Down by two goals three different times, the St. Louis Blues never quit. Even with a slew of key players sidelined with injuries, the Blues' young guns came through in a come-from-behind win against the defending Stanley Cup-champion Chicago Blackhawks on Saturday night. Kevin Shattenkirk's goal in the fifth round of the shootout gave the Blues a 6-5 victory against the Blackhawks before a standing room-only crowd of 20,082 at Scottrade Center.
"It's nice when you get out there and you
have a chance to win it for your team. It's a completely different
situation when you're trying to stay alive," Shattenkirk
said. "Literally, when I went out there, I looked at [Chris
Stewart] and [T.J.
Oshie], and Stewy said, 'Low blocker.' [Stewart] must have seen
it, and I just stuck to his word."
The Blues rallied to erase deficits of 3-1 and 5-3
on the way to their third win against Chicago in three tries this
season. The game-winning rally came on goals by Vladimir
Tarasenko and Patrik
Berglund 1:17 apart late in the third period. Oshie and Tarasenko
also scored shootout goals for the Blues, who beat Antti
Raanta on three of five shots. Jonathan
Toews and Patrick
Sharp scored shootout goals for Chicago, but the Blackhawks were
denied by goalie Brian
Elliott in each of their last three attempts. Two of the Blues'
three wins against the Blackhawks (27-7-7) have come in shootouts.
"We hung in there and found a way to get
two points, which is a heck of a bonus for us," Blues coach
Ken Hitchcock said. "We got some really good performances,
especially from guys like Tarasenko, who was just outstanding. [Jaden
Schwartz] was outstanding again and a lot of our younger players
really came to play."
The Blues, who fell behind by two early in the
game, got a goal and two assists from Tarasenko, a goal and an assist
from Berglund, who tied the game at 5-5 with 2:34 left in the third,
and goals from Maxim
Lapierre, Schwartz and Dmitrij
Jaskin. Ian
Cole had two assists. Jaskin's goal was the first of his NHL
career. The Blues (25-7-5) improved to 11-0-1 against the Central
Division this season and 6-1-2 in their past nine games overall.
Elliott replaced Jaroslav
Halak, who allowed three goals on 13 shots in the first period.
Elliott made 17 saves in regulation and overtime before denying
Patrick Kane,
Marian Hossa
and Brandon
Saad in the shootout. Toews had the best chance to end the game
in overtime but was denied by Elliott with 1:10 remaining.
"A tough one there," Blackhawks
coach Joel Quenneville said. "We had a couple looks in OT and
the shootout, two chances as well. It was a competitive game. They
really turned it up in the second period, and we didn't have the
great response that we needed, but we're still in pretty good shape.
The crowd was into it. Great intensity, good for the sport, tough for
us."
The Blues played the game without many of their
top players, including Alexander
Steen, who is out indefinitely with a concussion. Derek
Roy was a late scratch because of the flu, Roman
Polak has a lower-body injury, and Vladimir
Sobotka, who took part in the morning skate and was declared
ready to play by Hitchcock, did not dress after tweaking the same
injury.
"We sure do miss some great and important
players for us, but we still have to get points, win games,"
Berglund said. "Obviously, a good start for that today to
come back in this game against this team and in this building. It was
obviously a great feeling."
Kane extended his NHL-best point streak to 14
games with a goal and two assists. Toews and Duncan
Keith each had two assists. Sharp, Andrew
Shaw, Brandon
Saad and Brent
Seabrook also scored for the Blackhawks. Raanta stopped 20 shots
for the Blackhawks and fell to 9-1-3 in his first NHL season. The
Blackhawks set the tempo in the first period, outshooting the Blues
13-6 and taking a 3-1 lead. Sharp scored his sixth goal in three
games, taking Hossa's backhand one-time pass and splitting Alex
Pietrangelo and Jay
Bouwmeester before beating Halak on a backhand at 7:48 for a 1-0
Chicago lead. Shaw converted on Chicago's first power play of the
game when he was able to poke a puck sitting on the right post into
the goal at 9:55 to make it 2-0. Kane deflected Keith's point shot
through Halak's pads and the puck caromed off the right post, where
Shaw was waiting. Lapierre pulled the Blues to 2-1 when he tipped
Carlo
Colaiacovo's shot from the point past Raanta at 14:04, but Kane
used Cole as a screen and snapped off a wrister from the right
circle, beating Halak to his stick side at 17:04 to restore the
Blackhawks' two-goal lead. Kane now has points in 27 of 28 games (14
goals, 24 assists) and eight goals and 16 assists during the 14-game
point streak. The Blues came on strong in the second period and tied
the game on goals by Schwartz and Jaskin. Schwartz scored his 12th of
the season and notched his 17th point in 16 games (nine goals, eight
assists) when he took Tarasenko's feed into the slot and beat Raanta
2:26 into the second to make it a 3-2. Jaskin tied the game 3-3 when
he took in Bouwmeester's shot from the left point and fired it into
an open side from a sharp angle 7:47 into the second period. But the
Blackhawks re-established their lead when Ben
Smith's pass into the slot caromed off a stick to Saad, who fired
one past Elliott with 2:14 left in the second to make it 4-3.
Seabrook was somehow able to beat Elliott with what looked like a
harmless wrister from the blue line 1:06 into the third to give the
Blackhawks a 5-3 advantage. However, the Blackhawks couldn't close
the deal, and if there is one negative point this season for the
all-conquering Hawks, its that they are not finishing off teams
around them in the standings.
"We knew they weren't going to quit,"
Kane said. "Of course it's frustrating. We'll try to
improve on that and try to make sure it doesn't happen the next time.
But with that being said, it's 5-3 with a couple minutes left and
they've got all the momentum. We got a point, so I guess that's one
positive you can take from it."
The Blues were down two for the second time and
battled back to tie by scoring two goals in 1:17 at the end of the
period. Tarasenko cut Chicago's lead to 5-4 when he fired a shot from
the slot past Raanta with 3:51 remaining, then Berglund slipped a
backhand past Raanta with 2:34 remaining after Seabrook failed on two
attempts to clear the puck.
"[Shattenkirk] and [Tarasenko] just kept
staying on the puck there and I kind of filled in behind,"
Berglund said. "Vladi came out with the puck and my first
thought was just to try and take it to the net. I was lucky it went
in. I don't know exactly how it went in or whatever. Obviously, I'll
take it."
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