Created: Saturday, October 31, 2009 1:15 a.m. CST
Updated: Saturday, October 31, 2009 2:39 a.m. CST
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Sharp leads Blackhawks

By The Associated Press
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The Blackhawks Patrick Sharp (right) celebrates his game-winning goal as Montreal Canadiens goalie Carey Price watches in the third period of Friday's game at the United Center. The Blackhawks won, 3-2.
The Blackhawks Patrick Sharp (right) celebrates his game-winning goal as Montreal Canadiens goalie Carey Price watches in the third period of Friday's game at the United Center. The Blackhawks won, 3-2. (AP photo)

CHICAGO – Patrick Sharp ended a long goal drought – and finished off the Montreal Canadiens, too.

Sharp, who had only one assist in his previous six games, scored with 4:10 left to give the Blackhawks a 3-2 victory against Montreal on Friday night.

Set up by Patrick Kane’s centering pass, Sharp ripped a shot from between the circles past Carey Price to hand the Canadiens their fifth consecutive road loss.

“Sharpie scored our biggest goal of the year,” Hawks coach Joel Quenneville said. “It’s 2-2, late in the game. We needed two points and we had a whole week to think about today’s game.”

The Hawks led, 2-0, midway through the second period on goals by Kris Versteeg and Cam Barker, who each added an assist. Barker’s power-play goal was the Hawks’ second in their past six games.

But Montreal’s Mike Cammalleri and Travis Moen scored 4:02 apart late in second period to tie it.

The Hawks, who don’t play again until Thursday night in Phoenix, didn’t want to consider blowing the victory along with the lead.

“We just wanted to keep moving forward,” Sharp said. “Without trying to sound cocky or arrogant, we knew we were going to win.”

Kane, who had two assists, was the most dominant puck handler on the ice all night. He decided to let Sharp finish on the winner.

“Actually I was trying to beat my winger,” Kane said, “but Sharpie always finds a way to get open.”

Cristobal Huet stopped 20 shots in his fourth consecutive start and beat the Canadiens, one of his former teams, for the first time in three games.

Huet played on back-to-back nights for the first time this season. He made 26 saves in a 2-0 loss at Nashville on Thursday night, and has been sharp in his past four starts.

Price made 33 saves and held the Canadiens in the game in his first start since Oct. 17, a 3-1 loss to Ottawa. Jaroslav Halak had made five consecutive starts since then, winning the first four before a 6-1 loss at Pittsburgh on Wednesday night.

“We started doing some things right and it paid off for a short period of time, but not the whole game” Cammalleri said. “With as many good saves as he [Price] had, we should have won.

“But I thought we were too easy to play against, and I don’t think we made it difficult enough on them to make them do what they wanted.”

Hawks captain Jonathan Toews missed his fourth consecutive game because of concussion-like symptoms.

Toews hasn’t resumed skating after absorbing a crushing open-ice hit from Vancouver’s Willie Mitchell in the third period of a 3-2 loss to the Canucks on Oct. 21. The Hawks star is listed as day-to-day.

Versteeg scored the only goal in the up-tempo first period, with 6:14 remaining. His centering pass from behind the net hit the right skate of Montreal defenseman Marc-Andre Bergeron and deflected past Price.

The Hawks’ Andrew Ladd knocked Montreal’s Matt D’Agostini out of the game with an open-ice hit at the Canadiens’ blue line 3:48 into the first. It appeared Ladd slammed D’Agostini in the chin with his shoulder, but referees Stephane Auger and Dan O’Halloran assessed Ladd with an elbowing major and a game misconduct.

Huet made several close-in saves to hold off an extended Montreal flurry midway through the second. Quenneville called a timeout at 9:32 in an attempt to regroup his team.

The move helped.

Montreal’s Hal Gill went off for hooking at 9:46. Nine seconds later, Barker’s screened power-play goal from the left circle made it 2-0.

Goals by Cammalleri and Moen late in the second tied it at 2.

Cammalleri cut it to 2-1 with 4:05 left in the period. He beat Huet from the low edge of the right circle after Jaroslav Spacek’s shot from the blue line deflected off Hawks’ Brian Campbell in front of the net.

Moen took advantage of one of Huet’s few lapses to tie with 2.1 seconds left in the period. His wrap-around attempt from right side of the net squeezed in between Huet’s left skate and the post.

Huet made a point-blank stop on Guillaume Latendresse midway through the third to maintain the tie.

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