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St Louis Blues Puck Wall in Their Locker Room

Right before the start of the season, the Blues made their annual team bonding trip, this time going to the Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md.

At the end of the team's stay there, Academy superintendent Admiral Wallace E. "Ted" Carter, presented Blues coach Mike Yeo with a commemorative coin of their visit, which Yeo took back to St. Louis and had mounted and hung in the Blues dressing room at Enterprise Center.

"It will be kind of symbolic of this day," Yeo said in early October, "and hopefully something at the end of the season we look back at and say this day helped us get to that point."

The board the coin was mounted to included six shelves, each of which could hold 10 pucks. The idea was to take the final puck from each win and place it on the board, a way to chronicle the team's progress through the season.

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And for three months, that board sat there as a reminder of how poorly the season was going.

When Yeo was fired on Nov. 19, there were just seven pucks on the board, not even a full row. Since game pucks bear the logo of the home team, pucks from wins on the road serve as markers along the way. Four pucks into the second row sits a puck from the Dec. 22 game at Calgary. That was the last game before Christmas. Almost three full months into the season, the board was two-third empty.

"It wasn't pretty," center Ryan O'Reilly said. "We expected there to be a lot more pucks up there and it was frustrating."

Look at it now. As the Blues have made their march to the Stanley Cup Final, it is almost full. What was once a reminder of how poorly things were going is now almost at capacity.

"We filled it up real quick," defenseman Carl Gunnarsson said. "We're doing a little bit better now."

Not long after that Calgary win, the board shifted into overdrive. Over the next month, the team won seven games, pushing them into the third row, and then came the franchise record 11-game win streak, and by the time it was done, there were pucks into the fourth row. The number of opposing logos visible on it is a reminder of how well this team has played on the road this season. At the bottom, where the pucks from the playoff series are, there are three Winnipeg logos to be seen, two of Dallas and two more of San Jose.

"You look at that and see how our team formed over the past four months and how we became a team," defenseman Joel Edmundson said. "I like looking at that board. The Calgary puck, that's where we started to turn it around. You look at that and you look at where you were and where you are now.

"Halfway through the year I thought that board was way too big for its purpose. Me and (Colton Parayko) were talking about it that now it might not be big enough. Hopefully."

If Edmundson felt the board uninspiring, coach Craig Berube agreed. When Berube took over for Yeo, he took down the standings board that sits in the hallway from the parking lot to the dressing room at the team's practice facility, because he thought it wasn't sending the right message to the team. "It doesn't change quick enough," he said. "It's just a negative effect." He thought about doing the same thing with the puck board. But it stayed.

While Edmundson was less than thrilled with the board in those troubled times, Gunnarsson found it motivating.

"We needed a lot more pucks up there to even get in the playoffs," he said. "I don't think it was, what did you call it, demoralizing? That was more like, We've got to get going. We've got a long way to go, we've got to get going pretty soon here.

"Depending how you see stuff, it's a half-full, half-empty situation. I didn't think negatively about it. It was just, we've got to pick it up."

"I think it shows the parity of the league, how we were able to stay in it," O'Reilly. "We weren't playing consistent hockey. We'd have a good game, think we figured it out, and couldn't come back the next one and we were able to stay somewhat in the hunt and we kept working at it and eventually we win 11 in a row and that was amazing to see. You look at the board, you think, We're one of the better teams in the league now. We're going to have a chance at this. It's amazing how a season, the ups and downs of it, there are so many highs and lows, and to be able to stay even keeled and keep working at it. It's crazy to see how it pays off."

When the Blues won their first game this season, Bobby Plager was given the honor of putting up the first puck. After the Blues won the Western Conference final, Plager spoke to the team. "I told them, I want one more. I want the fourth one. I'll put the fourth one up there, too. The first and the last."

There's only one problem. The Blues won 45 games in the regular season. They have won 12 in the postseason. That's 57 wins, and 57 pucks. The board has room for 60. The Blues need four more wins to take the Stanley Cup. So if they with the championship for the first time ever, there's no room for the last puck.

"The last one doesn't need to go there," O'Reilly said. "I think it will be all right."

"We'll add another board," Gunnarsson said. "We'll put it somewhere nice."

"We'll put it in the Cup," Edmundson said.

JIM THOMAS ON THE BLUES

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Source: https://www.stltoday.com/sports/hockey/professional/the-tale-of-the-blues-season-as-told-in-hockey-pucks-mounted-on-a-locker/article_906a38da-3079-561e-b052-3d24f2837545.html

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