Refurbished, loaded Blues looking to make playoff history
Brayden Schenn and Vladimir Tarasenko are leaders on a powerful Blues offense.
ST. LOUIS — One talented Russian winger. Deep lines and pairings. Years of playoff heartache.
Months after Alex Ovechkin and the Washington Capitals won the first Stanley Cup title in franchise history, the St. Louis Blues are looking to follow in their footsteps.
"They don't give up after a lot of tough years," star winger Vladimir Tarasenko said. "They work on their game, play hard and finally reach their goal, so this is a really good example for us. I think that's what we need to try to do."
St. Louis also is looking for the franchise's first championship. The Blues missed the playoffs last year after six consecutive appearances, falling one point shy of continuing the streak when they lost 5-2 at Colorado on the final day of the regular season.
General manager Doug Armstrong could have taken the franchise in a different direction after the disappointing finish, but he decided to strengthen the roster instead. The Blues signed center Tyler Bozak, wingers David Perron and Patrick Maroon, and backup goaltender Chad Johnson in free agency, and traded for center Ryan O'Reilly in a blockbuster deal with Buffalo.
The veteran holdovers, including Tarasenko, defenseman Alex Pietrangelo and goaltender Jake Allen, enjoyed the view during Armstrong's active offseason.
"It's obviously huge," said Brayden Schenn, who set career highs with 28 goals and 42 assists in his first year with St. Louis. "You look at our division, how tight it's going to be, how tight the West is going to be, you've got to have the pieces to compete, and we feel like we have that in this locker room."
With Schenn, O'Reilly and Bozak, the Blues have one of the league's strongest groups of centers. Perron collected a career-high 50 assists last season while helping expansion Vegas make it to the Stanley Cup Final, and the rugged Maroon had 17 goals and 26 assists in 74 games with Edmonton and New Jersey.
The Blues are hoping the new additions will help them get back to their usual lofty spot in the rough-and-tumble Central Division — and then make some playoff history.
"We need to learn from last year," Tarasenko said. "It's not enough to play up and down all year and then fighting for one point, I don't think that's the spot where we want to be. I think our goal is to make the playoff without questions and just win the Cup, so that's what we need to do and play more consistent during the season."
WATCHING FABBRI
Robby Fabbri missed all of last season after re-tearing the anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee. He had originally torn the ACL on Feb. 4, 2017, and missed the rest of that season. He was activated off injured reserve before the start of training camp but has been slowed by a groin strain.
The 22-year-old Fabbri was selected by St. Louis in the first round of the 2014 draft. He had 29 goals and 37 assists in 123 games before the run of injuries, and could add to the Blues' forward depth if he can find a way to stay healthy.
"He can do everything," Tarasenko said. "He's smart and can score, can pass the puck, like play the game well. You know when we was playing together, it was fun. I like spending time on the ice with him."
POWER-PLAY WOES
St. Louis finished 30th in the 31-team NHL with a 15.4 percent success rate on the power play last season, just ahead of Edmonton at 14.8 percent. The Blues had just 38 power-play goals.
WORTH WATCHING
Tarasenko, 26, remains one of the NHL's most gifted scorers. He had 33 goals and 33 assists in 80 games last season. But Tarasenko had left shoulder surgery April 11 after he got hurt in a collision with Colorado captain Gabriel Landeskog in the regular-season finale.
WORTH WATCHING II
Allen, 28, missed the start of training camp due to back spasms. He had a 2.75 goals-against average and .906 save percentage while splitting time with Carter Hutton last season, and his play in net is a big key for the Blues this year.