Blues
beat Leafs in Yeo's debut
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[February 03, 2017]
ST. LOUIS -- In all his years in
the NHL, Paul Stastny had never experienced a mid-season coaching
change until the St. Louis Blues fired Ken Hitchcock on Wednesday
and replaced him with Mike Yeo.
That was one of the reasons Stastny didn't really know what to
expect on Thursday night when the Blues played their first game
under Yeo, hosting the Toronto Maple Leafs.
The move provided an immediate return, however, as the Blues -- led
by Stastny's two goals -- defeated the Maple Leafs 5-1 after losing
five of their previous six games.
"It's different," Stastny said. "He made a good point yesterday. We
all felt terrible and took it on ourselves and knew we were partly
to blame, everything together. Sometimes someone is the fall guy.
But after that, we had to focus on what we have to do to get better.
"Sometimes change is good. Sometimes you get too complacent, just
the way we prepare to everything it will be a little different. It
brings that urgency back."
Yeo, hired by the Blues over the summer as an associate coach with
the expectation that he would become the coach next season when
Hitchcock retired, saw the Blues fall behind 1-0 on Mitchell
Marner's first period goal.
The Blues responded with a goal by Alexander Steen to tie the game
late in the first period, then scored three times in the second
period to take control of the game.
Stastny and Vladimir Tarasenko scored 35 seconds apart before Colton
Parayko added a power-play goal to make it a 4-1 game. The
three-goal flurry came in a 4:35 span.
Stastny scored the fifth goal and his second of the night in the
third period.
The win was the most important aspect of the night for Yeo.
"There was a lot to like about the game," Yeo said. "When something
like this happens quite often there is a jolt to the team.
Obviously, it gives everybody a chance to dig in and look at
themselves and figure out what they can do better, and we got that
tonight.
"Part of the message for us is that we've done a lot of good things
in the past, we've got a lot of good players here, we don't need any
heroes but we need everybody to go out and do a lot of the little
things well and we saw that tonight."
Jake Allen had his best game in a month in goal, stopping 26 of 27
shots as he won for the first time since the Winter Classic on Jan.
2.
The loss was the third in a row for the Maple Leafs and their fifth
in the last seven games.
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Blues head coach Mike Yeo watches from the bench during the third
period against the Toronto Maple Leafs at Scottrade Center. The
Blues won 5-1. Mandatory Credit: Billy Hurst-USA TODAY Sports
"We had a good 10 minutes in the first period and after that they
were just better than us and they were faster and more determined,
executed better, were on top of us and we weren't good enough," said
Maple Leafs coach Mike Babcock. "We didn't have enough players being
good enough. The bottom line is we didn't get anything going. We
were playing good and we let it slip away."
The Maple Leafs' James Van Riemsdyk was not surprised at the
intensity displayed by the Blues because of the coaching change, but
he was disappointed his team was not able to match that performance.
"Whenever that kind of event like that happens, obviously, it's kind
of a gut check time for everyone, it's just one of those things,"
Van Riemsdyk said. "Everyone's kind of probably on their toes and
it's kind of a fresh start for everyone so I'm for sure that kind of
brings out the best of guys."
Yeo got the puck from the game as a memento of the win -- as well as
a little friendly criticism.
"The guys criticized my tie," Yeo said. "I thought it was pretty
good, but apparently, it's not."
NOTES: The Blues retired jersey No. 5 in honor of former defenseman
Bob Plager in a pregame ceremony. Plager was a member of the first
Blues team in 1967 and stayed through 1978 before moving into the
front office. It is the seventh jersey number retired by the
franchise. ... Mike Yeo kept the same lineup from the Blues'
previous game, his first as the team's head coach. D Robert Bortuzzo
and RW Dmitrij Jaskin were healthy scratches. ... D Morgan Rielly
returned to the Toronto lineup after missing six games with an ankle
injury. Also returning for Toronto was C Ben Smith, who had missed
the last 18 games because of a hand injury. ... The Blues conclude a
three-game homestand with Saturday night's game against the
Pittsburgh Penguins. The Maple Leafs play in Boston on Saturday
night, the fifth stop on a six-game trip that began before the
All-Star break.
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