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Blackhawks Look To Draw On Experience In Decisive Game 7 Against Blues

ST. LOUIS (AP) — The Chicago Blackhawks have big-time momentum heading into Game 7.

The defending Stanley Cup champion Blackhawks are trying to climb back from a 3-1 series deficit. They erased an early two-goal deficit in Game 6 and then some, scoring five unanswered goals in a rout that evened the series against the Blues.

Plus, they've won two straight in St. Louis.

"We put ourselves in an awful spot a little while ago," Chicago coach Joel Quenneville said Sunday. "We put ourselves exactly where we want to be (now)."

On the flight home, Blues coach Ken Hitchcock pondered what went wrong in the 6-3 loss and felt better before the plane landed. He said momentum means nothing entering Game 7.

"You have a visual of the game and then you start looking at the game," Hitchcock said. "I really believe this: It's never as bad as you think it is, it's never as good as you think it is, and that was the feeling after watching it."

Heading into Monday's showdown (8 p.m. EDT, NBCSN), history is against the Blues, who have lost in the first round the last three seasons. Roster turnover means not everybody is carrying around that burden, though.

"It's going to change eventually, so why not do it tomorrow?" forward Paul Stastny said. "I think in here, we have that mentality that what happened in the past happened in the past. I think we all believe in each other."

The Blackhawks escaped deep deficits their last two Cup seasons, coming back from 3-2 down to beat Anaheim in the Western Conference finals last spring and beating Detroit in the conference semifinals in 2013 after being down 3-1.

So, they've got a big experience edge: Just three Blues have played a Game 7.

"I love playing in big games," Chicago defenseman Brent Seabrook said. "The bigger the game, the better I feel like I get ready or up for. This is the best time of the season."

Now, the pressure perhaps shifts to the Blues.

"They're going to be excited," defenseman Duncan Keith said. "So I think we've got to draw upon that experience and use some of the momentum we've got from last game and try to carry it over and take it from there. First shift, first five minutes, and keep it going."

The Blues have blown a 3-1 series lead just once, in 2003 to Vancouver in the first round. But in the last four series they've lost since 2012 they've bowed out meekly.

Hitchcock hinted at possible lineup changes. But he's sticking with goalie Brian Elliott, who's played every game after a dominant finish to the regular season.

"There's no bad goals," Stastny said. "He's made the big saves when he's had to, and sometimes whether it's an odd-man rush or a rebound or we just lose our coverage, the goalie's not at fault."

Hitchcock defended his use of star forward Vladimir Tarasenko, whose ice time was down in Game 6. Tarasenko appeared to confront Hitchcock when the team left the bench after the second period Saturday night.

Hitchcock said Tarasenko plays a heavier game so needs shorter shifts, and noted he doesn't kill penalties. Nobody thought there would be lingering animosity.

"Knowledgeable hockey people don't look at time, they look at shifts, and shifts matter," Hitchcock said. "The game he plays is a physical game. It's at the puck, it's around the puck, it's one on one and it's very demanding."

Copyright 2016 The Associated Press.

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