Then you have Binnington come in and start winning games. Goaltending consistency gives a team confidence, especially from an unexpected source. This kid has just kept winning and winning; he's 12-1-1 with a 1.58 goals-against average, .937 save percentage and four shutouts, including an active eight-game winning streak, the longest by a rookie goalie in Blues history.
What Binnington has done is taking the concept of "being careful" out of the game for the rest of the team. They don't have to worry that one little slip-up will end up in the back of their net because they know Binnington, more often than not, will be there for them. Everything just flows and becomes liquid from there.
One thing I've noticed is the Blues look to be playing a faster-paced game. They're not the fastest team in the League in terms of skating ability, but they are playing a quicker more up-tempo game, in terms of puck movement, breakouts, all of it.
Where you really notice that aspect of their game is on the forecheck. They hardly spend any time in their own zone. Knowing Binnington has their backs, they are preoccupied with attacking, attacking, attacking. And when they lose the puck in the offensive zone, the step on the gas pedal to get it back.
Very rarely do we see them have extended shifts in their own zone when they are defending. It happened in the third period Tuesday night when forward Zach Hyman and center Auston Matthews scored 31 seconds apart for the Toronto Maple Leafs to tie the game at 2-2, a game the Blues ended up winning in overtime on a goal by center Ryan O'Reilly.
Certainly that little lapse in the third period was the exception to the rule. Normally the Blues are the ones putting pressure on the opposition, creating zone time in the offensive zone, spreading the ice and using the points.
When they don't have the puck, their back pressure and gap control from the defense has been really, really tight above the red line. It's hard for teams to get into their zone with any kind of numbers. They haven't been giving up many odd-man rushes. It's not going to happen. And that's made a big difference.