GAME: San Jose Sharks at St. Louis Blues.
PLAYOFF SERIES: Western Conference quarterfinal; Sharks lead 2-0.
TIME: Monday, 9 p.m. EDT.
The St. Louis Blues are loaded with veterans with plenty of playoff experience.
That hasn't been apparent through the first two games of this postseason.
St. Louis looks to avoid a 3-0 series deficit when their quarterfinal series against the disciplined San Jose Sharks shifts to the Savvis Center.
With the Blues and Sharks meeting in the first round for the third time in five seasons, this figured to be a physical series. While St. Louis has played a rugged style, it also has been undisciplined and taken far too many penalties, resulting in 17 power plays for San Jose.
After the teams played a fairly even contest in San Jose's 1-0 overtime victory in the series opener, the Blues came unglued in Game 2. St. Louis gave the Sharks 13 power plays, with captain Chris Pronger spending eight of the game's first 14 minutes in the penalty box.
"The first game, they let the marginal stuff go," said Pronger, who got six minor penalties. "All of the sudden, when they switch and call everything, it's difficult. It's tough to switch gears midstream like that, and it's up to us to adapt, but it's a little late."
Patrick Marleau scored the first of his three goals late in the first period on the power play, and Evgeni Nabokov nearly posted his second consecutive shutout in San Jose's 3-1 victory.
Marleau added another power-play goal in the second period and completed the second postseason hat trick in Sharks' history with a short-handed goal in the third. Vincent Damphousse set up two scores for San Jose, two wins away from its second conference semifinals appearance in three seasons.
Marleau's performance came after he scored just one goal in the final 17 games of the regular season.
"I'm getting used to new linemates, but if I'm working hard and trying things that will make the team win, it doesn't really matter," Marleau said.
While St. Louis has had difficulty containing San Jose's speed, the Sharks also have been much better keeping their aggression under control.
"They talked about getting more physical so we were expecting them to disturb our discipline and get under our skin," Damphousse said. "But it didn't work. We kept our cool. We just turned the cheek and tried to battle through."
St. Louis could have a bigger problem on its hands than a lack of discipline.
Starting goalie Chris Osgood, who appeared to injure his knee in the first period, left Game 2 after allowing Marleau's third goal 48 seconds into the third period and was replaced by Reinhard Divis.
Though Osgood is expected to start Game 3, the Blues need him to be in top form if they are to get back into this series and rally from a 2-0 series deficit for the first time since 1972.
Winning Game 3 is critical for St. Louis because only two teams - the 1942 Toronto Maple Leafs and the 1975 New York Islanders - have won a best-of-seven series after losing the first three games.
"We're still in this series," Blues coach Mike Kitchen said. "Absolutely. Absolutely. The way we play, look at the way we played. Our (penalty kill) was terrific. We have two home games coming up. We win there, we tie the series. I like our energy. We just have to make sure of our discipline. We get that, we'll be fine."
Including a 3-0 loss at Minnesota in their regular season finale, the Blues have scored one goal in their last three games. Left wing Keith Tkachuk, the team leader with 33 goals this season, has no points in his last five contests.
Game 4 is Tuesday at the Savvis Center.
— Associated Press