Devils End Blues’ Eight-Game Winning Streak

The Devils reeled off their fifth straight win at the Prudential Center tonight and, more importantly, finally beat the St. Louis Blues for the first time since January 24, 2014. They won 4-2, defeating the defending Stanley Cup champs in a memorable one.

The Blues had not lost since beating the Devils last month. They had set up and knocked down eight opponents and the Devils seemed like easy pickings. New Jersey was coming back from a West Coast trip and, as mentioned, had not beaten the Blues since 2014, which equaled 12 straight wins for St. Louis. But for one night, Cory Schneider stood tall and the Devils played about as well as they could and produced one hell of a game.

Some roster news to get to as the Devils announced yesterday that Will Butcher was done for the year, having successful surgery on thumb ligaments. In addition, Josh Jacobs and Jesper Boqvist were sent back down to Binghamton of the American League. Boqvist can get some more seasoning there, and, as many have pointed out, can play in a playoff race as the B-Devils are in the thick of a playoff push, giving him crucial experience in that kind of situation. Fredrik Claesson slotted back in on the blue line.

In goal, as mentioned, Cory Schneider went for the Devils, making 31 saves on 33 total St. Louis shots, en route to being named the first star of the night. He had a .939 save percentage on the night. It has been great seeing Cory come back to being the Cory we all knew. The win was his first at Prudential Center since March of 2019.

The way he is playing certainly takes a lot of pressure off of Mackenzie Blackwood, who, speaking of which, will see the start tomorrow night at the Rangers. The feeling from interim coach Alain Nasreddine is that Blackwood will be getting some experience playing in a hostile arena like the Garden and will get a chance to play spoiler to New York’s playoff hopes. It should serve to improve the youngster’s confidence even more.

Facing Schneider was St. Louis’ number one, Jordan Binnington. Binnington made 28 saves on 31 Devils shots for a .903 save percentage on the night.

One other roster move saw Miles Wood moved to the top line with Nico Hischier centering and Kyle Palmieri on the right wing.

The Devils were playing their first game in Newark since February 22 and, coming off of a great western swing, they were looking to build.

Jesper Bratt obliged them just 8:38 into the game when he scored. It came off of a defensive zone faceoff. PK Subban quickly transitioned the puck up to Bratt, who cut into the zone, used some nice edgework to make a power move in on Binnington, used a stutter step on him to open him up and scored. The goal was the first of the season for the Devils against the Blues, as they were blanked 3-0 in their trip to Missouri two weeks ago.

But St. Louis being what they were, the Stanley Cup champions, they came roaring right back. At the 12:31 mark of the fist period, Vince Dunn scored on a power play opportunity set up when Damon Severson got the gate for a hook. The Devils could not clear their zone when Dunn bobbled the puck along the far boards. He got it back to Robert Thomas at the point. He went across the blue line to Tyler Bozak, who shot. The rebound came back out to Dunn and he buried his chance. The game was knotted at one apiece.

On special teams, St. Louis was 1-for-4 with seven shots. They also had a pair of shorthanded shots as well. The Devils were 0-for-2 with four shots on the power play and two on the penalty kill.

The second period saw the Devils begin to break away a little. It began 6:50 in when Dakota Mermis tallied his first NHL goal. Severson took a shot and the rebound came to Mermis in the middle of the ice. He spun and, from an odd angle, scored. It was his first NHL goal in 18 games at the level and none other than Cory Schneider got the secondary assist. It was the second time this season that I can recall, that a Devils goaltender recorded a point.

Mermis grew up in Illinois, 30 minutes outside of St. Louis and rooted for the Blues as a kid. What a thrill it must have been for him to get his first NHL goal against the team he grew up rooting for. Congratulations to him.

About 11:08 later, Connor Carrick made it 3-1 Devils when Travis Zajac dug the puck out of the corner and got it to Claesson at the point. He went D-to-D with Carrick, ripped a shot and beat Binnnigton cleanly.

Twenty-nine seconds later, the Devils seemingly made it 4-1 when Kevin Rooney scored. Rooney cut to the net and scored on the power move on a nice backhand shot. Unfortunately, his right skate clipped Binnington’s pad as he cut in. Blues coach Craig Berube used his coach’s challenge, alleging goalie interference. The officials reviewed it and agreed. The call on the ice of a good goal was overturned to no goal.

The official statement from the NHL stated that Rooney “impaired” Binnington from playing his position before the puck entered the net and, hence, it was no goal.

The Blues would come back to cut the Devil lead to one when Jaden Schwartz took a centering pass from Brayden Schenn and scored. Schenn made a nice play behind the Devils’ net, anticipating Zajac trying to move the puck to Severson near the side of the right goalpost, and cutting the puck off, turning and making a lightning quick pass to Schwartz in front. That made it 3-2 Devils at the 16:49 mark of the third period.

The Blues pulled Binnington with about 1:50 left in regulation and Joey Anderson put a capper on it by scoring off of a 2-on-1 with Pavel Zacha into the empty net with 57 seconds to go. Mirco Mueller had the secondary assist on the goal that iced things at 4-2.

The Devils had their elusive win over the Blues and things were looking good as Bratt was the third star and Mermis the second (although they came out to acknowledge the crowd in reverse order). Cory was the first star, as mentioned.

The Devils were narrowly outshot by St. Louis, 33-32, outhit 23-21, had less blocked shots at 11 to ten and had more giveaways at 16 to the Blues’ nine.

The Devils did win 57-percent of the game’s faceoffs, with Michael McLeod winning 75-percent of his to lead the centers, although he was not playing full minutes.

