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Boston Bruins players take-in the Stanley Cup loss

Blues down Bruins 4-1 in Game 7 to win first Stanley Cup

Jun 13, 2019 | 12:00 AM

BOSTON — The St. Louis Blues have won their first Stanley Cup in franchise history.

Jordan Binnington made 32 saves and Alex Pietrangelo and Ryan O’Reilly had a goal and an assist apiece as the Blues downed the Boston Bruins 4-1 in Game 7 of the NHL’s championship series.

Brayden Schenn and Zach Sanford also scored for St. Louis. Jaden Schwartz tacked on two assists.

Matt Grzelcyk spoiled Binnington’s shutout bid with two minutes left in the third period.

The Bruins had it all lined up: a raucous home crowd for its first Game 7 of a Stanley Cup Final in their 95-year history, was aided by a couple of world champions from other sports and a fast start that provided a handful of excellent scoring chances in the opening period.

Then in a matter of three minutes because of a slow line change and a bad turnover by forward David Pastrnak, it was gone.

The St. Louis Blues stunned the Bruins and their fans with two quick goals, took that 2-0 lead into the first intermission and cruised to a 4-1 win Wednesday night to celebrate their first championship.

Also gone was the city’s chance for its 13th championship since 2002 that would have joined the New England Patriots’ six, four by the Red Sox and one each by the Celtics and Bruins.

After Patriots Super Bowl MVP Julian Edelman and Olympic champion gymnast Aly Raisman — both wearing David Ortiz white home jerseys as the honorary flag bearers — came out and fired up the crowd Boston came charging out quickly before its momentum disappeared late in the opening period even quicker.

They even showed 2004 World Series star Curt Schilling on the Jumbotron flashing his championship ring. Boston was searching for its first Cup since 2011 when it beat Game 7 in Vancouver, but nothing worked.

The Bruins were handed a power play on a delay of game penalty by Blues defenceman Colton Parayko 7:57 into the period and they certainly had their chances — like they did for a lot of the opening 10 minutes of the game.

Brad Marchand, the team’s leading scorer in the post-season, was robbed by Jordan Binnington on a wrister from the slot. After the penalty was over, David Krejci cut in alone and Binnington flashed his right pad to rob his backhander from the edge of the crease. They had another excellent chance when Marcus Johansson came charging in alone from the right circle, but Binnington dove out to make the stop.

That’s when Boston seemed to fall apart defensively late in the period. On slow change, the Blues collected the puck in the neutral zone and defenceman Jay Bouwmeester fired a shot from the point that Ryan O’Reilly tipped between Rask’s pads at 16:47.

In the closing seconds, Pastrnak gave the puck up in his own end. Jaden Schwartz sent a pass to Alex Pietrangelo and the defenceman beat Rask with a backhander to the blocker side from the slot with eight seconds left.

Ryan O’Reilly won the Conn Smythe Trophy as the most valuable player in the NHL playoffs, making good on Doug Armstrong’s blockbuster trade to acquire him last summer — and the line he told the St. Louis general manager on that initial call: “Let’s go win a Cup.”

Ryan O”Reilly wins Conn Smythe Trophy as most valuable player in the NHL playoffs,

O’Reilly set a Blues record with 24 playoff points and became the first player since Wayne Gretzky in 1985 to score in four consecutive Cup Final games.

“You dream of this for so long,” said O’Reilly. “As a kid, that feeling comes back to you of just what it means to win this thing. I still can’t believe this. I can’t believe I’m here right now and a Stanley Cup champion with this group of guys.”

The 28-year-old centre’s career hit a new peak this season when he was a finalist for the Selke Trophy as best defensive forward and the Lady Byng for sportsmanlike and gentlemanly conduct. Then he raised his game even further.

After scoring just three goals in his first 22 playoff games, O’Reilly scored five in the past four to carry the Blues to the Stanley Cup.