All four teams grabbed 1-0 leads in their respective best-of-seven series.
Despite losing all four meetings during the regular season, the seventh-seed Sharks fought their way into two overtimes before Martin Havlat put in the game-winner in the second session.
"It was a great pass from (Ryane) Clowe (in the slot), I just wanted to get it on the net and it went in," Havlat, who had two goals on the night, told reporters.
"Everyone wants to have a chance to fight for the Cup, I'm just trying to enjoy it."
Patrik Berglund netted twice in the third to put the Blues up 2-1 but Andrew Desjardins tied it to force overtime.
Jaroslav Halak, who along with Brian Elliott forms the top goaltending unit in the NHL, made 31 saves but was upstaged by San Jose's Antti Niemi, who had 40 stops.
Quality goaltending was a common theme on Thursday as Mike Smith made 43 stops for Phoenix to top the 31 managed by Chicago's Corey Crawford. Martin Hanzal's winning tip-in sealed the game.
In Boston, Tim Thomas prevailed in his showdown with Braden Holtby before Boston's Chris Kelly fired a slap shot past the unproven Washington netminder for the winner.
"I never thought it was going to be an easy game, I could tell that Holtby was on right away," Thomas told reporters after finishing with 17 saves to Holtby's 29.
Holtby, forced into action because of injuries to Washington's regular goaltenders, played just seven games during the regular season but shone in his understudy role.
In New York, the Rangers played like the top seeds they are.
Having won the Eastern Conference for the first time since their 1994 Stanley Cup triumph, the Rangers looked ready to go all the way this year as they raced to a 4-0 lead and got 30 saves from Henrik Lundqvist.
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