It has been a startling downward spike for the Bruins, who returned home after their road trip with aims of separating themselves from their Eastern Conference competition. But a string of injuries - Aaron Ward (broken left foot) being the latest casualty - has left coach Claude Julien with a battered lineup that's missing two key defensemen (Andrew Alberts sat out yesterday) and the two season-starting alternate captains, Patrice Bergeron and Glen Murray.
Yesterday, Julien was forced to play three rookies - Milan Lucic, Vladimir Sobotka, and Petteri Nokelainen - up front, while 21-year-old Matt Lashoff, called up Friday, appeared in his second NHL game of the season on the back end.
But perhaps more concerning than the team's inexperience is the fatigue that's starting to show in Zdeno Chara, Dennis Wideman, and Marc Savard, three players who have been tapped to jack up their contributions.
Chara (33:01 of ice time) came out of the loss with a minus-4 rating, while Wideman (32:16) and Savard (24:17) were on the ice for two St. Louis goals. Chara and Wideman rolled over the boards a combined 56 times, but the fifth and sixth defensemen - Lashoff (5:40) and Bobby Allen (5:50) - hit the ice for only 13 total shifts.
"Absolutely, there is a worry," Julien said of the increased workloads. "I think it showed [against the Blues]. We are in that situation where guys are logging a lot of ice time. It's going to be important for those guys to do less but to do better and simplify their games. That way, they can kind of last this situation out."
In the first period, St. Louis right winger Lee Stempniak used Chara as a screen and whistled an off-wing wrister over Tim Thomas (25 saves), picking the top-right corner at 11:56 to give his club a 1-0 lead.
Then, with 2:20 remaining in the second period, ex-Bruin Brad Boyes netted the winning goal. Forward Jay McClement slid a pass between Chara's skates to Boyes, who slammed a shot past Thomas for his 21st strike.