To Tarasenko's point: St. Louis was in mourning after the loss. The city waited 49 years to host a Stanley Cup Final game, and that long-anticipated moment finally arrived with concerts outside the arena to a list of celebrities inside that included actor Jon Hamm, actress Jenna Fischer, Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes and tight end Travis Kelce.
But all that energy hurt the Blues more than it helped them. Their adrenaline surge led to seven minor penalties, many of the undisciplined variety. The Bruins capitalized on the power play, going 4-for-4 on four shots.
Schenn said the Blues must calm down and have more of a workman-like attitude in Game 4 here on Monday (8 p.m. ET; NBC, CBC, SN, TVAS). They know what's at stake.
"Any time you lose, I think the emotions are so high in every playoff game," Schenn said. "When you don't get the result you want, you come to the rink the next day or you have a sleep that night and you have that bitter feeling where you feel whether you let it slip away or you didn't get the result you wanted.
"You're angry for a day. But coming to the rink today down 2-1, we knew it was going to be a tight series, a long series. Like [Tarasenko] said, we flip the page, worrying about tomorrow getting a win and that's all that really matters."
The Blues' ability to reboot and move ahead has been on prominent display this spring; St. Louis is 8-2 in games following a loss. Rookie goalie Jordan Binnington, who was pulled after giving up five goals on 19 shots on Saturday, is 12-2 with a 1.82 goals-against average after a defeat in his brief NHL career.