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Ducks, Blackhawks ready for Game 7

Chicago Blackhawks left winger Brandon Saad celebrates after scoring a goal against Anaheim Ducks goalie Frederik Andersen during the second period in Game 6 of the Western Conference in Chicago.

ANAHEIM, Calif. — Someday the Anaheim Ducks and the Chicago Blackhawks will relish the stories they’ll be able to tell about playing in a postseason series as good as these Western Conference finals.

Not just now, though. They’ve still got to determine whether this tale has a happy ending or a brutal punchline.

Two weeks of extraordinarily high-level hockey conclude Saturday night at Honda Center when the Ducks and the Blackhawks play Game 7 for the Campbell Bowl and a trip to the Stanley Cup Final. They’ve traded victories for six tense games across the past two weeks, playing six overtime periods and four one-goal games.

Both teams used Thursday for travel and mental preparation for the big finish after Chicago staved off elimination with a 5-2 victory in Game 6.

The teams also did a bit of reflection on what’s shaping up as a conference finals as memorable as Chicago’s seven-game epic with the Los Angeles Kings last spring.

“It’s for sure the most exciting series I’ve ever been a part of personally,” said Ducks defenseman Francois Beauchemin, a Stanley Cup champion with 96 games of NHL playoff experience.

The games have mostly been close, but they’ve also been extremely well-played. Anaheim’s deep, balanced lineup has wrestled Chicago’s star-powered roster to a virtual stalemate through six games, with the Blackhawks winning two of the three overtime contests to avoid large series deficits.

“We play for these big games,” said Chicago forward Marcus Kruger, whose goal ended Game 2 in triple overtime. “You never get tired of hockey. That’s what everyone plays for.”

It’s been a spellbinding spectacle for fans and players alike, particularly in those overtime thrillers — even if the coaches aren’t having quite the same experience.

“I can’t feel it, quite frankly,” Anaheim coach Bruce Boudreau said. “I’ve asked people, `Is this a good series? Is it entertaining?’ You’re caught up in the moment of winning and losing. People say it’s unbelievable, but we look at it as a little different right now. It might be something you appreciate one way or another in six months or in the future.”

The Ducks might feel a bit more pressure than the Blackhawks on home ice, and not just because they controlled long stretches of the series and got painfully close to finishing it in those overtime games.

They also have a daunting bit of recent history to overcome: The Ducks have blown a 3-2 series lead and lost a Game 7 at home in each of the past two postseasons, and they’re one loss from doing it again.

Yet Chicago has a failure to overcome in its own recent postseason history. The Blackhawks took Los Angeles to a seventh game in the Western Conference finals last spring, rallying from a 3-1 series deficit, only to lose in overtime when Alec Martinez’s shot deflected off now-departed defenseman Nick Leddy’s torso for the conference-winning goal.

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