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Blues Beat Bruins In Shootout

 Bruins center Patrice Bergeron (37) hits the post during the shootout on St. Louis Blues goalie Jaroslav Halak in Boston Saturday. (AP Photo/Winslow Townson)
Bruins center Patrice Bergeron (37) hits the post during the shootout on St. Louis Blues goalie Jaroslav Halak in Boston Saturday. (AP Photo/Winslow Townson)

Jaroslav Halak finally gave up a goal. The posts can only help so much.

Halak's shutout streak ended, but the St. Louis goalie extended his winning streak to six straight games with a lot of help from the posts on Saturday night, and the Blues beat Boston 2-1 in a shootout.

Two would-be Bruins goals were overturned in regulation when replay showed they went off the posts; another two shots clanged off posts in the shootout.

"Usually that's a good thing for a goaltender, when it hits a post," Halak said with a smile. "Four posts tonight."

Ex-Bruins center Vladimir Sobotka scored on a giveaway from Boston defenseman Dennis Seidenberg late in the first period. It stayed that way until Gregory Campbell scored with 7 minutes left in the third period to tie the game and spoil Halak's hopes for a fourth shutout in five games.

It was the first goal he had allowed in 150 minutes, 3 seconds.

"He was solid again," Blues coach Davis Payne said. "He makes a lot of key saves for us when we make mistakes. That's why he is the goaltender he is."

T.J. Oshie and Brad Boyes both beat Tuukka Rask in the shootout. Halak stopped Patrice Bergeron and Michael Ryder, with help from the post both times.

"Our guys were hitting a lot of posts, and it ended up going in the wrong direction," Bruins coach Claude Julien said. "I thought our guys were a little snakebit: two reviews. Even in the overtime we scored a goal, and the other two hit posts."

Halak and the Blues have won six straight games - their longest winning streak since 2003. They have just one loss in regulation all season, and their four overtime games are the most in the NHL.

In the shootout, Bergeron put his shot off the left post, and Oshie went under Rask's pads to make it 1-0. Tyler Seguin faked right and went left for a backhand that tied it, then Boyes scored to put the Blues back in the lead. When Ryder's shot appeared to deflect off Halak's glove and then the post, the Blues had clinched the win.

The Bruins have lost back-to-back games for the first time, losing to Washington 5-3 on Friday night after Rask came in to replace starter Tim Thomas in the third period, trailing 3-0. That leaves Rask with all four of Boston's losses this season.

But he matched Halak in regulation, stopping 34 shots in his best performance of the season.

"An unlucky start for him thus far," Bruins forward Milan Lucic said. "But he was great tonight and kept us in the game."

And the Boston offense just missed giving him the win.

The Bruins saw the red light go on twice, but both goals were erased on replay.

In the first period, Nathan Horton did a spin move from the right circle and sent the puck off the far post. It bounced behind Halak, who reached back and covered it with his glove as the light went on; the referee immediately signaled no goal.

In the second, it was Horton again who lost the goal on review. He made a quality move to get around defenseman Eric Brewer, who hooked Horton down as he put the puck off the top corner of the net on Halak's glove side. It bounced onto the goal line and trickled around but, replay showed, didn't go into the net.

The Bruins finally tied it when Ryder brought the puck over at the left side and centered it to Campbell, who one-timed a shot as he dropped to his knee.

This program aired on November 7, 2010. The audio for this program is not available.

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