It seemed fitting that a defenseman wearing No. 4 scored in overtime in a Stanley Cup Final game between the Blues and Bruins. Defenseman Bobby Orr, who wore No. 4 in his Hockey Hall of Fame career, scored the Cup-clinching goal for Boston in overtime the last time the teams met in the Cup Final, in 1970.
That goal inspired a statue that stands outside TD Garden. Gunnarsson probably won't get a statue for his, but it will hold a place in history for the Blues, who were 0-13 in Cup Final games, including 0-5 against the Bruins, before winning Game 2.
"I guess that's a little bonus," Gunnarsson said. "That's pretty cool if you think about it that way. Pretty sure we're not going to stop here."
The Blues feel they have something special going and showed their resilience again by rebounding from a 4-2 loss to the Bruins in Game 1 on Monday. Gunnarsson is their latest unlikely scoring hero, joining defenseman Robert Bortuzzo, whose first NHL playoff goal was the winner in a 4-2 victory in Game 2 of the Western Conference Final against the San Jose Sharks.