Blues
looking to limit penalties in Game 4
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[June 03, 2019]
ST. LOUIS -- Throughout the
Stanley Cup Final, the St. Louis Blues have spoken repeatedly of
playing a disciplined game and staying out of the penalty box. Yet
when the Boston Bruins appear on the ice, St. Louis struggles to
play physically without taking penalties.
It killed the Blues on Saturday night, when Boston went 4-for-4 on
the power play in a 7-2 Game 3 win to take a 2-1 lead in the
best-of-seven series. If St. Louis wants to win Game 4 at home
Monday and tie the series, it can't afford to give the Bruins four
or five more chances.
"We do have to limit the penalties for sure," St. Louis interim
coach Craig Berube said Saturday. "We know they have a dangerous
power play. We've been flirting with danger all series and it burned
us tonight."
Not only was Boston perfect with the man advantage, it needed only
four shots to score four goals. Its four power plays lasted a total
of 2:06. Patrice Bergeron, David Pastrnak, Torey Krug and Marcus
Johansson each potted man-advantage markers as the Bruins won
faceoffs, moved the puck and buried their chances.
"I can tell you as a penalty-killer in practice, it's hard to
compete against those guys," left winger Jake DeBrusk said. "I can
tell you they're a lot of fun to watch. I have a lot of respect for
the way they move the puck. They're really good and talented
players, and they find options all over the ice."
The Blues' identity is that of a physical team which, over the
course of a game or series, wears an opponent down. The difference
between this series and the first three playoff rounds is that they
have taken 14 minors in three games, compared to an average of just
under three per game en route to the Western Conference title.
St. Louis actually came out and controlled the first six minutes
Saturday night, taking its cue from a revved-up crowd seeing the
first finals game in the city since 1970. The Blues outshot Boston
5-0 for starters, but the Bruins weathered that storm, converted
their first power play in only 21 seconds and gradually choked the
life out of the crowd.
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Blues defenseman Colton Parayko (55) celebrates with teammates Tyler
Bozak (21) , Vladimir Tarasenko (91) and Ryan O'Reilly (90) after
scoring a goal against the Boston Bruins in the third period in game
three of the 2019 Stanley Cup Final at Enterprise Center. Jeff
Curry-USA TODAY Sports
By the time Boston led 5-1 late in the second period, the loudest
cheers came when NFL MVP Patrick Mahomes was shown on the scoreboard
chugging a drink during a TV timeout.
"Listen, every building's loud this time of the year, typically
full," Bruins coach Bruce Cassidy said. "That's where having a lot
of veterans helps. Some of our young guys were still getting cute
late in the second period, but the veterans help in terms of getting
them to play winning hockey."
The Blues need rookie goalie Jordan Binnington to return to the form
that made them a championship contender. Binnington ceded five goals
on 19 shots before getting the hook for Jake Allen after Krug's
goal. Only one of those tallies could be blamed entirely on
Binnington, who got little help from his defense.
"My confidence level in him is really high," Berube said.
--By Bucky Dent, Field Level Media
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