Takeaways: Islanders Hold On for 3-1 Win Over Blues

Takeaways: Islanders Hold On for 3-1 Win Over Blues

Isles snap three-game winless skid with a victory on home ice

The New York Islanders came back home and came out with a much-needed win, as they beat the St. Louis Blues 3-1 on Saturday night.

Kyle Palmieri (2G) and Brock Nelson (1G, 2A) scored for the Islanders, while Jake Neighbours scored the lone tally for St. Louis. Ilya Sorokin made 24 saves in his 100th career win, while Jordan Binnington made 28 of 30 saves in the loss.

The victory put an end to the Isles’ three-game winless skid (0-2-1) following a road trip where they went 1-2-2.

“Tonight we did a good job of focusing on the task at hand,” Kyle Palmieri said. “We weren’t thinking about Calgary or Detroit or Seattle. We were focused on getting the job done here at home.”

The Islanders were stingy out of the gate, holding the Blues scoreless through two periods while building a 2-0 lead. Nelson rushed into the Blues zone and dished the puck to Kyle Palmieri, who ripped a shot through Binnington from the slot to open the scoring at the 18:51 mark.

The Islanders power play, which was 1 for 12 in the last five games entering Saturday’s contest, converted on its second opportunity of the night. Maxim Tysplakov controlled the puck behind the net and found Nelson in the slot – who wristed the shot from his knees – to double the Islanders lead to 2-0 at 15:55 of the second period.

The Blues bit back in the third period. Neighbours, who scored the lone goal in a shutout 1-0 win for the Blues earlier this season against the Islanders, got the Blues on the board 45 seconds into the third period. Though the Blues pulled within one, the Islanders played well defensively.

“Even when they made it a 2-1 game when they scored on that power play, I was pretty confident that we’d do a good job,” Head Coach Patrick Roy said. “The way we were calm and played hard, that’s what we want to do.”

Noah Dobson’s blast from outside the right circle was successfully challenged and was disallowed for goaltender interference, keeping the score at 2-1. The waning minutes of the third period felt intense for the Isles – who entered the game tied for the league’s highest goal allowed in the final frame (29) – but Palmieri buried the empty-net goal for his second tally of the night.

“We’ve been talking the five-on-six, I wasn’t nervous about it,” Roy said. “I thought our guys played really well and it was nice to see Palms score the empty netter.”

Nelson made history with each point he scored on Saturday. With an assist on Palmieri’s first period goal, he tied Bob Bourne for 10th on the all-time franchise scoring leaderboard with 542 points, took sole possession of 10th with his second period power-play tally, then tied John Tonelli for ninth all-time with an assist on Palmieri’s empty-net goal.

After three consecutive games where the Islanders built a lead and let it slip in the third period, closing out the win was important confidence-wise.

“It’s nice to close that one out,” Scott Mayfield said. “It’s been kind of a sore spot for us, and it’s a confidence booster that we can do it. Just go out there with that attitude and play our game.”

STL at NYI | Recap

SOROKIN EARNS 100TH CAREER WIN

With a 24-save effort, Ilya Sorokin earned his 100th career win on Saturday night after being stuck at 99 for his last four starts.

“He probably should have gotten it a while ago with some of the performances he’s had,” Palmieri said. “The opportunities he’s given us to win hockey games, we’re so happy for him.”

When the Blues tested the Isles with 10 shots in the third period, Sorokin bailed the Islanders out with nine of 10 saves, including several big saves late in the third period. Roy praised the netminder for his stellar performance.

“He’s making key saves at the right moments, and tonight we fortunately scored enough goals for him,” Roy said. “100 wins is a nice achievement.”

Sorokin has always been humble when it comes to his personal accolades.

“Nothing,” Sorokin said with a laugh, when asked about what his 100th win means to him. “I hear about this, but I’m just focused on my game and the team.”

STL@NYI: Palmieri scores goal against Jordan Binnington

ODDS AND ENDS

– With a two-goal night, Palmieri took the team lead in goals (9) and retained the team lead in scoring with 18 points.
– Scott Mayfield recorded a career-high nine blocked shots. His previous career-best was eight blocked shots on Apr. 9, 2016.
– Anders Lee took a team-high six shots.
– The Islanders dominated in the dot, winning 34 of 53 draws as a team while Bo Horvat led the charge with an 80% rate (12 for 15), which was a testament to the Isles’ NHL-best 55.3% average in the dot this season.

“Bo was on fire, winning 80% but all of our guys were really sharp,” Roy said. “All season we’ve been very good on faceoff. [Assistant Coach Benoit Desrosiers] has been working with the guys.”

– Simon Holmstrom has two points in his last two games (1G, 1A).

STL@NYI: Nelson scores PPG against Jordan Binnington

LINEUP CHANGES

Roy kept his forward lines and d-pairs the same from last game, while giving Ilya Sorokin his second consecutive start.

NOTABLE QUOTE

Eight-year-old Henry, an Isles fan who’s battling cancer, was in attendance for Hockey Fights Cancer Night at UBS Arena. He said before the game that he wants to see his favorite player Brock Nelson score a goal. Nelson delivered with a huge power-play goal ion the second period.

“I said I’ll do my best,” Nelson said with a smile. “What a night to go out there and do that… it was positive energy and a little bit of manifestation. It’s special that it was a request from him, and I was able to deliver.”

NEXT GAME

The Islanders continue their three-game homestand when they host the Detroit Red Wings on Monday. Puck drop is at 7:30 p.m. at UBS Arena.

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UBS Postgame Photos: Islanders 3, Blues 1

Snapshots from the New York Islanders 3-1 win over the St. Louis Blues on Saturday, Nov. 23, 2024. Photo credit: Dennis DaSilva/ New York Islanders, Sam Johnston/ New York Islanders, Bruce Bennett via Getty Images and Mike Stobe/NHLI via Getty Images.