Friday 28 October 2016

NHL - Minnesota Wild @ St Louis Blues 2-3 - Thursday, October 13, 2016



Nail Yakupov has been on the ice with his St. Louis Blues teammates for four days and already is in a comfort zone. Two practices and two games may be a small sample size, but Yakupov appears to have made a seamless transition.
Acquired in a trade with the Edmonton Oilers on Oct. 7, Yakupov gave St. Louis a glimpse of what the Blues hope are things to come with a goal and assist in a 3-2 victory against the Minnesota Wild at Scottrade Center.
Ryan Suter and Charlie Coyle scored for Minnesota, which was playing its season opener, and Devan Dubnyk made 28 saves.
Yakupov scored with 7:24 remaining in the second period to make it 2-1, and Paajarvi scored off an odd-man rush, taking Yakupov's cross-ice pass in the left circle and beating Dubnyk 4:25 into the third to give the Blues a 3-1 lead.
Coyle scored with 7:11 remaining in the game off a Jason Zucker centering pass to make it 3-2. Steen put the Blues up 1-0 at 10:51 of the first period, his third point in two games, but Suter tied the game 1-1 at 3:03 of the second period.

* Nail Yakupov gained speed through the middle of the ice and stepped into a slap shot that seemed to handcuff Devan Dubnyk. "... We wanted to make some real good plays and play defense, too, but at the same time, I have to have some fun in (the) offensive zone," Yakupov said.

Quotes
Alexander Steen: "It's good [the 2-0 start], but that's all it is. It's a start. We wanted to come out of the gates quick, and we have."
Ken Hitchcock: Yakupov played fewer minutes Thursday (8:30) than he did Wednesday (10:38), but Hitchcock expects to play him in more situations rather quickly.
"Yakupov's starting to understand the things we want in winning hockey. He's starting to understand that. As he starts to gain more steam 5-on-5, we'll bleed him into the power play starting next week. He's starting to figure it out."


Wild coach Bruce Boudreau: "I was thinking that (Wednesday) night was such an advantage for them to have already played a fast-paced game, knowing what it is, and this is not an excuse (but) we were a step behind it seemed all night long."


"The whole game, we couldn't get up to speed," Suter said. "They were coming and we just couldn't catch up."



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