The Bruins struck first in the 2019 Stanley Cup Final.
Boston scored four unanswered goals to pull out a 4-2 win over the Blues in Game 1 on Monday at TD Garden. The Bruins now hold a 1-0 lead in the best of seven series.
What a turnaround!
— NHL (@NHL) May 28, 2019
The @NHLBruins take Game 1 of the #StanleyCup Final. pic.twitter.com/nZyYOGIAPc
The Bruins will host the Blues in Game 2 on Wednesday at 8 p.m. ET.
Here are three takeaways from Boston's Game 1 win
Bruins overcome long layoff
The Bruins swept the Hurricanes in the Eastern Conference finals and had 10 full days off before facing the Blues in Game 1.
Boston — which held an intrasquad scrimmage late last week — wasn’t sharp early and fell behind less than 10 minutes into the first period.
The Bruins, however, shook off the rust and bounced back to come away with the win. Sean Kuraly put the Bruins ahead for good with a goal a little more than five minutes into the final period.
Guess this is what the kids call a game changer? 🤷♂️ #StanleyCup
— NHL (@NHL) May 28, 2019
🇺🇸📺: https://t.co/x1v5IP9RaP @nbc
🇨🇦📺: https://t.co/Ru1tdgCszT @Sportsnet pic.twitter.com/zvDbNNPK4h
Brad Marchand then added an empty netter to secure the victory.
Momentum shifts in second period
The Blues had all the momentum early in the second period after Vladimir Tarasenko found the back of the net less than a minute in to put his team ahead, 2-0.
When opportunity knocks, open the door. #StanleyCup
— NHL (@NHL) May 28, 2019
NHL x @massmutual pic.twitter.com/GKwIN5zdBY
But from there, the period was disastrous for St. Louis as Boston dominated. Connor Clifton quickly scored the Bruins’ first goal of the 2019 Stanley Cup and Charlie McAvoy followed with a power play goal a little more than 10 minutes later.
TIE GAME. @CMcAvoy44 with the equalizer.
— #StanleyCup on NBC (@NHLonNBCSports) May 28, 2019
📺: @nbc or stream it here: https://t.co/svSJ7srvwn pic.twitter.com/vugRzVpEPq
In total, the Bruins outshot the Blues, 18-3, in the period.
The score could have been a lot worse for the Blues heading into the intermission, which leads us to our next takeaway.
Jordan Binnington gave Blues a chance
Blues goalie Jordan Binnington was great in Game 1 despite the loss.
The 25-year-old rookie kept his team competitive throughout the matchup. He made 34 saves and limited Boston to just one goal on five power-play attempts.
Come for the slick move, stay for the spin cycle, enjoy the save as an encore. #StanleyCup pic.twitter.com/wyQUAsSEya
— #StanleyCup on NBC (@NHLonNBCSports) May 28, 2019
St. Louis will hope Binnington can repeat his performance Wednesday as the team looks to even the series at 1-1.
Tuukka Rask made 18 saves for the Bruins in the winning effort.