Alexander Steen and T.J. Oshie scored shootout goals to lead the St. Louis Blues to a 3-2 win against the Minnesota Wild at Xcel Energy Center on Sunday. The win was the Blues' fifth in a row and moved them to the top of the NHL standings at 94 points, one ahead of the Anaheim Ducks. St. Louis has won eight straight against Minnesota and improved to 18-0-1 against Central Division opponents this season. Oshie improved to 8-for-11 in the shootout this season.
“[The Wild] played good enough to win
tonight,” Oshie said. “We’ll get out of here with the
two points, watch some video and be happy about it. It was a tough
game tonight.”
Blues goaltender Brian
Elliott stopped Zach
Parise and Mikko
Koivu missed wide with a backhand attempt in the shootout.
“When you have guys like [Oshie] and [Steen]
in the shootout, you make a couple of saves, you can win a game,”
said Elliott, who made his first start in five games. “It’s
just one of those games where you try not to let the nerves get to
you. You just want to get out there, feel the puck and move on from
there.”
The victory spoiled the Wild debut of goaltender
Ilya
Bryzgalov, who was acquired from the Edmonton Oilers on Tuesday.
He allowed goals on the second and third shots he faced Sunday, but
stopped the final 19 and finished with 20 stops.
“Obviously, you’re nervous because you’re
playing for a new team,” Bryzgalov said. “Those were good
goals.”
The Blues took advantage of two Wild turnovers in
a sloppy first period to jump ahead 2-0. Oshie scored on the power
play at 3:37 for a 1-0 lead, cleaning up a rebound of a Steen shot
from the point for his 16th goal. Five minutes later, a turnover
behind the Wild net by Charlie
Coyle made its way into the slot and onto the tape of Blues
defenseman Carlo
Colaiacovo, who beat Bryzgalov over his blocker with a wrist shot
for his first goal this season at 8:30. The goal snapped a 43-game
goal drought for Colaiacovo, who played in his 14th game of the
season Sunday.
“Third game in four nights, we showed some
tired legs,” Blues coach Ken Hitchcock said. “It was good
we got a 2-0 lead so we could manage our minutes a little bit. I
thought we made some tired decisions sometimes with the puck.”
Minnesota played much better from the midway point
of the first period on. The Wild pulled to within one a little more
than three minutes into the second when Parise passed to Jason
Pominville at the left circle. Pominville beat Elliott glove side
with a snap shot for his team-leading 23rd goal.
“It wasn’t like we were that bad,”
Wild coach Mike Yeo said. “We were competing, we had a couple
shifts in the offensive zone. I think they thought they were going to
take it to us physically. I think our guys responded to that. Our
guys started being physical with their defensemen, and we really
started to get to our game.”
Nearly four minutes after Pominville’s goal,
Matt Moulson
tied the game at 2-2 when he scored his first goal with the Wild.
After blasting Blues defenseman Kirk Shattenkirk on the forecheck
behind the Blues net, Moulson drifted to the right post, where
Shattenkirk seemingly forgot about him. Koivu stopped Shattenkirk's
clearing attempt at the left half-wall and fired to a wide-open
Moulson for his 18th of the season.
“I thought maybe [Koivu would] throw it to
the net, so I just put my stick down,” Moulson said. “He
just put it right off of it and in. Pretty good play.”
Elliott made a fantastic save with 13 minutes left
in regulation to keep the game tied. Granlund seemingly had a
wide-open net to put away a rebound, but Elliott dove and got the
paddle of his stick on the shot.
“In the third period, we just really
battled,” Hitchcock said. “It wasn’t pretty. But our
goalie was good, and those two guys are money in the shootout right
now.”
The Blues were nearly handed a gift win with 10
seconds remaining in regulation. With the Wild on the power play,
Pominville turned the puck over to Steen in the Wild zone. Steen
ripped a snap shot that beat Bryzgalov but caromed off the pipe. The
Blues will play consecutive home games this week for the first time
in more than a month when they play the Dallas Stars on Tuesday and
Edmonton Oilers on Thursday. Before heading to St. Louis, the Oilers
will play in Minnesota on Tuesday as the Wild continue with the
second game of a crucial four-game homestand.
No comments:
Post a Comment