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St. Louis Blues
vs
San Jose Sharks
Today's Featured Sports Pick

Game Date:
05/21/2016
7:20pm EST

Lines:
St. Louis +1.5
San Jose -1.5

Total:
Over 5 (+107)
Under 5 (-118)

Community Picks: St. Louis Blues 0% vs San Jose Sharks 0%

St. Louis Blues and San Jose Sharks Thread

Team Tweets & News Articles
St. Louis Blues
Friday's Dose focuses on the Sharks blanking the Blues (again) to take a lead in the WCF. Continue to Article
May 20, 2016 8:25:am EST
San Jose Sharks
SAN JOSE, Calif. – St. Louis Blues coach Ken Hitchcock wants Vladimir Tarasenko to look across the rink at the San Jose Sharks and see the desire and willpower of his opponent. He wants his young sniper to see players like Joe Pavelski and Joe Thornton paying the price in order to make a big play. He wants Tarasenko to understand that at this stage of the postseason not all goals need to be highlight-worthy. “As you experience this as a younger player, you're going to have to learn to fight through a lot if you expect to score. We would like him to learn that lesson a day from now, but we're not sure on the timeframe,” Hitchcock said after the Sharks downed the Blues 3-0 in Game 3 to take a 2-1 series lead in the Western Conference Final. “Some guys never learn it. Some guys can't do it. Some guys learn that lesson and they really become accomplished players, especially scoring players. But he's going to have to fight through everything if he expects to score a goal and contribute offensively.” [ Join a Yahoo Daily Fantasy Hockey contest today ] In Game 3 Tarasenko was held off the score-sheet again and was a non-factor, firing just two shots on goal. Throughout this series he hasn’t picked up a point. As the Sharks’ top players have continued to roll – especially in Game 3 when the line of Thornton, Pavelski and Tomas Hertl scored two goals – the Blues’ best forwards have been held silent. For the second straight game, St. Louis was shut out by Sharks goaltender Martin Jones, who stopped all 22 Blues' shots on goal. While Jones has played well, much of the series storyline has revolved around the Blues’ inability to generate much of anything offensively rather than Jones’ ability to stop the puck. And a lot of that falls on Tarasenko who had 40 goals in the regular season.  These playoffs have been a strange stretch for Tarasenko, who has 13 points and seven goals in 17 games. He started them off with five points and three goals in the first four games against the Chicago Blackhawks in the first-round. Then in Game 6, he seemed to squabble with Hitchcock about ice-time and played just 14:31 in Game 7 – a Blues win over the Hawks. In the second-round against the Dallas Stars he had seven points and scored a goal in Game 7. But he has misfired against the Sharks, which has led to questions on why such a dominant regular season scorer could be held so quiet at an important time of the year. “There's some days that he's going to end up being an effective player and not even get a point, but he's going to have to have an understanding of what it takes to play at this time of year, in the conference final, with 100 percent commitment on the other side, still be an effective player,” Hitchcock said. “These are lessons you can talk to him about. Unfortunately for all of us, you got to go through it.”  This series is still just three games old, and though the Sharks have played more consistent hockey so far the Blues are sill very much not out of it. If Tarasenko can find his game again, the whole complexion of the series could change. “Just because he doesn't score doesn't mean he's not doing what he's supposed to do,” defenseman Alex Pietrangelo said. “He's a team player. Sometimes you've got to do the hard things, especially on the road. You're not always going to get the matchup that you want. We'll take Vladi in any situation. He's doing what he's got to do and he'll get his opportunities."’  Then again, Tarasenko isn’t the only responsible party for the Blues' offensive struggles against the Sharks. Forwards David Backes and Jaden Schwartz each have just one point this series. Rookie Robby Fabbri and veteran Alex Steen have also been held scoreless.   The Blues tried to add more offense by inserting Dmitrij Jaskin and Magnus Paajarvi into the lineup for Game 3. Jaskin played 10:47 and Paajarvi played just 6:57.  “We need to get back onto our method and our ways,” Backes said. “When we do that, we’re going to have success. It’s 2-1 them. Park this again and find a way as a group to bind together and get out of this goal-less streak, then open up the floodgates hopefully. When we find a way to get one, probably going to be a real ugly one.” MORE FROM YAHOO HOCKEY   - - - - - - - Josh Cooper is an editor for Puck Daddy on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter! Follow @joshuacooper   Continue to Article
