CHICAGO — They’ve done it again.
But this time, they did it at home.
For the third time in the last six years — and for the first time in Chicago since 1938 — the Blackhawks ascended to the top of the NHL, beating Tampa Bay 2-0 on Monday night in Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Final, winning the series four games to two.
Monday’s game was, like every game this series, a thrilling affair with little separating the two teams. While the final didn’t go the full seven games and failed to feature a single overtime, the Bolts and ‘Hawks combined for one of the most tightly-contested championship series the NHL’s seen in a long time.
Perhaps that’s why it took a special play from a special player to decide it.
Duncan Keith, the Conn Smythe winner as playoff MVP, scored the winning goal late in the second period on a terrific solo effort, picking up his own rebound before firing past Ben Bishop. That Keith scored the winner was fitting and cemented himself in Blackhawk lore; with the goal, he became the first ‘Hawk to score a cup-winning tally at home since Carl Voss beat the Maple Leafs at the old Chicago Stadium 77 years ago.
Keith wasn’t the only hero of the night, however.
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Corey Crawford, outstanding in the latter half of this series, stopped all 23 shots he faced for his first-ever Stanley Cup Final shutout. Over the final three games, the two-time Cup-winning goaltender allowed just two goals, finishing with a sparkling .975 save percentage.
But there’s another side to Crawford’s heroics.









