1 of 10St. Louis Blues center Robert Thomas (18) competes for the puck and New York Islanders center Casey Cizikas, right, during the third period of an NHL hockey game Tuesday, Dec. 6, 2022, in Elmont, N.Y. The Blues won 7-4. (AP Photo/Adam Hunger)
NEW YORK (AP) — Noel Acciari and Colton Parayko scored 13 seconds apart in the third period and the St. Louis Blues defeated the New York Islanders 7-4 on Tuesday night.
Josh Leivo had a goal and an assist and Thomas Greiss made 36 saves and the Blues snapped a four-game skid in the finale of a three-game northeastern road trip. Ivan Barbashev, Ryan O’Reilly and Robert Thomas also scored for St. Louis.
Noah Dobson, Zach Parise, Hudson Fasching and Jean-Gabriel Pageau scored for New York. Ilya Sorokin made 21 saves, but the Islanders fell for the third time in four games.
Parise, Fasching and Pageau scored within a 9:28 stretch in the third period to trim their deficit to one goal. But empty-net goals by Thomas and Acciari sealed the victory in favor of St. Louis.
“We got a veteran group, we all knew what we needed to do,” Leivo said of the final five minutes. “Get behind them, get pucks deep and shut them down. Happy to get the two points.”
Barbashev gave the Blues a 2-1 lead at 3:51 of the second period when he buried a feed from William Bitten on an odd-man rush opportunity. Islanders defenseman Scott Mayfield failed to keep the puck in the offensive zone after a strange bounce off the boards and the Blues capitalized.
“My speed is one of my biggest factors,” Bitten said after registering his first NHL point. “Took it wide, saw Barbashev, put it right on the money for him and he buried it. … Pretty special point for me, I worked really hard for this opportunity and to get to this level. Really happy and excited about that point.”
O’Reilly extended St. Louis’ lead to two goals at 14:58 of the second period. The Blues captain fired a sharp-angled shot and then beat Islanders defenseman Alexander Romanov to the rebound before pushing the puck past Sorokin.
“That’s what we need right now,” O’Reilly said of the effort on his goal. “We are not really generating as much as we want to. You can tell everyone is a little bit hesitant and we are not feeling the way we normally do. … A lot of good things we did tonight.”
Leivo opened the scoring with a nifty wrist shot that rang off the post and in at 17:13 of the first period. The Islanders fell to 5-9 this season when surrendering the first goal.
Dobson’s top-shelf one-timer evened the score at 1-all 39 seconds after Leivo notched his first of the season. Mathew Barzal showed off his great vision with a beautiful backhand pass to set up Dobson in the slot.
“We made some uncharacteristic decisions that led to a couple outnumbered rushes that they ended up scoring on,” Islanders coach Lane Lambert said. “Uncharacteristic and it cost us.”
Greiss preserved the Blues’ two-goal edge early in the third period with a critical stop on Parise off a pass from Jean-Gabriel Pageau. The German goaltender spent five seasons with the Islanders and helped the franchise end a 23-year drought without a playoff series victory when he guided the team past the Florida Panthers in the first round of the 2016 Stanley Cup Playoffs.
“We felt confident in how we were playing, it just wasn’t going in,” Islanders captain Anders Lee said.
Pavel Buchnevich (lower-body) and Torey Krug (upper-body) missed the game against the Islanders after sustaining injuries in the Blues’ 6-4 loss against the New York Rangers on Monday evening.
Islanders defenseman Adam Pelech left the game in the third period and did not return.
OFFENSE FROM THE BLUE LINE
Blues defensemen have accounted for over 15% of the team’s goals this season, and St. Louis is 8-1 when a defenseman scores a goal. In addition, Blues defenders have contributed five power-play goals this season, tied for the most in the NHL with the Nashville Predators and Florida Panthers.
SCHEDULE QUIRKS
The Islanders opponent is on the back end of a back-to-back for all three games on this homestand. Nashville played at New Jersey, while both Chicago and St. Louis visited UBS the day after playing at Madison Square Garden. It is the first time in Islanders history that a rested Islanders team has hosted a team that has played at another metro-area opponent for three straight games (per Islanders statistician Eric Hornick).