May 20, 2016 2:53:am EST
St. Louis Blues
No. 1 Star: Martin Jones, San Jose Sharks Granted he only faced 16 shots on goal, but what's more impressive is the streak he has going. The last goal he allowed was in Game 1 at the 15:04 mark of the first period. His shutout streak has reached is at 150:45. For the second straight game, he's shut out the Blues. Not bad for a guy who has never played in a Conference Final before. No. 2 Star: Tomas Hertl, San Jose Sharks The youngster scored 2 goals on a team leading 7 shot attempts in 17:46 TOI. He was also credited with 4 hits in the Sharks 3-0 win .   No. 3 Star: Joe Pavelski, San Jose Sharks The Sharks captain, along with Joe Thornton, assisted on both Hertl goals. Pavelski was 5 of 8 on the faceoff dot. He led all forwards in icetime with 19:31. Honorable Mention: Sharks out-hit the Blues 41 to 21; Roman Polak and Dainius Zubrus tied to for the team high with 6 each. St. Louis generated 60 shot attempts in the game (22 SOG, 26 A/B, 12 missed). St. Louis did not allow a goal playing nearly an entire five minutes with their goalie pulled. Did You Know? #stlblues have been shut out in back to back games for the first time in playoff history. — Lou Korac (@lkorac10) May 20, 2016 Dishonorable Mention: Scottie Upshall, Steve Ott, and Joel Edmundson were scratched from the Blues lineup for Game 3. Upshall's scratch is believed to be related to an injury that the team will update on Friday. Brian Elliott was pulled in the third period after allowed 3 goals on 14 shots. - - - - - - - Jen Neale is an editor for Puck Daddy on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email her at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com or follow her on Twitter! Follow @MsJenNeale_PD . MORE FROM YAHOO HOCKEY: Continue to Article
May 20, 2016 1:41:am EST
San Jose Sharks
For a San Jose team whose playoff struggles have often come down to running into a streaky goaltender at the wrong time, it must be nice to have the goalie making all the stops. Martin Jones made 22 saves in his second straight shutout and Tomas Hertl scored twice to give the Sharks a series lead for the first time in four trips to the Western Conference final with a 3-0 victory over the St. Louis Blues in Game 3 on Thursday night. ''He's the backbone of our team,'' forward Joe Thornton said of Jones. Continue to Article
May 20, 2016 1:15:am EST
San Jose Sharks
SAN JOSE, Calif. –  At morning skate in advance of Game 3 of the Western Conference Final, San Jose Sharks forward Joe Thornton seemed to show no ill effects from a slash on his hand he took late in Game 2 from St. Louis Blues defenseman Jay Bouwmeester.  Thornton gripped his stick at practice and stayed on ice for the brief practice session. “It’s fine, it’s fine,” Thornton said after morning skate. Bouwmeester slashed Thornton at the five-minute mark of the third period in Game 2. Thornton stayed on ice for the ensuing power play from the slash, then went to the locker room. He returned and then played two more shifts in the third period. [ Join a Yahoo Daily Fantasy Hockey contest today ] Overall Thornton played four shifts in the third, his lowest amount per-period in the game, a 4-0 win by San Jose. The Sharks’ first-line center is having one of the top all-around playoffs of his career. He’s had 11 points – six of which coming on the power play – in 14 games while averaging 19:29 of ice-time. He’s also won 52.6 percent of his faceoffs. This past year the 36-year-old Thornton led the Sharks with 82 points in 82 games and was arguably the team’s most important player. “They’re going to come hard. They’re a better team on the road,” Thornton said of the Blues. “That’s been documented in the post-season here. So they’re going to come with their best game. I expect us to do the same.” MORE FROM YAHOO HOCKEY   - - - - - - - Josh Cooper is an editor for Puck Daddy on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter! Follow @joshuacooper Continue to Article
May 19, 2016 4:57:pm EST
 
Previous Matchups: 3/30 • 4/6
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