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Patrick Kane added an empty netter for the Blackhawks.
"The two in Vancouver are going to be pretty tough," Kane said. "We know we can beat these guys now, I guess."
The Blackhawks split the first two games in Vancouver a year ago in the semifinals before prevailing in six games.
But Vancouver is more offensive-minded and has jumped out in both games.
"It's certainly not the way we wanted to approach it, fighting from behind," Quenneville said. "We did it last year in the playoffs, but it's not really the recipe for success."
Mason Raymond had a goal, and Mikael Samuelsson added a 5-on-3 power-play score in the opening minutes when it looked as though the Canucks would take control. But Seabrook, who also had two assists, brought the Blackhawks within a goal in the first period that put them right back in the game.
Sharp's short-handed score came at the end of a 2-on-1 break. He chipped the puck past a defender to start the rush, skated in from the right, waited until Luongo committed and then beat them with a backhand.
The Canucks had a 3-on-1, short-handed break later in the period, but Antti Niemi snuffed an attempt by Ryan Kesler to keep it at 2-1.
Niemi, in his first NHL postseason, is now 5-3 after making 24 saves, responding with a victory each time the Blackhawks have dropped a game. He'd been pulled after two periods in Game 1.
"You don't want to get too rattled after one game," he said. "You want to be patient. ... It's a huge win. If we'd lost, things wouldn't be good for us."
[Associated Press;
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