Bruins rally past Blues in Stanley Cup Final opener
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[May 28, 2019]
(Reuters) - The Boston Bruins
overcame a sluggish start and erased a two-goal deficit to beat the
St. Louis Blues 4-2 and draw first blood in the National Hockey
League's Stanley Cup Final on Monday.
The host Bruins used a dominant second period to tie the game and
grabbed their first lead of the night when Sean Kuraly corralled a
cross-ice pass with his foot and tapped the puck in the Blues net
five minutes into the third period.
Brad Marchand added an empty-net goal with two minutes to play to
seal a victory that gave the Bruins a 1-0 lead in the best-of-seven
games championship series.
"We want to elevate our game and tonight we started a little low so
it wasn't that hard to elevate," said Kuraly. "But I think we did
elevate and we are going to have to keep getting better because this
(Blues) team is not going anywhere."
Boston, who had a 10-day layoff after sweeping Carolina in the
Eastern Conference final, looked out of sorts early and were staring
at a two-goal deficit when Blues forward Vladimir Tarasenko scored
one minute into the second period.
The Bruins, bolstered by their fourth line, stormed back 76 seconds
later when a cross-ice pass from Kuraly deflected off rookie
defenseman Connor Clifton's skate and into the Blues net.
Boston tied the game on the powerplay when Charlie McAvoy fired a
wrister from the slot under the glove of Blues goalie Jordan
Binnington with seven minutes left in the second.
"They are awesome, they are spark plugs," McAvoy said of his team's
fourth line. "They play physical, they are fun to watch, they play
responsible. And every night you are going to get it from them, and
to see them step up in the Stanley Cup Final, all three of them,
it's awesome."
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Bruins left wing Brad Marchand (63) reacts after scoring an
empty-net goal against the St. Louis Blues during the third period
in game one of the 2019 Stanley Cup Final at TD Garden. Mandatory
Credit: Bob DeChiara-USA TODAY Sports
St. Louis forward Brayden Schenn opened the scoring seven minutes
into the game, a dream start for a Blues team that were dead last in
the NHL in early January but remarkably now find themselves playing
for a maiden Stanley Cup championship.
St. Louis reached the Stanley Cup Final in each of their first three
years of existence from 1968-70 but were swept each time, including
by the Bruins in 1970.
They looked headed for their first game win in a Cup final after a
solid first period but were undone by a combination of turnovers and
undisciplined penalties.
"First period was good. I thought we did a lot of good things,"
Blues head coach Craig Berube told reporters.
"Second period we stopped skating, stopped moving the puck, turned
it over and gave them momentum, and plus the penalties didn't help."
The series resumes on Wednesday in Boston.
(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto; Editing by Peter Rutherford)
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