St. Louis Blues Defense is a Scout’s Dream

Alex Pietrangelo Predators
Alex Pietrangelo was selected 4th overall in 2008, just behind Steven Stamkos, Drew Doughty and Zach Bogosian. (Rich Kane/Icon SMI)

When the Director of Amateur Scouting of an NHL club heads to the NHL Entry Draft in June, he hopes to accomplish something that weekend that is a lot rarer than people may think.

Select a quality NHL player in the 1st round.

Every round is important; the Detroit Red Wings are proof of that.  Just look at perennial all-stars Pavel Datsyuk (selected in the 6th round, 171st overall, in the 1998 NHL Draft) and Henrik Zetterberg (selected in the 7th round, 210th overall, in the 1999 NHL Draft).

However, the 1st round is where teams expect to succeed with their draft selections.  These are the highly touted players; the ones that are expected to make the jump to the NHL faster than anyone else in the draft.  Most importantly, these are the guys that are supposed to be the best players on your NHL roster for years to come.

Currently, NHL scouts are drooling over what has happened this season with the St. Louis Blues.

Here is the current defensive team for the Blues and how they were drafted:

Carlo Colaiacovo – Selected in the 1st round, 17th overall, of the 2001 NHL Entry Draft (Toronto)

Ian Cole – Selected in the 1st round, 18th overall, of the 2007 NHL Entry Draft (St. Louis)

Kent Huskins* – Selected in the 6th round, 156th overall, of the 1998 NHL Entry Draft (Chicago)

Barret Jackman – Selected in the 1st round, 17th overall, of the 1999 NHL Entry Draft (St. Louis)

Alex Pietrangelo – Selected in the 1st round, 4th overall, of the 2008 NHL Entry Draft (St. Louis)

Roman Polak – Selected in the 6th round, 180th overall, of the 2004 NHL Entry Draft (St. Louis)

Kris Russell* – Selected in the 3rd round, 67th overall, of the 2005 NHL Entry Draft (Columbus)

Kevin Shattenkirk – Selected in the 1st round, 14th overall, of the 2007 NHL Entry Draft (Colorado)

*currently on injury-reserve.

With Huskins and Russell on the IR, the Blues have been sending out five out of six defensemen who were 1st round draft selections.  Not one other team in the NHL can make that claim.

Brian Elliott Blues
Brian Elliott and Jaroslav Halak both have GAAs below 2.00 thanks in large part to their defense. (Bob Frid/Icon SMI)

The smart drafting has led to a great product on the ice.  The Blues have allowed 20-or-less shots against 14 times this season and have allowed 40-or-more shots against in just one game this season.  This solid play has allowed for 12 shutouts this season (split between goaltenders Jaroslav Halak and Brian Elliott), and an average of just 1.87 goals-against-per-game.  The stingy defense has allowed just 2.59 shots-against-per-game.  All of these statistics lead the league in each category.

They do so much in front of us [goaltenders],” Elliott said after a 13-save shutout against the Minnesota Wild on February 18.  “You don’t want to let them down on the shot that gets through.”

How are they allowing so few shots-against on a nightly basis?

“We block a lot of shots and we play fast,” said Blues’ ice-time leader Alex Pietrangelo.  “We’re not going to keep the puck in our end for very long and we’re going to move the puck up as fast as we can.”

The transition-game for St. Louis has been something to marvel.  After the Blues block shots and passes in the slot, it is a common occurrence to see the three forwards along with one defenseman break up the ice.  The four-man attack has led to various scoring chances for the Blues.

“I think we’ve really worked hard at having them be part of the [offense],” Head Coach Ken Hitchcock said after a 3-1 win over the Anaheim Ducks Thursday night.  “Not everybody has a green light but we have three of the six that we pretty much give the green light to and we want them to be part of our offense.  I think it’s the only way that you can score in the league now.  You have to include a 4th attacker on everything.  Teams are too disciplined [and] they are too structured so we work really hard at creating seams for our defensemen to be a part of the rush.  I know there’s a risk to it but I think that as long as we enter the zone properly then there is no risk to it.  But we need those guys to be part of the rush.  They create a lot of offense for us and we include them in everything.”

Pietrangelo, in his second-full NHL season, finds himself tied for 5th in scoring by defensemen, posting 41 points.  Shattenkirk is right behind him, tied for 14th with 36 points.  Shattenkirk also ranks 5th among all NHL players with a plus-26 rating.

The defense has also been solid when they are a man-down.  Tuesday night’s 5-1 win over the division-rival Chicago Blackhawks was due in large part to the success of the penalty-kill.  The Blues killed off all five Chicago power-plays and allowed just three shots in that time.  Forward Vladimir Sobotka even added a shorthanded goal due to the penalty-kill squad’s unwillingness to let Chicago set-up with the extra man.

“[Not allowing power-play goals is] all a part of working hard, blocking shots and getting in lanes and not letting them get set-up,” Pietrangelo said after the victory.  “We’re able to get in those lanes and pressure them to make the plays that they don’t want to.”

The penalty-kill has not allowed a power-play goal since James Wisniewski’s late first period goal on Valentine’s Day.  They have killed off 35 consecutive power-plays.

Barret Jackman Blues
Barret Jackman and the Blues' PK ranks 9th in the league with an 83.7%. (Icon SMI)

The penalty killing and the goaltending have been the No. 1 and 2 aspects of our game that have helped us win,” Hitchcock said.  “When you kill penalties and you take out the top players and they don’t get a beat in on the game, they don’t get a bite on the game, they get discouraged and then I think the team loses energy.”

The penalty-kill and overall outstanding defensive play has been the key to the Blues’ success this season.  After Thursday’s win over the Ducks, the Blues find themselves atop the NHL standings.

“It’s an accomplishment and it shows that we’ve come a long way,” Pietrangelo said. “It’s exciting, especially given everything we’ve gone through to get to this point with a couple [bad] years that we had there.”

Bad years lead to higher 1st round picks and forces the hand of management to make trades.  In the Blues’ case, these trades have only benefited the future of the franchise.

The Blues’ road to success is exactly one that several NHL scouts will be trying to follow in this June’s draft.