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Sunday, November 24, 2024

Bruins rally past St Louis Blues to win Stanley Cup opener

Los Angeles, United States—Sean Kuraly scored the game winner early in the third as the Boston Bruins rallied with four unanswered goals to beat the St Louis Blues 4-2 in the opening game of the Stanley Cup finals.

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Bruins rally past St Louis Blues to win Stanley Cup opener
Sean Kuraly (52) of the Boston Bruins scores a third period goal past Jordan Binnington (50) of the St. Louis Blues in Game One of the 2019 NHL Stanley Cup Final at TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. AFP

After a slow start Monday (Tuesday Manila time), the Bruins picked up where they left off, shaking off the rust of a 10-day break to win their eighth consecutive game in the postseason.

Kuraly’s third tally of the playoffs came 5:21 into the final  period to break the deadlock and cap a four-goal scoring burst by the Bruins, who fell behind 2-0 early in the second.

Boston forward Noel Acciari made a spinning pass across the crease that Kuraly managed to kick from his skate to his stick before slamming it home.

“I am just trying to play hard. I am happy it went in,” said Kuraly. “We are going to have to keep getting better. This team is not going anywhere.”

Game two is Wednesday in Boston.

The Blues are seeking to claim their first-ever championship, while the Bruins are gunning for their first title since 2011.

Defenseman Connor Clifton, Charlie McAvoy on the powerplay and Brad Marchand, with an empty netter, also scored for the Bruins, who are playing in the finals for the third time this decade.

The Bruins got scoring from unlikely places with their fourth line leading the offensive charge and the defense chipping in with two helpers. Kuraly, who plays on the fourth line, also had goal and an assist in game seven of the first round of the playoffs.

“This is what they do. They can skate and they play simple hockey,” said Bruins coach Bruce Cassidy of Kuraly and the fourth line. 

“For us, being off as long as we were we can’t get drawn into fancy plays. They are always going to play same way—a straight line game—and they got rewarded.”

Finnish veteran Tuukka Rask easily won the goaltending battle with Blues rookie netminder Jordan Binnington by making 18 saves in front of a crowd of 17,500 at the Boston Garden.

“We’ve been real disciplined all playoffs. We weren’t tonight with five penalties. We got to be much better,” said Blues coach Craig Berube.

Kuraly also assisted on the first Bruins goal of the game by Clifton to cut the Blues lead to 2-1. 

Brayden Schenn led the Blues with a goal and an assist, while Vladimir Tarasenko scored once and Binnington stopped 34 shots in the first game of the best-of-seven series.

Clifton got the Bruins onto the board by scoring just 76 seconds after Tarasenko’s goal. Clifton snuck in behind the Blues’ defence and tipped a pass from Kuraly in from the side of the St Louis net.

Schenn had his best game of the playoffs, opening the scoring with his third goal of the postseason.

“We had a 2-0 lead we just didn’t play our game after that,” said Schenn.

Schenn got the puck in the high slot, made a nifty little stickhandle and fired it into upper half of the net. 

The stickhandle move did its job by freezing Binnington and it’s something that was lacking from Schenn’s game earlier in the playoffs when he was mired in a scoring slump.  

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