Playing without two of their top six forwards didn't faze the League-leading St. Louis Blues. The Blues will be without Vladimir Tarasenko for six weeks with a right hand injury, and T.J. Oshie missed the game against the Winnipeg Jets on Monday night because of the birth of his first child, a daughter, earlier in the day. It left the Blues without two players who've combined for 38 goals. But David Backes' power-play goal with 6:51 remaining snapped a 1-1 tie and the Blues remained hot by defeating the Jets 3-1 at Scottrade Center. Backes had two goals, Brenden Morrow scored and goalie Ryan Miller stopped 16 shots to remain unbeaten in regulation with St. Louis (7-0-1). The Blues are the first team in the League to hit the century mark in points (101). They are four points ahead of their closest competitors, the Boston Bruins, Anaheim Ducks and San Jose Sharks. St. Louis improved to 47-14-7 on the season and 8-0-1 in its past nine games. The Blues are 7-0-2 in their past nine home games and 20-0-2 against Central Division opponents. It's the sixth time in franchise history that the Blues have reached the 100-point mark, the most-recent was in 2011-12.
"'Vova' (Tarasenko) with his injury, we're
hoping he's back sooner than later and then our thoughts are with
'Osh,' Lauren and the new baby in the hospital," Backes
said. "Hopefully he'll be back with us soon. We miss a guy
like that, all his energy. We had to fabricate a little energy in the
locker room before we went out. He's quite a spark plug for us. You
miss a guy like that, not just in the room, but on the ice too making
plays all over the place. They're both missed, but we're going to
have little instances like that throughout the year, throughout the
rest of the season, throughout the playoffs. Different guys stepping
in to fill those roles, it's good to see."
Eric
O'Dell scored for the Jets, who fell six points behind the
Phoenix Coyotes for the Western Conference's second wild-card spot in
the race to the Stanley Cup Playoffs. Jets goalie Al
Montoya stopped 22 shots.
"That's frustrating. This is what that
team does," Montoya said of the Blues. "They get up
by a goal and they hold the fort. It was a perfect situation for us."
After Evander
Kane took a slashing penalty in the offensive zone, Backes gave
the Blues the lead with their only shot with the man advantage after
he took a caromed puck in the slot off a shot from Ian
Cole and beat Montoya five-hole at 13:09 of the third period.
"I wish I had a beautiful explanation for
you that it was all planned out and great hockey sense,"
Backes joked. "At that time of the game, power play late,
power plays for both teams weren't real spectacular to say the least
earlier. Just kind of dumbing it down, shooting the puck, getting
bodies to the net and I was able to find a loose one and swatting at
it and rolled her through there."
Jets coach Paul Maurice lamented that Kane took an
offensive-zone penalty against the Blues' Chris
Porter. "We just can't be in the box there. That's the
bottom line on that play."
O'Dell had tied the game for the Jets (31-30-9)
1:55 into the third after taking a pass from Kane in a 4-on-4
situation and beating Miller, who dove out to try to poke-check the
puck. It was a game then, and not because the Jets fought their way
back in, according to Blues coach Ken Hitchcock, but more so because
the Blues failed to capitalize when the chances were there in the
second period.
"For us, we made a game of it because we
couldn't pull away because of all the scoring chances. That made a
game of it. We really played well in the second period and kind of
got a little bit sloppy in the last four, five minutes. But the first
15 minutes, 16 minutes we played in the second period, we could have
had four, five goals if we would have salted it away and gave them a
chance to play in the third period."
Backes was given credit for an empty-net goal with
1:11 remaining when he was taken down by Jets defenseman Jacob
Trouba while trying to go for the empty net to make it 3-1. It's
Backes' first goal without actually putting the puck in the net.
"I think it is," he said. "That
doesn't happen a whole lot. Sometimes when things aren't going
perfect for you, you'll take them any way you can get them. Hopefully
that's the start of a little streak here."
"I don’t think that game should have
gone to 3-1," Maurice said. "I don't think that's an
automatic goal. I don't think it's a slash. He goes down, maybe they
locked feet. But it's not unimpeded progress. That game should be
still 2-1 in my mind. But 2-1 is still a deficit for us."
Morrow snapped a 10-game scoring drought when he
one-timed Derek
Roy's centering feed past Montoya 1:44 into the second period to
open the scoring. After Jay
Bouwmeester's point shot was blocked, the bouncing puck eluded
Jets forward Devin
Setoguchi and Roy was able to slot a pass to Morrow. Bouwmeester
broke a 12-game pointless streak and Roy also snapped a 10-game
drought. Miller only saw five shots in the second period but was up
to the task on a couple of quality chances, including saves on Blake
Wheeler after a neutral zone giveaway and Bryan
Little after a Blues line change that could have produced a
disastrous result. An uneventful first period produced only 13 shots
between the teams, hardly any stoppages in play and no penalties. The
Jets' Anthony
Peluso had the best chance with a point-blank backhand that
Miller was able to get his paddle down to make the stop.
"We had a lot of good players,"
said Hitchcock, whose team improved to 38-1-5 when scoring first and
30-0-4 when leading after two periods. "We didn't finish like
we normally would have but we had a lot of good players in the game
today. I thought we managed the game well. We got up to speed more
and more. ... We had all six defensemen contribute. We had four lines
chip in when we had to. You like to see rewards for working this
hard, getting that many scoring opportunities."
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