David Backes claims he would have trouble pulling off T.J. Oshie's shootout goal on PlayStation. Oshie claims Backes doesn't know how to play PlayStation. Oshie's real-life shootout goal Thursday night at United Center helped the St. Louis Blues rebound from a discouraging loss against the San Jose Sharks on Tuesday. Oshie scored the lone goal on the Blues' first attempt and Jaroslav Halak was not scored on in the shootout, helping lead St. Louis to a 3-2 victory against the Chicago Blackhawks. Oshie, who also collected his 200th NHL point with an assist, beat Corey Crawford with a slick move to his forehand. The Blues (5-1-0) have now beaten the Blackhawks (4-1-2) in three straight. Backes marveled at Oshie's 19th career shootout goal.
"I can only do that on PlayStation. Even
then I can't do it," said Backes, who played in his 500th
career game, all with the Blues. Could Backes pull it off as his
PlayStation character? "Definitely not me," Backes
said with a laugh. "The guy that they made for me throws it
into the corner when I do too much with it." Oshie begged to
differ. "I don't think Backs plays PlayStation,"
Oshie said with a big grin. "I think I've only shot a
shootout on [Crawford] once, maybe twice, before. One time I think I
tried to go five-hole and he didn't move and I hit him in the pads.
It's just one of those things that you make a move and you hope it
works and it worked out."
Oshie said he didn't watch any shootout video but
got some small tips from teammate Chris
Stewart. "I didn't watch the shootout video that I
usually do," Oshie said. "So on the bench, I went to
Stew [because] I saw him watching it earlier, and he said, 'Maybe a
quick backhand was working on some guys.' Some guys he thought you
could do a backhand, forehand. I've done that move before in
shootouts. I thought I would give her a try and tried to get one on
the board. I was fortunate that [Crawford] bit on that first move."
The Blues have won eight straight one-goal games
dating back to last season and are now 15-4-2 in their last 21
one-goal games. Backes and Alexander
Steen scored goals, Jay
Bouwmeester picked up a pair of assists and Halak stopped 27
shots. He also was able to make saves on Jonathan
Toews and Patrick
Sharp in the shootout after Patrick
Kane fired wide on Chicago's first attempt.
"I think that was my first game in Chicago
that I won in four years since I joined St. Louis," Halak
said. " I just tried to stay with them and not to try to go
down on the first fake. Luckily, Osh came up with a great move, and
good for us, it was enough to win the game."
Marian
Hossa had a goal and an assist for the Blackhawks, Brandon
Pirri scored his first NHL goal and Crawford stopped 26 shots.
"Awful," Blackhawks coach Joel
Quenneville said of his team's effort. "Didn't like our game
at all ... first 12 minutes I liked. Early, we had that and I don't
know. We stopped getting behind them, getting it at the net. We
slowed ourselves right down. Didn't like our pace, how we turned
pucks over, didn't get pucks to the net, didn't generate any offense
after the first. … That's what they do: They put pucks on the net.
They score ugly goals. We're not willing to do that."
Blackhawks defenseman Brent
Seabrook agreed. "We did a good job in the first period,
but our second and third periods have to be better,"
Seabrook said. "We're having a tough time finding the back of
the net, but with that being said, we have to muscle these games out
and win them 2-0, 2-1, 1-0. That's the mindset we have to have when
we're not scoring goals."
Pirri got the Hawks on the board when Hossa picked
off a Roman
Polak outlet pass and fed Pirri in the left circle. Pirri quickly
snapped a high shot stick side past Halak 7:42 into the game for a
1-0 Hawks lead. Backes helped the Blues tie the game 1-1 just five
seconds into a power play when he won a faceoff, went straight to the
net and tipped a Bouwmeester wrister by Crawford at 10:14 of the
first. It was Backes' fifth goal in six games. He didn't score his
fifth goal last season until the 36th game. The second period was
more defensive, but in the waning moments, the teams traded goals 51
seconds apart. Hossa gave Chicago a 2-1 lead with 2:38 left in the
period when the Blues surrendered the puck while entering the
Blackhawks' zone, with Barret
Jackman losing it as the puck rolled off his stick. Players
behind him were going off on a line change, and Niklas
Hjalmarsson sent Hossa in on a breakaway and he beat Halak high
stick side. But the Blues quickly tied it at 18:13 when a
double-deflector got past Crawford. Bouwmeester's shot from the left
point was initially tipped by Steen in the high slot, then the puck
caromed off Duncan
Keith's stick to tie the game 2-2. St. Louis had a response each
time Chicago grabbed a one-goal lead, and the Blues stuck with the
game plan two days after a woeful 6-2 home loss to the San Jose
Sharks.
"Overall, our whole game was a lot
better," Bouwmeester said. "It was kind of where it
needed to be to play against teams like this. Obviously, against San
Jose, we didn't and we've got to learn from it. Tonight was better."
Crawford produced the best save of the third
period when he was able to sprawl out on Alex
Pietrangelo's attempt coming down the slot, as Pietrangelo tried
to slide wide to the right, but Crawford stood his ground with 7:22
remaining in the third. Jackman nearly won it for the Blues with 1:44
left in overtime when he hit the left goal post. It's the first time
in the teams' last 10 meetings that the team that scored first didn't
win. It was Chicago's sixth straight one-goal game.
"I thought after the first 10 minutes, we
played really well," said Blues coach Ken Hitchcock, whose
team will play at Winnipeg Friday night. "We weathered the
storm, we knew we were going to weather a storm from what happened in
the last game, but I thought after the first 10 minutes, we played a
really good hockey game. Especially in the third period and overtime,
I thought we played especially strong. We really played with a sense
of composure and discipline. I was really happy with our effort."
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