Sometimes, a team simply has to tip their hats to the opposing goalie for stealing a game. The St. Louis Blues found themselves in that scenario with Phoenix Coyotes goalie Mike Smith on Tuesday night. Oliver Ekman-Larsson's overtime goal made Smith's stellar effort stand up, as the Coyotes pulled out a 3-2 victory against the Blues. Smith was scintillating for the Coyotes. He did everything possible to keep the Coyotes afloat and give his team a chance to grab two points. Ekman-Larsson fired a shot past Blues goalie Jaroslav Halak 56 seconds into overtime to help the Coyotes pick up their seventh win in eight games. The Blues (11-2-3) peppered Smith with shot after shot, but the Phoenix goalie was able to keep 37 of the 39 shots he saw out of the net. Smith, who picked up his 11th win of the season, bent but didn't break.
"The old rope-a-dope," Smith
joked. "Obviously, we're happy with the two points. They
can't take those back from us now. That's definitely not the way we
want to be as a team this year. When you play really good hockey
teams, I think we've got to raise our level."
Coyotes coach Dave Tippett recognized Smith was
integral to his team's win. "There were parts of that game I
liked, other parts I really didn't like. We didn't have enough
players competing at the speed and level we needed to, but give our
goalie credit; he played very well. We had a few players who really
jumped in, and we found a way to get two points."
Ekman-Larsson was one of them. The young
defenseman was able to take in Mike
Ribeiro's pass and fire a shot through a screen and past Halak.
"It was a great play there by Ribeiro,"
said Ekman-Larsson, who has four goals, three of them game-winners.
"I saw [Shane] Doan was coming in from the corner, so I shot it,
and it was perfect."
Blues defenseman Alex
Pietrangelo was on the ice and may have partially screened Halak,
who stopped 16 shots, on the play.
"It's obviously a good shot coming down
the middle there," Pietrangelo said. "Someone's got
to block it. I didn't see what happened up top. I was trying to block
the shot. I think I kind of got in the way of Jaro, too, there.
Mostly the onus is on us there. Jaro really had no chance. I don't
think he saw it. Where he is and how it happened, the exchange, I
have to look at it again. You don't want to screen your goalie and
not give him the opportunity to see it."
The game-winning goal came on Phoenix's 19th shot.
Mikkel Boedker
and David Moss
also scored for the Coyotes (13-4-2), and Ribeiro had two assists.
Maxim Lapierre
and Roman
Polak scored for the Blues, who saw their three-game winning
streak snapped.
Blues coach Ken Hitchcock said it was a case of
his team not outworking Smith. "The same thing happened
[against] Pittsburgh," Hitchcock said, referring to the
Blues' 2-1 victory Saturday. "We won the game (against
Pittsburgh), but if we want to get to the next level, we've got to
find a solution to outwork the goalie. We did a lot of good things in
the second and third period, but we've got to outwork the goalie. It
doesn't matter how you get it done. You've just got to get it done.
If we want to go to the top echelon and be there and be part of that,
that's one of the things we want to see get done."
Polak scored his second of the season when he
pinched in from the right point, took a terrific pass from Alexander
Steen and beat Smith over the glove on the short side 2:49 into
the third period to tie the game 2-2. The assist extended Steen's
career-best and NHL-leading point streak to 11 games. Steen has 10
goals and 14 points during the run. With the game tied 2-2, Smith
made the save of the game, robbing Derek
Roy with a glove save with 7:05 remaining in the game after Roy
came into the zone with a slick spin move. Moments later, Smith was
up to the task again on Vladimir
Tarasenko with a left-pad save and Brenden
Morrow barreling down on him. Smith robbed Roy again 21 seconds
into overtime, this time grabbing Roy's backhand in front on a
high-percentage scoring chance.
"That was a great move; the puck was kind
of bouncing, and he was able to get it between his legs,"
Smith said. "It was more luck than anything. I think it just
ended up in my glove. But I'll take it."
Patrik
Berglund also whiffed on an open chance in the third period off a
T.J. Oshie
feed.
"It's the whole focus of finishing,
burying it in the back of the net, not relaxing," Hitchcock
said. "Some guys are struggling offensively right now. ...
We've got to get them going, but that's pretty much it. We had
opportunities. We created a number of offensive opportunities off our
work. We really started to skate the second and third period, really
gave them trouble and did a great job of keeping the puck away from
Smith in the second period, but at the end of the day, you've just
got to put it in the net."
Smith made two saves in overtime before
Ekman-Larsson's winner. "I don't love it," said
Smith, who's seen 555 shots this season to lead the NHL. "It's
just the way things have worked out so far. Obviously, we want to
tighten that up and get those shot totals down. But right now, we're
finding ways to win games. Right now, we're just happy to get the two
points."
Blues captain David
Backes credited Smith with a fine game, but also felt he and his
teammates needed to finish. "He made some phenomenal saves.
That being said, we've got good players on our team that need to find
a shot to get by him, myself especially and maybe we're having a
different conversation now."
Lapierre put the Blues ahead with his second goal
in three games when he redirected Jay
Bouwmeester's wrist shot past Smith 5:53 into the game for a 1-0
lead. It was the eighth straight game in which the Blues scored the
first goal of the game and 13th time in 16 games overall. But Phoenix
closed out the first period with two goals off a pair of St. Louis
mistakes. Moss tied the game when he converted a turnover by Oshie in
the defensive zone, snapping a shot from the right circle past Halak
at 7:49 of the first period. It was Moss' first goal since he scored
against the Edmonton Oilers on April 10, a 26-game span. Boedker
scored his fourth of the season, all on the road, after the Blues
missed out on a pinch, as Kevin
Shattenkirk failed to keep a puck in the offensive zone and the
Coyotes came away with a 3-on-1. Boedker took a feed into the slot
from Rob
Klinkhammer and one-timed a slap shot past Halak with 31 seconds
left in the first for a 2-1 Phoenix lead.
"We played a game today that started off
pretty slow," Backes said. "I think we liked the way
we progressed throughout the game but dug a little hole. We had to
give everything we had just to get back tied. You double up a team in
shots, you expect to bury a few more and that's upon us to find a way
to do that."
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