ST. LOUIS — Blues coach Craig Berube took a chance and challenged a late goal. Even though it didn’t work out, his players soon rewarded his faith in them.
Brayden Schenn scored, Jake Allen made 35 saves and St. Louis beat the Edmonton Oilers 2-1 on Wednesday night.
Mackenzie MacEachern also scored for the defending Stanley Cup champions, who won their fourth straight.
James Neal had a late goal and Mikko Koskinen stopped 42 shots for the Oilers, who lost for the fifth time in six games.
Neal scored with 1:50 left in the third period, and the Blues claimed Zack Kassian interfered with Allen. St. Louis was penalized for the unsuccessful challenge, giving the NHL's top power play a 6-on-4 advantage the rest of the way.
“Our mindset is always to be aggressive,” Berube said. “That kind of goes with the challenge, too. I try to be aggressive, too, and maybe to a fault. Maybe it was wrong tonight. I’ll look into it.”
Allen preferred facing a 6-on-4 instead of a 6-on-5.
“You don’t have to worry about icings,” he said. “It gives the other team more time and space to think and when you think you usually take plays a little bit for granted and it’s easier for us because we can stay in our PK structure; 6-on-5 you get running around a bit out there.”
Allen, playing for the first time since Dec. 10, made several saves during a late Edmonton push to preserve the lead, running his record to 6-2-2.
“Both goalies were on their game tonight for sure,” Oilers
Edmonton went 0 for 4 on the power play, snapping an eight-game scoring streak with the man advantage.
“World-class players over there with high-end skill that can make plays and shoot pucks,” Blues
Schenn’s 15th goal of the season gave the Blues a 1-0 lead at the 8:04 mark of the second period. Vince Dunn’s outlet pass sprung Schenn on a breakaway and he beat Koskinen with a shot to the upper right corner.
The goal gave Schenn 19 points (seven goals, 12 assists) in 17 career games against the Oilers. He is one point away from 400 in his career.
“You have no time to think, so whatever you see, try to make the most of it,” Schenn said of his breakaway. “I saw some room high glove. I probably shot it a little earlier than I probably should have, but I’ll definitely take it.”
Robert Thomas came close to adding to the Blues' lead late in the second, but his shot on a power play hit the post.
MacEachern gave St. Louis some breathing room, burying Ryan O’Reilly's perfect backhand feed from behind the Oilers net at 6:23 of the third.
“Kept pushing but couldn’t get enough,” Edmonton coach Dave Tippett said. “Koskinen was excellent. Kept us in the game, so a little disappointing we couldn’t find a way to manufacture a little more
Both teams had several quality opportunities in a scoreless first period that featured 25 total shots.
Troy Brouwer rang one off the crossbar for the Blues in the opening minutes. Allen made a tough save on Jujhar Khaira's point-blank chance midway through the period and stopped Connor McDavid's rebound try on a late power play.
NOTES: Oilers C Leon Draisaitl extended his point streak to five games with an assist. … Blues LW Jaden Schwartz got an assist on Schenn’s goal, giving him 27 points (12 goals, 15 assists) in 21 career games against Edmonton. … Kassian played in his 500th game. … Blues C Tyler Bozak (illness) was a late scratch and was replaced by Brouwer.
UP NEXT
Oilers: Host the Pittsburgh Penguins on Friday.
Blues: At the San Jose Sharks on Saturday.
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Joe Harris, The Associated Press