The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

No day at the beach: Classic is coldest outdoor NHL game

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MINNEAPOLI­S — The St. Louis Blues boarded their bus to the game in a humorous ensemble of shorts, Hawaiian shirts and flipflops, lightening the mood before the coldest outdoor game in NHL history.

Jordan Kyrou and his linemates made the Winter Classic look like a day at the beach.

Kyrou had two goals and two assists in a five-goal second period, and the Blues cruised to a 6-4 win over the Minnesota Wild with a faceoff temperatur­e of minus-5.7 degrees on Saturday night.

“It’s a nice little trick. I definitely was fully awake,” said Blues captain Ryan O’reilly, who helped orchestrat­e the dress code in the player group chat.

This was the first of 33 outdoor games the league has played with a temperatur­e below zero. The Blues got serious once they hit the ice, filling their water bottles with chicken broth and tucking hand warmers in their pads to help against the cold.

“It was important to have energy and emotion in the game,” coach Craig Berube said. “When you’re playing in that kind of extreme weather, you’ve got to dig in.”

David Perron got the Blues on the board in the first period. Vladimir Tarasenko, Ivan Barbashev and Torey Krug joined Kyrou by scoring in the second, and Robert Thomas pitched in with two assists. Jordan Binnington made 29 saves for the Blues, who are 11-1-2 in their last 14 games against the rival Wild.

“It was a crazy show, and I think it’s something we’ll always remember,” Binnington said.

Kirill Kaprizov had a goal and two assists for the Wild, who trailed 6-2 at the second intermissi­on and pulled goalie Cam Talbot after 22 saves in two periods in favor of Kaapo Kahkonen. Talbot had a lower-body injury, coach Dean Evason said.

Rem Pitlick, Ryan Hartman and Kevin Fiala also scored for the Wild, who pulled within 6-4 on Fiala’s 6-on-5 goal with 5:38 remaining after Kahkonen was pulled for the extra skater, but they were in too big of a hole.

“It’s cold for both teams. The ice is bouncy for both teams. They just outplayed us for 40 minutes, easy. We didn’t play smart hockey like we’ve been doing most of the time this year,” right wing Mats Zuccarello said.

Talbot, who posted an outdoor shutout for Edmonton in the Heritage Classic in 2016, wore a forest green stocking cap on top of his mask to match Minnesota’s jerseys. He didn’t have much help. The Wild were missing their two best defensemen, captain Jared Spurgeon (lower-body injury) and Jonas Brodin (COVID-19 protocols), and allowed 14 shots on goal in each of the first two periods.

“They’re a team that likes to make plays, and obviously the ice is not the best. We kind of tried to capitalize on their mistakes, and that’s how we got our chances,” Kyrou said.

Due to virus outbreaks on other teams, the Wild had four games postponed over the last three weeks and had not played in 12 days.

 ?? AARON LAVINSKY/MINNEAPOLI­S STAR TRIBUNE/TNS ?? Tyler Moe-slepica, of Minnetonka, Minnesota, grimaces as he tries to stay warm outdoors in below-zero weather while watching the Winter Classic on Saturday in Minneapoli­s.
AARON LAVINSKY/MINNEAPOLI­S STAR TRIBUNE/TNS Tyler Moe-slepica, of Minnetonka, Minnesota, grimaces as he tries to stay warm outdoors in below-zero weather while watching the Winter Classic on Saturday in Minneapoli­s.

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