The News-Times

Blues’ penalty kill has them on verge of Cup

STANLEY CUP, GAME 6, BRUINS AT BLUES, SATURDAY, 8 P.M. (NBC)

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Something is missing from the Boston power play.

The uninterrup­ted puck movement and cross-ice passes to a wide open David Pastrnak aren’t there anymore. Torey Krug isn’t getting the chance to fire away from the top. Patrice Bergeron isn’t dominating between the faceoff circles like before.

Boston rode its lethal power play to a 2-1 lead in the Stanley Cup Final. Since then, the St. Louis Blues have shut out the most effective power play unit in more than 30 years and shut down the Bruins’ best players, too. The Blues power play has been nothing special, but their penalty kill is a major reason why St. Louis has won two straight to take a 3-2 lead with a chance to claim the first NHL championsh­ip in franchise history at home Sunday night.

St. Louis has gone from being the playoffs’ leastpenal­ized team through three rounds to something else entirely. The Blues are borderline undiscipli­ned, relying on targeted toughness to beat up and disrupt the Bruins. It’s working. Since allowing six powerplay goals early in the final and letting the Bruins go 4-for-4 on four shots in Game 3, the Blues have made five successful penalty kills. Suddenly Boston’s most valuable weapon is quiet.

“We’re staying tight to each other,” Blues penalty killer Oskar Sundqvist said. “We’re not letting them pass through the seams and shoot from the top and things like that. We’re making it harder on them and keeping them on the outside. We just need to keep doing the same thing and we’re probably going to be fine if we do that.”

Not just fine. If this keeps up, they could be Stanley Cup champions.

Game 3 was such an eyeopener of how good Boston’s power play is that many wondered if the Bruins were just going to steamroll the Blues and win the series in five games. But Sundqvist was suspended that game and goaltender Jordan Binnington has shown serious resolve since then. Blues coach Craig Berube has also made adjustment­s to Boston coach Bruce Cassidy’s special teams.

“They really like using seam passes and things like that, and I thought we were tight and doing a good job with our sticks and doing a real good job on our stand at the blue line on their breakouts and breaking plays up,” Berube said.

The Bruins power play had been converting over 30% — a clip that could’ve been the second-highest all-time for a Cup champion — and was drawing comparison­s to the New York Islanders’ 1980s dynasty that featured Mike Bossy, Denis Potvin, Clark Gillies and Bryan Trottier.

“Back then it was more drop-off, backdoor, overload … a lot more point shots,” Cassidy said. “Little more low-to-high driven net-on-net, whereas now I think you see a lot more power plays, certainly always the half wall is a big thing. But I would guess more net-front tips, rebounds back then. Now it’s more one-timer, seam passes.”

Krug considers Cassidy a power-play mastermind, and that will be tested in preparatio­ns for Game 6 in St. Louis with the Bruins facing eliminatio­n for the first time since Game 7 of the first round against Toronto.

“I think in zone, they’ve been tight,” Cassidy said of the Blues. “Either got to stretch them out to get some seams or we got to be less stubborn, then get a net presence and take the shot that’s available with that net presence. Maybe stretch them out off of puck recovery. A little bit is on us to make sure — `us’ the staff — and it’s on the players to make the right decision at the right moment in time.”

Getting the power play righted is key to staving off eliminatio­n. And it’s not just about scoring because the power play fuels the Bruins’ 5-on-5 offense, and even that’s not happening right now.

“Any time you don’t get chances on the power play, you’re going to get frustrated,” Blues captain Alex Pietrangel­o said. “So we’re just doing our job.”

St. Louis has done a much better job at maintainin­g defensive assignment­s on the penalty kill after inexplicab­ly leaving skill players wide open in Game 3. Seemingly dumbfounde­d by Boston’s power play that night, the Blues have begun to turn the tide on faceoffs on special teams and figured out how create their own penalty-killing momentum.

“Just staying aggressive,” Pietrangel­o said. “That’s all. Staying aggressive and we’re getting the puck down when we have a chance to clear.”

Closing down the Bruins power play has compensate­d for a series-long parade to the penalty box by the Blues. If it continues, St. Louis could soon be hosting its first profession­al sports championsh­ip parade since baseball’s Cardinals won the World Series in 2011.

 ?? Michael Dwyer / Associated Press ?? Blues goaltender Jordan Binnington guards the net during Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Final against the Bruins on Thursday.
Michael Dwyer / Associated Press Blues goaltender Jordan Binnington guards the net during Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Final against the Bruins on Thursday.

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