Red Wings center Dylan Larkin said they enjoyed stalling the Blackhawks' playoff drive.
"It's a lot of fun to be a spoiler," he said.
Patrick Kane scored, and Corey Crawford made 23 saves for Chicago (31-29-8), which had won four straight and was playing the second game of a back-to-back. The Blackhawks defeated the Edmonton Oilers 4-3 on Thursday.
"We had a lot of guys play big minutes last night and again tonight," Colliton said. "I thought we got better as the game went on and created chances, but we didn't finish."
Chicago nearly took the lead 1:10 into the first period on a 2-on-1 with Drake Caggiula and Alex DeBrincat. Caggiula's pass gave DeBrincat what seemed like an easy opportunity, but Bernier slid across to make a skate save, then stopped DeBrincat on the rebound.
"That's a huge save, it is an elite, elite save," Blashill said. "There are times goalies can get an early read and start moving across, but [Bernier] didn't have that option. I would have guessed that was going to be a goal."
Bertuzzi gave the Red Wings a 1-0 lead 20 seconds into the second period, scoring from the slot to end a 13-game drought.
"When you are winning you don't think about it, but you want to score and contribute," Bertuzzi said.
Chicago had several odd-man rushes after Bertuzzi's goal but did not score.
"It seemed like he was seeing every shot we took," Blackhawks defenseman Duncan Keith said. "Even when we tipped something he was able to get in front of it."
Fabbri made it 2-0 on the power play at 10:05, one-timing Gustav Lindstrom's pass. Lindstrom's assist was his first NHL point in his 14th game.
It was the Red Wings' fourth power-play goal in 10 games, and they killed three penalties.
"We haven't won many games with specialty teams this year, for sure. They've cost us because they haven't been good enough," Blashill said. "But tonight we got a big power-play goal and some huge kills, especially in the third period."
Kane pulled the Blackhawks within 2-1 at 18:55, tapping in a pass from Toews.