{{pageModel.leagueAbbr}} {{pageModel.subtitle}} | Las Vegas Review-Journal
National Hockey League
St. Louis 2, Boston 0
When: 7:00 PM ET, Tuesday, December 22, 2015
Where: TD Garden, Boston, Massachusetts
Referees: Chris Rooney, Ian Walsh
Linesmen: Scott Cherrey, Matt MacPherson
Attendance: 17565

BOSTON -- The St. Louis Blues needed a bounce-back effort Tuesday against a hot team to make up for blowing a three-goal lead and losing in Philadelphia on Monday.

They got it.

"The best we've played on the road was the first period (Monday), and probably the worst we've played was the second period (that night)," coach Ken Hitchcock said after the Blues scored twice in the third period and hit the NHL's Christmas break with a 2-0 victory over the Boston Bruins on Tuesday night. "And then to come back with a game like today just shows the character that we've got on the team when we dig in."

Sizzling right winger Vladimir Tarasenko and center Robby Fabbri scored third-period goals, and goalie Jake Allen stopped 32 shots for his fifth shutout of the season as the Blues (21-11-4, 10-5-2 on the road) won their fifth straight game at TD Garden.

"It was a well-played game by both teams," Hitchcock said. "Both teams really played with a sense of urgency defensively, so if you were going to score, it was going to have to be a mistake or it was going to have to be one of those fluky goals -- and the wrong guy for Boston got the breakaway and made the difference."

Tarasenko, scoring his sixth goal in the last seven games to move into a tie with Dallas Stars center Jamie Benn for the league lead, took a pass from left winger Magnus Paajarvi as Tarasenko sliced through defensemen Dennis Seidenberg and Colin Miller. He went in alone on goalie Tuukka Rask and scored his 22nd of the season at 7:35 of the third.

The goal extended Tarasenko's points streak to seven games (11 points) and gave him 16 points in the past 13 games.

"They got a break there with their most dangerous guy on a breakaway," Bruins coach Claude Julien said. "Tarasenko opened up the scoring, and that was probably the thing that stung the most."

The Bruins, absorbing only their second regulation loss in the past 16 games, their first since Dec. 7. They were blanked for the first time this season, saw their three-game winning streak end and fell to 19-10-4 -- on a night they had a chance to move into first place in the Atlantic Division.

"I think that's one of the messages I gave the team is that it's not a fun loss, it stings," Julien said. "We knew what the opportunity was, but at the same time, let's not forget what's happened here in the last month and a half or so. We've played some pretty decent hockey, so sometimes a loss like that just brings you back to reality."

Fabbri took a long pass from defenseman Alex Pietrangelo and broke down the left side alone, firing a wrist shot over Rask's glove and into the top corner with 7:10 left in the game.

Allen, who tied for the league shutout lead, wasn't all that busy in his 10th career shutout. His best stops came against right winger Loui Eriksson in the first period and left wingers Frank Vatrano and Brad Marchand in the second.

The shutout was the first for the Blues in Boston since 2002.

Not long after the Tarasenko goal, Paajarvi fed center Paul Stastny in front, and Rask, who made 27 saves as his five-game winning streak ended, made a huge save to keep the game at 1-0. But his team couldn't score.

Asked what the Bruins can take out of this game, Seidenberg said, "I guess the message is don't dwell on this loss too long. Take these three days off and come back hungry. And keep building on what we've built these last couple months and just keep being hungry and playing consistent hockey."

NOTES: Boston LW Max Talbot served the first half of his two-game suspension for hitting New Jersey's Jiri Tlusty, with LW Zac Rinaldo coming off IR (after missing three games with an upper body injury) back in the lineup. ... RW Jordan Caron, a former Bruin, made his Blues debut Tuesday night after being recalled from the minors. "We really liked him (in training camp)," said Blues coach Ken Hitchcock. "We really liked his strength on the puck. He had a slow start but he's played great down there lately. He deserves a chance to play." Caron replaced veteran C Scott Gomez in the lineup. ... Blues D Carl Gunnarsson, who left Monday night's game in Philadelphia with an arm injury, was out Tuesday but the injury isn't serious. ... Both teams come out of the Christmas break with home games Saturday -- the Blues hosting the Dallas Stars and the Bruins facing the Buffalo Sabres.
Top Game Performances
 
St. Louis   Boston
Robby Fabbri 1 Points N/A
Robby Fabbri 1 Goals N/A
David Backes 1 Assists N/A
N/A Power Play Goals N/A
N/A Short Handed Goals N/A
Jake Allen 1.000 Save Percentage Tuukka Rask .931
Jake Allen 32 Saves Tuukka Rask 27
Team Stats Summary
 
Team Shots Goals Power Play Penalty Kill Penalty Mins Face Offs Won
St. Louis 29 2 0-1 0-0 5 25
Boston 32 0 0-0 1-1 7 31
Upcoming Games
  • Boston will play their next game at home against Buffalo. The Bruins have a W/L % of .579 after a win and .571 after a loss.
  • St. Louis will play their next game at home against Dallas. The Blues have a W/L % of .476 after a win and .733 after a loss.