And speaking of minutes, Severson led everyone with 25:26 (including 2:17 on the power play and 2:49 on the PK, as an example of a player who is entrusted with minutes in all situations. Hischier led the forwards in ice time with 17:31 (1:11 on the PP and 37 seconds on the penalty kill included).

Shots on goal were led by Wood and Carrick who each had five. Hits were led by John Hayden, Mermis and Claesson who had three each. Blocks by Mermis with two and takeaways by Zacha with two.

Overall, it was not pretty, but the Devils did it, finally exorcising the Blues. Next up, it’s a trip across the Hudson River to take on the Rangers in Manhattan. This will be another test as the Rangers have been playing very well of late and are in the playoff hunt. Nothing would be sweeter than to knock the Rangers down a peg even if for the moment.

Puck drop is 7 PM for that one and we will have coverage for you right here afterwards. In the meantime, I really hope everyone has wonderful weekend.

Preseason: Devils Beat Bruins in OT; Lose to Habs

The Devils opened the 2019 preseason tonight with a split squad set of games. Half of the team was in Newark playing the Bruins, winning in overtime 4-3 while the other half was up in Montreal and lost 4-2.

We’ll start with the Montreal loss. The Devils sent some relatively weaker star power north of the border, as Jack Hughes and PK Subban were making their Devils debuts at Prudential Center.

Artturi Lehkonen and Nate Thompson scored in the first period while Will Butcher (from Michael McLeod and Damon Severson) added a power play goal for the Devils to make it 2-1 after one.

Michael McLeod tied things just 1:55 into the third at two apiece. He got assists from Brett Seney and Dakota Mermis. But Jake Evans scored shorthanded for the Canadiens and Nick Cousins scored with less than a minute remaining to ice it 4-2 for the Habs.

Carey Price made eight saves on nine shots faced while Cayden Primeau stopped 16 of 17 for Montreal. The Devils had a total of 26 shots. For the Devils, Mackenzie Blackwood stopped 11 of 13 while Evan Cormier was equal to 11 of the 12 he faced. Montreal also had 26 shots on net.

Special teams-wise, the Devils were 1-for-6 on the power play and held the Canadiens 0-for-2 with the man advantage.

Montreal won 57-percent of the game’s faceoffs and the Devils outhit the Habs 30-28. Both teams had 14 blocked shots.

For the Devils, Seney, Colton White and Matt Tennyson were all a plus-1 to lead the plus/minus, Kyle Palmieri led in shots with four. John Hayden, in his Devils debut, led in hits with six and Tennyson led in blocks with three. Kevin Rooney, Brandon Gignac, White and Severson each had one takeaway.

Total ice time was led by Severson with 24:06 while Blake Coleman led the forwards with 21:41.

Meanwhile, back in New Jersey, we mentioned that some Devils stars were appearing at The Rock. Who was missing was Wayne Simmonds (out with a lower body injury, day-to-day according to Matt Loughlin) and Taylor Hall. Simmonds was likely a precautionary measure while Hall has already stated that he will likely play in only one or two preseason games – most definitely the final one or two. Ryan Schmelzer was in for Simmonds tonight.

The Devils thrilled the home fans by pulling this one out in OT. Oskar Steen got the Bruins on the board first. He snapped a shot by Cory Schneider just as he was gaining entry into the Devils’ zone early in the second period.

Midway through the second, Boston switched their goalies out, as Kyle Keyser (who stopped all 17 shots he saw) gave way to Dan Vladar.

But it was number one overall pick in the 2019 NHL Draft, Jack Hughes, who would tie things up. Hughes scored on the power play late in the second to make it 1-1. Ty Smith made a nice play to keep the puck in the Boston zone and Hughes sniped a shot from the far circle. Sami Vatanen and Smith had the assists.

For the third period, Gilles Senn came on in relief for Schneider. Jesper Bratt would give the Devils the early 2-1 lead. He shot off the rush, coming up the right wing boards and beat Vladar. Vatanen had the lone assist on the goal, his second of the night.

Senn made a nice save on Steen right after the goal on, but Boston would end up getting their equalizer. Chris Wagner scored through a mass of players in front of the Devils’ net. The Devils got caught in their own end with some sloppy defensive play and they paid for it here.

So with the score tied at two, we would get some 4-on-4 play as Miles Wood and a Boston player went off with matching minors.

On the ensuing 4-on-4, Jesper Bratt faked a shot from the shot, making a nice slap pass to Connor Carrick along the far boards. He fired from the top of the circle and beat Vladar to make it 3-2 Devils.

Almost immediately following that goal, PK Subban had his pocket picked along the Bruins’ blue line and Senn had to stop a breakaway.

He turned that aside, but Boston would tie it up with less than a minute left when they pulled their goaltender for the extra attacker. Jack Studnicka scored to make it 3-3 and force an overtime period.

The Devils started OT with Jack Hughes, PK Subban and Nikita Gusev: firepower that they did not possess prior to this offseason. Just mere moments into the extra session, the Devils gained control of the puck, as Hughes grabbed it and was off to the races with Gusev.

Hughes made a drop pass to Gusev just inside the Boston blue line and Gusev shot as Hughes cut to the net. Jack then grabbed the rebound and put it home for the game-winner.

Although it was the Devils’ big guns playing against a weaker Bruins’ lineup, this was a nice win. Also nice to see Hughes come away with a pair of goals.

Splitting the night was a great result for the Devils and we will see you again on Wednesday as the Devils travel to the Garden to take on the Rangers. This one is on traditional TV, as the game is being broadcast by MSG Network rather than streamed like the Boston game was.