CHICAGO – Charlie Coyle scored the winner in the shootout and the Boston Bruins recovered from blowing a 3-0 lead to beat the St. Louis Blues 4-3 for their 60th win of the season.
Linus Ullmark made 35 saves and stopped all three of St. Louis’ shootout attempts to lead Boston to its third straight win. Jake DeBrusk, Tyler Bertuzzi and Oskar Steen all scored in regulation for Boston.
Jordan Kyrou scored twice, including the tying goal with 25 seconds left in regulation, and Torey Krug also had a goal for St. Louis. Jordan Binnington made 28 saves for St. Louis which lost its second straight game.
Elsewhere, Dougie Hamilton, Erik Haula, Jesper Boqvist and Timo Meier each had a goal and an assist and the New Jersey Devils beat the Chicago Blackhawks 6-3 for their second straight victory.
Ryan Graves also scored and Dawson Mercer added a empty-netter for the Devils. They have 104 points, one behind first-place Carolina in the Metropolitan Division. New Jersey´s leading scorer, 21-year-old Jack Hughes, added two assists.
Andreas Athanasiou had a goal and assist for last-place Chicago in its eighth straight loss. Tyler Johnson scored for the third straight game and rookie Lukas Reichel deflected in a goal.
Longtime Blackhawks captain Jonathan Toews returned from two-month medical leave of absence.
The 34-yeare-old Toews took the opening faceoff for Chicago as he appeared in a game for the first time since Jan. 28 at Edmonton. He set up Athanasiou´s goal in the third period.
“Definitely finding my way a little bit,” Toews said. “I think the first period was rough. That´s a fast team, a fast game.”
Toews made a statement through the team Feb. 19 saying he would be stepping away because of the effects of Chronic Immune Response Syndrome and “long COVID.”
Toews was back on the ice with teammates in a practice session on Tuesday, but didn´t commit to returning this season and hinted at retirement. His eight-year, $84 million contract is set to expire at the end of the season.
The Blackhawks stayed close into the second period. Then the speedy Devils picked up the pace late in the second to take the lead and pull away.
New Jersey has started slow and finished with flash before, coach Lindy Ruff said.
“We’ve had a lot of games when the first period hasn’t been our quickest, we haven’t played our quickest,” Ruff said. “We gained a lot of momentum in that second period and carried it into the third.
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