"They kept plays alive. We were looking for the clear. We shouldn't have poured the numbers in where we did."
Ward's first of two goals tied the game 2-2 at 4:37 after a lengthy shift in the Blues zone, and Pavelski scored at 18:33 to make it 3-3 after St. Louis was caught with too many men below the goal line. Pavelski was open in the slot when Joe Thornton found him after getting open to the left of Blues goalie Jake Allen.
"I thought the killer goal was the third one," Hitchcock said. "We had the lead, we built some good shifts. They caught us on a little bit of a change, took a penalty and we were really doing well killing the penalty, but we made two mistakes. We got stuck behind the net, and I thought the energy on our bench, which was excellent, really dropped a little bit after the third goal, not the fourth [goal] to me. That was the difference."
In one of the biggest games of the year, the Blues needed their special teams to win; they got a power-play goal from rookie Robby Fabbri but couldn't contain San Jose's power play when it mattered most.
"Yeah, that's obviously frustrating on our part with the way we worked last game on the penalty kill too," Blues defenseman Alex Pietrangelo said.
"It's the same power play it's been all series," Fabbri said. "They just capitalized on their chances this game."