Struggling Blues seek to regain swagger, move up in playoff hunt

Craig Berube stood back and watched his St. Louis Blues practice battle drills so he could see how players handled the situation amid a seven-game losing streak.

Anyone looking in from the outside can spy a team in deep trouble.

Berube’s Blues have lost 12 of their last 14 games and are running out of time to salvage their season and make the playoffs. Less than two years since going on an improbable run to win the Stanley Cup, St. Louis has a brutal schedule down the stretch and faces an uphill climb to even qualify for the NHL postseason.

“We’re in a hole right now and we’ve got to scratch and claw our way out of it,” Berube said Tuesday. “I know this group cares, and things aren’t going well right now. But to get out of it, you’ve got to keep believing and keep working and keep competing and stick together. That’s the only way you get out of it.”

The Blues woke up March 6 second in the West Division before this free-fall started and now sit five points back of the final playoff spot with 18 games to go. That’s not an impossible margin to erase, but 14 of the final 18 games are against one of the top three in the West: Vegas, Colorado or Arizona.

“We’ve got tough games and great opportunities, and obviously, the teams we’re playing throughout the end of the year here are the teams we’re going to have to get through to reach our goal,” center Tyler Bozak said. “It’s going to be fun. We all love playing meaningful games, and obviously, these ones mean a lot.”

They’ve meant a lot for some time, and the Blues have squandered plenty of chances already. They’ve been outscored 25-8 during the seven-game skid, evidence that they can’t get a goal or a stop when they need it.

Injuries have hamstrung the Blues, from playing without top defenseman Colton Parayko from mid-February until Monday to losing grinding forward Oskar Sundqvist and defenseman Carl Gunnarsson to season-ending knee injuries. But Berube still expects the leadership group and core players to lead the way out of this slump.

“That’s what those guys get paid to do is score goals and to do the right things on a nightly basis,” he said. “We’re not getting that, so it’s tough to win. It’s the same thing when I talk about the goaltending. You need saves, and we’re not getting enough of them.”

That falls on goaltender Jordan Binnington, who came out of nowhere to win the Cup in 2019 and was an All-Star last season. Binnington ranks 39th in the league with a 2.77 goals-against average and 43rd with a .904 save percentage.

Asked what he needed to do better, Binnington said: “Just make a couple more saves. Same approach: Prepare the best way you can and focus and give the team a chance to win.”

Berube wants to see Binnington’s — and the whole team’s — swagger back, but the 27-year-old doesn’t think he ever lost it.

“I always have swagger,” Binnington said. “Sometimes I just do my job and make the saves I’m supposed to make, sometimes you do more and you want to win those games 1-0, 2-0. I always want to play hard and have fun doing it.”

It’s not much fun for the Blues right now and won’t get any better if they don’t find their game quickly. Some of the cast has changed, including captain Alex Pietrangelo leaving for Vegas in free agency, but this is a similar roster to the one that won the Cup, so there’s belief inside the locker room that not all is lost.

“We have such a great group in there, and if there’s a group that’s going to turn it around, this is the group to do it,” Parayko said. “We’re sticking together. We’re going to make progress. We’re going to push. … I have no doubt this is the group to turn it around.”