The St. Louis Blues made some adjustments that allowed them to rebound for a 3-2 overtime win against the Boston Bruins in Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Final on Wednesday. With the best-of-7 series tied heading into Game 3 in St. Louis on Saturday, it's the Bruins' turn to respond.
We can dissect the adjustments St. Louis made in terms of X's and O's or line matchups, but the biggest change was in attitude. The Blues executed a more passionate game plan with superior discipline to Game 1, a 4-2 loss. Regardless of the score, their passion in every situation showed in their desperation and commitment to not get sidetracked.
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For Boston, as much as we can analyze the details of its structure, it boils down to the top line of Brad Marchand, Patrice Bergeron and David Pastrnak contributing more.
The Bruins have received solid production from their depth players throughout the Stanley Cup Playoffs, including goals from their third line (Charlie Coyle) and fourth line (Joakim Nordstrom) in Game 2. But while the depth players have contributed, Marchand, Bergeron and Pastrnak have yet to find their dominant game.
This also happened early in the Eastern Conference Final against the Carolina Hurricanes, when their impact was limited at 5-on-5, but they found their stride and were a force later in the series.
Marchand, Bergeron and Pastrnak have been on the ice for three goals against in the first two games and their production has been limited to an empty-net goal (Marchand) in Game 1 and an assist (Pastrnak) in Game 2. Expect that line to make significant adjustments and lead the way for Boston in Game 3.
Two players specifically who are looking to rebound for Boston are Marchand and defenseman Brandon Carlo. Normally an extremely reliable player, Marchand had an off night in Game 2. He turned the puck over on four occasions while choosing to pass instead of carrying or shooting.
In overtime, Carlo twice failed to clear the defensive zone with the puck on his tape, which eventually led to Carl Gunnarsson's game-winning goal at 3:51. In his case, the physicality the Blues administered might have taken a toll with the Bruins down to five defensemen after Matt Grzelcyk was injured on a hit from Oskar Sundqvist in the first period.