VANCOUVER—Dustin Byfuglien was all over the Vancouver Canucks, creating havoc in the crease and on the score sheet.Byfuglien banged in a pair of power-play rebounds and completed his hat trick in the third period to lift the Blackhawks to a 5-2 win over the Canucks and a 2-1 lead in the Western Conference semifinal series on Wednesday.Dismissed by the Canucks before the series as a non-factor despite scoring two of his three career playoff goals against them last season, Byfulgien was the biggest factor in putting the Hawks ahead in the series for the first time. Moved back up front and onto the top line after playing defense in Game 2, the 6-foot-4, 257-pound Byfuglien went hard to the net all night, tucking in power-play rebounds in the first and second periods. He was credited with his third goal with 6:02 left after pushing Roberto Luongo into his net, leaving the goalie upset and the Canucks pledging retaliation.The Canucks seemed most worried about clearing Byfuglien out of Luongo’s face. Byfuglien doesn’t expect that to happen.If not, Luongo would like to see his teammates at least make life just as difficult for his counterpart. Antti Niemi made 16 of his 31 saves in the first period, but didn’t have to fight through nearly as much traffic.Kris Versteeg opened the scoring 5:19 in as the Blackhawks picked up where they left off with a third-period comeback in Game 2. Hannik Hansen and Alex Burrows scored for the Canucks, who will try to even the series when they host Game 4 on Friday night. Vancouver will have to do a better job on special teams and against Byfuglien.Byfuglien started the series on the fourth line and moved to defense in Game 2, but he shifted to the top line with Toews and Patrick Kane. But as he did in last year’s series against Vancouver, Byfuglien took his usual position in front of the net on the power play and made the Canucks pay.Pointless in his first eight playoff games, he lifted in a power-play rebound with 3:13 left in the first period after Toews won a faceoff cleanly and Luongo bobbled Duncan Keith’s unscreened shot from the point. Hansen pulled the Canucks within a goal midway through the second, but Burrows took an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty two minutes later. Byfuglien then lifted in another rebound after Toews drove to the net along the goal line.Burrows made up for the undisciplined penalty by snapping a wrist shot from the slot under Niemi’s blocker off the rush with 54 seconds left in the period. But any hope of Vancouver adding to an NHL-leading 13 third-period comebacks ended when Hossa beat Shane O’Brien to a rebound for an easy goal at 7:45. Byfuglien, who skated along the end boards taunting the crowd after his second goal, was back in the spotlight — and on top of Luongo — for the third. Luongo was in position to make the save before Byfuglien pushed him into the net, but the goal — orginally given to Kane — was upheld after a video review. Byfuglien doesn’t think he is getting Luongo off his game, but he admitted that seeing the goalie talking to the officials could mean he is getting close.
NOTES—To make room for Byfuglien, the Hawks scratched Vancouver native Troy Brouwer, who scored 22 goals in the regular season but was pointless in eight playoff games…..Jordan Hendry, who played Game 1 but sat out Game 2, took Byfuglien’s place on the third defense pairing alongside Brent Sopel.