Las Vegas Review-Journal

Blues seeking first trip to Stanley Cup Final since 1970

- By Josh Dubow The Associated Press

SAN JOSE, Calif. — From last in the league in early January all the way to the brink of their first Stanley Cup Final in nearly a half-century, it has been quite a ride for the St. Louis Blues.

A remarkable turnaround continued Sunday with perhaps their most convincing win of a charmed playoff run.

Jaden Schwartz started a dominant second period with the first of his three goals, Vladimir Tarasenko scored on a penalty shot and the Blues moved within one win of the Cup final with a 5-0 victory over the San Jose Sharks in Game 5 of the Western Conference final.

“It’s probably tough to put into words,” Schwartz said. “It’s something that everyone’s worked for and dreamed about. You don’t want to look too far ahead. We all know how important and how hard that last win’s going to be. It would be a dream come true.”

St. Louis used a relentless second-period forecheck to take control of Game 5 and series, scoring twice and holding a 20-6 edge in shots. It also got 21 saves from Jordan Binnington in his first playoff shutout and a first-period goal from Oskar Sundqvist to overwhelm the Sharks.

Schwartz added two goals in the third for his second hat trick this postseason, becoming the first player with two in one playoff run since Detroit’s Johan Franzen in 2008.

The victory gave the Blues a 3-2 series lead, the closest they’ve been to making the Cup final since getting there in their first three seasons as the winner of the all-expansion Western Conference. St. Louis can earn its first trip back to the final since 1970 with a win at home in Game 6 on Tuesday night, an improbable journey for a team that was last in the standings on Jan. 2.

“I think the guys know that,” Blues forward Patrick Maroon said. “It’s in the back of their heads, but we know that that’s a good hockey team over there, too, and they’re not going to give up.”

Martin Jones made 35 saves for the Sharks but got little help from his teammates, who have been held to one goal in losing the past two games. San Jose now faces eliminatio­n for the third straight series, having overcome a 3-1 series deficit to the Golden Knights in the first round and winning a Game 7 at home in the second round against Colorado.

“We’ve been here before,” coach Peter Deboer said. “You’re never comfortabl­e when your back’s against the wall like that, but we have been here before and found a way, and I’m confident we can do that again.”

San Jose got off to a spirited start in the rare afternoon contest that led to a more subdued crowd than usual at the Shark Tank. Evander Kane hit the post just 12 seconds into the game and the Sharks had the better of the play in the opening 20 minutes despite falling behind 1-0 when Sundqvist converted a turnover from a hobbled Erik Karlsson into a goal less than six minutes into the contest.

Karlsson has been hampered by a groin injury that sidelined him for 27 of the final 33 games in the regular season and has been extremely limited since the third period of Game 4.

The game got out of hand in the third as the Sharks took a parade to the penalty box, upset about a hit to the head of Tomas Hertl in the first period by Ivan Barbashev and a high hit to captain Joe Pavelski by Alex Pietrangel­o early in the third.

“I thought we obviously took way too many penalties,” forward Logan Couture said. “You can’t come back when you’re in the box the whole period, got away from us at the end. Would have really liked us to control our emotions and given ourselves a chance.”

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