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    PA Stats Inc
    Dec 31, 2008, 16:46

    Detroit (24-7-5) at Chicago (20-7-7), 1:00pm, EST

    CHICAGO (Ticker) -- With a slight chance of snow in the

    forecast, the Chicago Blackhawks and Detroit Red Wings are set

    for the third annual "Winter Classic" to be played at historic

    Wrigley Field, home of Major League Baseball's Chicago Cubs.

    The forecast for Thursday's game calls for temperatures ranging

    from 26 to 32 degrees and a 30 percent chance of snow.

    More than 70,000 fans attending last year's game at Buffalo's

    Ralph Wilson Stadium were treated to a "winter wonderland" as

    snow fell intermittently during the Pittsburgh Penguins' 2-1

    shootout victory over the Sabres.

    Heavy snowflakes were falling when the Penguins' Sidney Crosby

    scored the winning goal in the shootout.

    "I was in Buffalo last year, and it was a great event," said

    Scotty Bowman, now a senior advisor for the Blackhawks.

    "Everything fell into place. It snowed a bit more maybe than

    they wanted, and it took a bit more work to keep the ice ready,

    but being the first time, I thought they did a terrific job. It

    was also maybe a bit cooler than they expected, but the players

    adjusted and it ended up being a real terrific game."

    The "Winter Classic" celebrates the game's roots as almost every

    Canadian hockey player grew up playing the game outdoors on

    frozen ponds or backyard rinks.

    "It should be fun," Detroit center Pavel Datsyuk said.

    "Everybody remembers what it was like as kids to play outside."

    However, Thursday's contest is more than a novelty act as it

    pits two longtime rivals battling for first place in the back

    end of a home-and-home series.

    In the opener Tuesday, the Red Wings blanked the Blackhawks,

    4-0, in Detroit, ending Chicago's franchise-record nine-game

    winning streak. It was the 700th meeting between the teams, the

    most between any two clubs in NHL history.

    Ty Conklin recorded 36 saves for his third shutout of the season

    as the Red Wings pulled six points ahead of the Blackhawks in

    the Central Division. Conklin improved to 6-0-0 in his career

    against the Blackhawks.

    "We keep saying (the Winter Classic) is just another game, but

    obviously it isn't," Blackhawks captain Jonathan Toews said. "We

    just have to use this game as motivation. We'll have to step up

    our intensity and our discipline on Thursday. We've got to want

    to win more than we did (Tuesday)."

    The 32-year-old Conklin, who started in the first two "Winter

    Classics", will be back in goal for the Red Wings on Thursday

    because Chris Osgood is still nursing a sore groin.