BOSTON — Torey Krug flew down the ice with his helmet off, like his big, bad predecessors on the Boston defense from the days of Eddie Shore and Bobby Orr.
He lined up St. Louis center Robert Thomas and knocked him off his skates, delighting the crowd and sending an unmistakable message to rest of the Blues: The Bruins had woken up from their 11-day layoff, and they were ready to fight for the Stanley Cup.
“I think it gave our team energy, and that’s all you’re trying to do out there,” Krug said after Boston rallied from a two-goal deficit to beat St. Louis, 4-2, in Game 1 on Monday night. “Hopefully it gave the guys a boost on the bench.”
Sean Kuraly scored to break a third-period tie and assisted on another goal, and Tuukka Rask stopped 18 shots to help the Bruins complete their comeback from a two-goal deficit. Game 2 in the best-of-seven series is Wednesday night.
Forty-nine years after Bobby Orr flew through the air to beat the Blues for the 1970 N.H.L. title, the Bruins got goals from defensemen Connor Clifton and Charlie McAvoy.
Brad Marchand added an empty netter with about three minutes left, but the unofficial clincher came when Krug got up off the ice after losing his helmet in a tussle with David Perron in front of the Boston net.
“You know, you don’t want to mess with that guy,” Clifton said. “Don’t make that guy mad.”
Jordan Binnington made 34 saves for the Blues, who haven’t been back to the final since getting swept by Boston in 1970. But it was Boston that was struggling with a long layoff — at least early on.
Idle since May 16, when the Bruins completed their sweep of the Carolina Hurricanes, they spotted St. Louis a two-goal lead before snapping out of their slumber.
Brayden Schenn made it 1-0 lead midway through the first period on a third-chance shot. In the first minute of the second, David Pastrnak got sloppy behind the Bruins’ net and Schenn was there again, this time to pass it to Vladimir Tarasenko in the slot to make it 2-0.
“I think we can be even better, and we have to be,” Perron said.
Bruins Coach Bruce Cassidy admitted that the long layoff since the Eastern Conference finals may have left his team rusty.
“The time off, you don’t have your edge yet to battle,” he said. “We weren’t too happy with the way the game was going. We weren’t playing our game. We weren’t playing to our standard. And I think after the second goal, that kind of woke us up.”
The Bruins went on to outshoot the Blues, 18-3, in the second period, finishing the game with a 38-20 edge.
“I was pretty much a spectator after that,” Rask said.
Just 76 seconds after Tarasenko’s goal, Clifton tipped in a pass from Kuraly to cut the deficit to one. And in the middle of the second, on the Bruins’ fourth power play of the game, McAvoy came right up the middle and wristed it past Binnington’s glove to tie it.
It was still tied five minutes into the third when Noel Acciari, on Binnington’s left, made a spin move and swept the puck across the crease to Kuraly. He steadied it with his skate and then poked it in with his stick to give the Bruins their first lead of the game.
“In the second period we stopped skating, turned it over and gave them momentum,” Blues Coach Craig Berube said. “I thought they were the better team after that.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/27/sports/bruins-rally-at-home-for-game-1-win.html
2019-05-28 07:41:15Z
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