Three Takeaways From Blues' 6-1 Win Against Utah Hockey Club

Utah Hockey Club captain and Swansea, Il. native Clayton Keller (9) skates away after the St. Louis Blues scored in a 6-1 Blues win on Tuesday at Enterprise Center. (Jeff Le-Imagn Images)

ST. LOUIS – Not much was made of the St. Louis Blues making the playoffs at the start of the season, and coming out of the 4 Nations Face-Off, it was even a bleaker look being eight points out of a wild card berth.

But 26 games and a 19-4-3 record later, the Blues have knocked down the playoff door and claimed the second wild card from the Western Conference.

It took all 82 games of the regular-season, but the Blues clinched in resounding fashion with a thorough 6-1 win of Utah Hockey Club at Enterprise Center on Tuesday.

The Blues (44-30-8) closed the season on a strong note and needed a franchise-record 12-game winning streak to put themselves in a position to clinch a playoff berth for the first time since 2022.

Jordan Kyrou scored twice, Pavel Buchnevich had a goal and two assists (all in the first period), Jimmy Snuggerud scored his first NHL goal and had an assist, and Brayden Schenn and Zack Bolduc each had a goal and an assist. Robert Thomas had two assists to finish the season with a 12-game point streak (four goals, 21 assists) before departing with a lower-body injury that coach Jim Montgomery called precautionary, and Jordan Binnington made 22 saves to emphatically give the Blues a regulation win that put them in no matter the results of the games involving the Minnesota Wild and Calgary Flames.

And in turn, the Blues will now face the Presidents’ Trophy winners and Central Division champion Winnipeg Jets (55-22-4), with the series likely to start on Saturday in Winnipeg.

“It feels really good, and I loved the way we did it,” Montgomery said of Tuesday’s win. “We got back to who we are for 60 minutes, and the first eight minutes, I knew we were going to win just by the way we were committed to playing north and playing to the goal line. I thought our forecheck was excellent and we made them defend.”

Added Schenn, “A lot goes into it. This is what you train for in the summer, and this is what you play for all year -- to have a chance at the Stanley Cup. You just have to get in and anything can happen. We saw that years ago. We've been on a good run here and, at the same time, we just can't be happy that we're in. Playing Winnipeg, Winnipeg is obviously a good team and they're going to present a good challenge for us. But I don't think anyone gave us a chance really, where we were. I'm glad we came kept it together. They're too many good pieces in this locker room to not get in the playoffs. We felt if we played hard for one another, we can get the job done and it just took 82 games.”

Let’s five into the Three Takeaways one final time in the regular season:

* Started like a buzz saw – The Blues walked the walk and talked the talk.

They talked of coming out with a good start, needing to put the hammer down on the game early.

Boy, did they ever.

The forecheck was relentless, the intensity was high, the commitment to playing north hockey was evident from the moment the puck was dropped with the ‘WTF’ Line on the ice.

For every time Utah, which finished 38-31-13, tried to put pucks into the Blues’ zone, it was out quicker than the blink of an eye, and then the Blues would spent shift after shift in Utah’s zone buzzing and recovering.

And when Schenn made it 1-0 at 8:08 of the first period, it was the culmination of good play all around.

“All guys were contributing,” said Blues defenseman Cam Fowler, who had two assists to finish with 36 points (nine goals, 26 assists) in 51 games since being acquired in a trade with the Anaheim Ducks on Dec. 14. “We were playing the brand and style of hockey that we wanted. But our start was a big reason why we were able to get that win tonight.”

And it didn’t stop.

Buchnevich, who has been on a tear since the 4 Nations break, made it 2-0 at 11:17 on what amounted to be one of the prettier passing plays you’ll see.

After Colton Parayko won a wall battle pinching in and getting it back around and behind the net, the puck went from Fowler to Thomas to Buchnevich in the bumper to Jake Neighbours in the left corner. Neighbours took a the puck off his skate, took a couple strides before finding Buchnevich at the bottom of the right circle for the one-timer.

“We got a quick pregame speech from ‘Monty’ and everybody pumped up and we got a good 10 minutes, score a couple goals and kind of control the game, which is what we want,” Buchnevich said.

* Power play was icing on cake – On top of what the Blues were able to do from the get-go, their power play added the layers for an overwhelming four-goal first period.

Snuggerud’s first NHL goal needed some time before officials decided there was no distinct kicking motion and it gave the Blues a 3-0 lead at 14:45.

It came off another solid passing play, led by Fowler playing it low for Thomas, who found Buchnevich, who in turn put the puck to the net with Snuggerud there, and ultimately, he got a fortuitous carom into the net off his skate for his first NHL goal.

“I mean, I can't score with my stick, so I might as well just score with my skate,” Snuggerud joked. “… It's nice that they called it a good goal.”

And the capper was Bolduc’s power-play goal to make it 4-0 at 19:13, not long after the Blues had 1:06 of a two-man advantage, and it was vintage Thomas again, in the left corner, finding Bolduc in the quiet area of the bumper just inside the top of the left circle and he whipped the shot by Karel Vejmelka.

Not even Montgomery could have scripted a better start.

“No, but this is the way we were starting games when we were playing really well,” he said. “There was a purpose, there was an intent. We got to our ‘A’ game right away.”

Kyrou’s one-timer from the low slot at 6:59 of the third period was the Blues’ third man-advantage goal of the game, leaving them with a 3-for-6 night.

* Binnington did Binnington things – Utah, which played Monday in a 7-3 win at the Nashville Predators, was playing its third game in four nights to conclude the season.

Utah found its legs in the second period and the Blues took some undisciplined penalties as a result.

When Blues killer Clayton Keller wired a one-timer past Binnington to make it 4-1 early in the second period, it set off a set of circumstances that required the Blues’ goaltender to be on his toes.

‘Big Game Binnington’ was at it again. He faced 14 of his 23 shots against and was only beaten by Keller’s precision shot into the top half of the netting and did his best to preserve a three-goal lead at the time.

And when it got to the third period, Kyrou helped put the game away with his power-play goal, then add another to finish with a team-high 36 at 17:24 following up Alexey Toropchenko’s slot shot.

“It's a good feeling and we're looking forward to getting into the playoffs,” Schenn said. “It's important for guys like Jake and Bolduc and ‘Snuggy’ and the list goes on and on to feel what the NHL playoffs are all about. That's how you build a culture and that's how you build a winning mentality. It's an exciting time to be a hockey player playing in the playoffs.”

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