By Associated Press - Thursday, August 13, 2020

EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) - Bo Horvat scored twice and the Vancouver Canucks beat the defending Stanley Cup champion St. Louis Blues 5-2 on Wednesday in the opening game of their best-of-seven first-round series.

J.T. Miller, Elias Pettersson and Troy Stecher also scored for Vancouver.

David Perron and Jaden Schwartz scored for St. Louis.

Game 2 is set for Friday night.

Horvat has four goals in return-to-play action while rookie teammate Quinn Hughes logged an assist to reach seven points (one goal, six helpers) in five games.

Horvat said the Canucks were ready to match the Blues’ intensity.

“They won the cup for a reason, so we were ready for it,” Horvat said. “I thought we showed some good things tonight, some push-back and obviously scoring those big goals late was a huge clutch for us.

“And I couldn’t be happier for Troy to get that one. I think I can speak for everybody (on that).”

Stecher broke a 2-2 tie in the third period when he raced down the right wing and sent a slap shot from the circle under the arm of St. Louis goalie Jordan Binnington.

Stecher then pointed to the sky to acknowledge his father, Peter, who passed away on Father’s Day due to complications from diabetes.

“It’s been tough obviously at certain moments throughout this process,” the 26-year-old Stecher said.

“I had a couple of seconds there to reflect on my dad. The biggest thing was everybody showed their support on the bench instantly, kind of gave me a tap, and that kind of motivated me to keep it going.”

Jacob Markstrom made 29 stops for the win.

The Canucks were making their first playoff appearance since 2015, having defeated the Minnesota Wild in the qualifying round.

They never trailed in the game.

The teams swapped mirror-image power-play goals in the first period.

Horvat opened the scoring about five minutes in when he one-timed a feed from Hughes from the top of the left circle past Binnington.

St. Louis countered with under four minutes to go. Perron slapped a pass from Brayden Schenn from the top of the right circle high over the glove of Markstrom.

Vancouver regained the lead on the power play midway through the second period. Pettersson whipped the puck under the bar off a goalmouth scramble for his second goal.

The Blues tied it just over a minute later when Schwartz tipped the puck past pinching Canuck defenseman Chris Tanev at the Blues’ blue line, then charged in on a breakaway and beat Markstrom with a nifty backhander through the pads.

After Stetcher’s goal, Horvat turned Blues defenseman Vince Dunn inside out, raced in and fired a wrist shot past Binnington on the blocker side.

Miller added the fifth goal on the power play with less than 40 seconds left.

St. Louis coach Craig Berube said he saw positives against Vancouver.

“I thought that we did a good job controlling the tempo and the play,” Berube said. “We had a lot of good looks. We’re going to have to do a better job of getting more traffic in front of their goalie and getting some greasy goals.

“Listen, we’ll fix it. We’ll get better next game. It’s a long series.”

The Canucks are winning with a mix of veterans and playoff newbies.

Pettersson, Brock Boeser, Jake Virtanen, Tyler Motte, Hughes, Stecher, Zack MacEwen, and Markstrom were regulars playing in their first playoff game (although technically they have playoff experience as the qualifying round statistics will count as post-season ones).

NOTES: St. Louis was the best in the Western Conference (42-19-10) and second overall in the league when the NHL suspended play March 12 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In the return to action, they have squandered third-period leads in every game and have scored just six goals in three contests. … History is on Vancouver’s side. The teams have met three times in the playoffs (1995, 2003 and 2009). Each time the Canucks bounced the Blues out in the first round.

UP NEXT

Game 2 is set for Friday night.

___

For more AP NHL coverage: https://apnews.com/NHL and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

Copyright © 2024 The Washington Times, LLC.

Please read our comment policy before commenting.

Click to Read More and View Comments

Click to Hide