St. Louis Blues coach Craig Berube was one of many who enjoyed the teamâs recently completed Hall of Fame weekend.
On Friday night, the team inducted its inaugural Hall of Fame class before a sold-out crowd at the Missouri Athletic Club downtown. Included in that class were some of the best the NHL has seen, including Scotty Bowman, Red Berenson, Garry Unger, Bernie Federko, Bob Gassoff, Glenn Hall, Brett Hull, Dan Kelly, Al MacInnis, Barclay Plager, Bob Plager, Chris Pronger, Sid Salomon Jr., Sid Salomon III and Brian Sutter.
And then the seven Bluesâ Hall of Famers in attendance â Bowman, Berenson, Unger, Federko, Hull, MacInnis and Pronger â took part in a ceremonial puck drop before Saturday nightâs game against the Tampa Bay Lightning.
âIt was great, a lot of fun,â Berube said when asked about Fridayâs induction ceremony. âJust to see those guys and listen to all the stories, it was great stuff.â
Berube played 17 seasons of NHL hockey and is in his seventh as a head coach. He played with MacInnis in Calgary, coached Pronger in Philadelphia and played against several of the Bluesâ Hall of Famers. But he got a special thrill in getting a chance to talk with the 89-year-old Bowman.
Widely regarded as the greatest coach in NHL history, Bowman holds the record for wins in league history with 1,244 in the regular season and 223 in the Stanley Cup playoffs. Heâs won a record nine Stanley Cup championships, including five with the Montreal Canadiens (1973, 1976-79), one with the Pittsburgh Penguins (1992) and three with the Detroit Red Wings (1997-98 and 2002). Heâs the only coach to lead three teams to Stanley Cup titles.
Bowman, who coached 30 NHL seasons, was the charter coach of the Blues, working here from 1969 through 1971.
âHeâs an interesting guy, a great guy,â Berube said. I got âa lot of good stuff from him. I talked to him Friday night at the Hall of Fame (induction) for a while, but then he came down here on the day of the game in the locker room before practice and we went and watched the pregame skate a little bit. Heâs got a lot of knowledge, obviously, and a great memory. We were talking about a lot of different things. I loved it. I like all the stories about his days when he coached and the different eras and the things he did and what he didnât do. We were talking about different things, the Russian players and the Czech players, this and that and how he did things with those type of players. It was great. I loved it. I like all that stuff, and I like the history of the game.â
He coached âa long time. Obviously, youâve got to love it and youâve got to love being around the game to last that long,â Berube continued. âHe still loves the game. He goes to all the games in Tampa. He lives down there and loves the game of hockey and enjoys watching it now.â
In preparation for Mondayâs game against the Ottawa Senators, the Blues shifted Nick Leddy to a defensive pairing with Colton Parayko. That puts Niko Mikkola with Justin Faulk and Calle Rosen with rookie Tyler Tucker.
âItâll give us a puck-mover in each group,â Berube said. âThat was my thought process on that.â
For the second consecutive day, Vladimir Tarasenko (hand) was on the ice for practice. It looks like he has a chance to return to the lineup sometime during this homestand, which continues with games this week against Nashville Predators on Thursday and against Chicago Blackhawks on Saturday and wraps up on Tuesday, Feb. 24, against the Buffalo Sabres.
âHe looked good, skating well and shooting a little bit, which is a good sign,â Berube said after Sundayâs workout. âHeâs going to keep practicing with us, and heâll let us know when heâs ready.â
Defenseman Marco Scandella (hip), who hasnât played at all this season, was also on the ice for the morning skate Monday.
The teamâs scratches for Mondayâs game were forward Nikita Alexandrov, dealing with an upper-body injury, and defenseman Steven Santini.
With a number of prospects, including Josh Leivo, Jake Neighbours, Nikita Alexandrov, Tyler Tucker and Steven Santini with the Blues, the Springfield (Massachusetts) Thunderbirds dropped their fourth straight AHL game on Monday afternoon, losing 6-2 to the visiting Bridgeport Islanders.
Springfield is 15-16-1-4 this season.
Springfieldâs Will Bitten, who had an assist during a four-game stay with the Blues in December, opened the scoring with his 12th goal of the season less than two minutes into the contest, but the visitors went on from there, scoring twice in the first period before exploding for four second-period goals.
Late in the game, Springfieldâs Matthew Highmore scored on the power play for the 6-2 final. Highmore leads the Thunderbirds in scoring this season with 34 points on eight goals and 26 assists.
Six different players scored for the Bridgeport, a farm team of the New York Islanders. The winning goalie was ex-NHLer Cory Schneider, who turned aside 41 of 43 shots.