Friday, May 10, 2019

Armstrong: Berube will coach Blues moving forward

GM said on eve of Western Conference Final list was reduced to 
one after terrific second-half regular-season run, playoff advancement

By LOU KORAC
SAN JOSE, Calif. -- When Craig Berube was given the reigns of the Blues coaching job on the night of Nov. 19 when Mike Yeo was fired following a 2-0 loss to the Los Angeles Kings, the door was wide open as to who would take the position permanently.

That was then, this is now.

That endless door is down to one: the guy who's still guiding the ship.
(St. Louis Blues photo)
Blues interim coach Craig Berube looks on during action in the first round
of the Stanley Cup Playoffs against the Winnipeg Jets.

Blues general manager Doug Armstrong said on the eve of Game 1 of the Western Conference Final against the San Jose Sharks that the search has dwindled down to one: Berube.

It took some time for things to fall back on the rails, but once January hit and the Blues soared up the standings and into the Stanley Cup Playoffs, advancing to the conference final for the second time in four years, the evitable became quite inevitable.

The interim tag will soon be no more.

"When we asked Craig too take over the team, we were in flux at that point," Armstrong said. "I said to Craig, 'You take over on the interim basis and we'll go from there.'"

No contract has been signed yet. That will come at the conclusion of this season, and Armstrong said as much before the Stanley Cup Playoffs began when he announced Jay Bouwmeester's one-year extension and that there would be no more negotiations during the playoffs.

The Blues finished the regular season 30-10-5 after being in last place in the NHL the morning of Jan. 3 with a 15-18-4 record but finished 45-28-9. They climbed all the way up the standings and came within one point of matching Nashville for first place in the Central Division. 

In that 45-game run, the Blues won a franchise record 11 straight games from Jan. 23-Feb. 21. The Blues were 7-9-3 when Berube took over for Yeo, who was named an assistant coach with the Philadelphia Flyers earlier this week.

"We were going to support Craig and we were looking outside at potential candidates, whether it be major junior, Europe, the NHL, the American Hockey League," Armstrong said. "And as I started to work with Craig, whatever name was on the (candidate) list started to get crossed off and crossed off. Then I found the synergy that Craig and I have had. Now we're at a list of one."

The Blues defeated the Winnipeg Jets in six games in the first round, and just recently eliminated the Dallas Stars in seven games in the second round and are in search of their first Stanley Cup Final berth since 1970.
(St. Louis Blues photo)
Blues coach Craig Berube talks to players during a stoppage in play during
the first-round series against the Winnipeg Jets. Berube is expected to have
the interim tag removed and be named permanent coach after the season.

The 53-year-old Berube, who joined the Blues as associate coach under Yeo on June 15, 2017, wad coach of the Chicago Wolves of the American Hockey League in 2016-17; he was 75-58-28 as coach of the Flyers from 2013-15.

Berube played 17 seasons for the Flyers, Toronto Maple Leafs, Calgary Flames, Washington Capitals and New York Islanders. He had 159 points (61 goals, 98 assists) and 3,149 penalty minutes in 1,054 regular-season games.

* NOTES -- The Blues held a practice today at SAP Center ahead of Game 1 on Saturday. 

With a 5 p.m. local starting time (7 p.m. central time), the Blues will not hold a morning skate on Saturday.

Defenseman Carl Gunnarsson did not skate after not skating during an optional on Thursday. He was replaced in line rushes by Robert Bortuzzo. 

Gunnarsson is dealing with a lower-body injury sustained in the 2-1 double-overtime win in Game 7 over the Stars. He is questionable to open the series on Saturday.

Berube said Gunnarsson will try to skate Saturday morning.

No other lines/defensive pairings changed from Game 7 Tuesday.

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