saves and it was definitely back and forth.”

Crawford stopped 29 shots to help the Hawks end a two-game losing streak after they set an NHL record by getting at least a point in each of their first 24 games.

If there was relief in ending a miniskid, so be it.

“We had some great chances to score in overtime, but their guy (Bobrovsky) came up with some huge saves the whole game long,” Crawford said. “We just stuck with it and our guys made two nice goals there in the shootout.”

Jack Johnson scored the tying power-play goal for Columbus 52 seconds after Oduya put the Hawks ahead, and Bobrovsky finished with 39 saves for the Blue Jackets, who set a franchise record by picking up a point in their ninth game in a row (5-0-4).

That was little consolation to coach Todd Richards, however.

“Whether it’s our goaltender or us playing well as a team, we’re in games,” he said after his team’s eighth overtime in its past nine games. “We’re competing and battling. We’re getting a point, but we need two points.”

A crowd of 15,009, including a large percentage of Hawks fans, gave both teams a lengthy standing ovation after an overtime in which the teams swapped scoring chances in a blizzard of offensive moves – followed by outstanding work by the goalies.

Columbus’ Artem Anisimov and Chicago’s Jonathan Toews each scored to open the shootout. After Crawford stopped Ryan Johansen, Kane moved in slowly on Bobrovsky and then lifted a backhander into the net. Crawford then stopped Derick Brassard’s attempt before he could even unleash a shot.

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