Jets rewrite record book

Conquer hard-charging Blues to set franchise record for wins

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Don’t let the close final score fool you.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 07/04/2025 (194 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Don’t let the close final score fool you.

The Winnipeg Jets played one of their most dominating games of the season Monday night, absolutely smothering the NHL’s hottest team at every single turn and skating away with a well-deserved 3-1 victory that very much had a playoff feel to it.

“Everybody looked at each other and got up for this one,” Jets forward Kyle Connor said. “We just embraced the moment. Top to bottom, we took the flow of the game early. I liked what I saw.”

Alex Iafallo (left), Mark Scheifele and Adam Lowry celebrate Monday after Lowry’s insurance marker against the St. Louis Blues. (John Woods / The Canadian Press)
Alex Iafallo (left), Mark Scheifele and Adam Lowry celebrate Monday after Lowry’s insurance marker against the St. Louis Blues. (John Woods / The Canadian Press)

How impressive was this timely triumph over the St. Louis Blues? Let us count the ways.

*The Blues came to town on a 12-game winning streak and with two regulation defeats over their past 23 outings. They were the clear second-best in this one, and by a considerable margin. They fall to 43-29-7 and currently occupy the first wild-card spot in the Western Conference.

*By improving to 53-21-4, the Jets broke their franchise record for wins in a season. They still have four games remaining.

*Winnipeg is now five points ahead of Dallas in their efforts to win a first division title (in either 1.0 or 2.0 eras). They need six points — either gained by them and/or lost by the Stars, who have five games left — to clinch.

*Winnipeg is now three points ahead of Washington in the race for the President’s Trophy. The Capitals have one game in hand.

Winnipeg Jets head coach Scott Arniel talks to his team during first period. (John Woods / The Canadian Press)
Winnipeg Jets head coach Scott Arniel talks to his team during first period. (John Woods / The Canadian Press)

*Goaltender Connor Hellebuyck, the runaway favourite to win a third Vezina Trophy and a legitimate Hart Trophy candidate, stopped 14 of 15 shots to tie his own franchise record with his 44th win of the year. He’s now four away from the league’s all-time mark.

*Jets captain Adam Lowry, who had a monster defensive game, fittingly sealed the victory by scoring into an empty net and breaking his career high with his 16th goal.

*Jets alternate captain Mark Scheifele — the first draft pick by the 2.0 Jets, with Lowry being the second — set up the clincher to match his career high with his 84th point.

*The game was played in front of 15,225 fans, marking a sixth consecutive sellout (and 13th of the year).

Alex Iafallo (left) and Mark Scheifele celebrate after Iafallo’s banged home the game-winnig goal Monday against the St. Louis Blues. (John Woods / The Canadian Press)
Alex Iafallo (left) and Mark Scheifele celebrate after Iafallo’s banged home the game-winnig goal Monday against the St. Louis Blues. (John Woods / The Canadian Press)

That, folks, is what you call a pretty nice Monday.

“It’s gratifying, but it’s stuff for after the year. We’re still after something here, we’re still trying to get that division, and this was another step towards it,” said coach Scott Arniel.

“It’s amazing that we’re at (win) 53 and we still haven’t clinched the division, that’s how good our division is. So it’s just move off of this one, move on to the next one.”

Let’s break this down further:

THE ROUT WASN’T ON

But it should have been with the huge disparity in play. Consider this:

The Jets had a whopping 31 shot attempts in the first period while giving up eight to the Blues. Yet it was still tied 0-0. Credit St. Louis for only allowing eight of those to get on net, with a whopping 14 being blocked and the other nine missing the net.

It was only a matter of time before that kind of relentless pressure paid off.

St. Louis Blues’ Nick Leddy (4) defends against Winnipeg Jets’ Mason Appleton (22) during first period. (John Woods / The Canadian Press)
St. Louis Blues’ Nick Leddy (4) defends against Winnipeg Jets’ Mason Appleton (22) during first period. (John Woods / The Canadian Press)

Winnipeg finally got rewarded when Josh Morrissey made a great play at his own blue-line to spring fourth-liner Morgan Barron on a breakaway at 2:34 of the middle frame.

You could almost feel the players and the fans exhale at that point.

“I think that’s how we want to play,” said Barron.

“That’s a really good team in transition. We kind of knew that when we’re at the top of our game, we’re able to stymie that the best we could. Our D just gapped up really nicely and our forwards tracked back really well.”

Pavel Buchnevich tied it up later in the period, converting a nice feed from linemate Robert Thomas, but that proved to be a temporary blip for the Jets who kept coming in waves.

Connor set up Alex Iafallo at 7:05 of the third to give the home team the lead for good, while Lowry added the big insurance marker in the waning seconds.

“Everybody’s bought in and we’re focused,” Connor said. “It’s still something we’re working on, the consistency. Also fresh in our mind is how we played in Utah (Saturday, a 4-1 loss). There’s an awareness of where this game needs to be for our team.”

Winnipeg tilted the ice in the entire game, with shot attempts ending up 64-40. The website Natural Stat Trick had high-danger chances 17-4 in favour of the Jets.

HOMETOWN HOFER

Credit the hometown boy, Joel Hofer, for keeping his team in it.

The 24-year-old Blues goaltender stopped 24 of the 26 shots he faced as he tried to win for a second time this year in Winnipeg. Hofer was sensational during a 4-1 St. Louis victory on Dec. 3.

St. Louis Blues’ Jake Neighbours (63) crashes into goaltender Joel Hofer (30) as he saves the shot from Winnipeg Jets’ Brandon Tanev (73) during third period. (John Woods / The Canadian Press)
St. Louis Blues’ Jake Neighbours (63) crashes into goaltender Joel Hofer (30) as he saves the shot from Winnipeg Jets’ Brandon Tanev (73) during third period. (John Woods / The Canadian Press)

He had plenty of family and friends in attendance who saw put in another terrific performance despite the outcome.

“You know, they made us defend a lot more than we made them defend,” said Blues coach Jim Montgomery. “And then the other part would be, we had turnovers where we should. We should have made more poised plays than we did.”

Of course, the Jets played no small role in that.

“That was a really solid 60 minutes of going out in five-man units, out-battling them, and getting zone time on the opposition,” said Arniel.

“Everybody figured out after the first period who their matchups were, who they were going head to head (with) and I thought all four lines won their matchups. Along with the D-men, obviously. You do that, you have 20 guys doing that, that’s a tough team to beat.”

MEN IN STRIPES

We normally shy away from commenting on officiating, but this was a bit of an odd one.

Referees allowed both teams all kinds of leeway through the first half of the game, then completely changed the standard in the second half and called a ticky-tack infraction on each team.

The Jets were later penalized for a second time on a clear high-stick, but the game then reverted back to Hudson Bay rules for the duration with all kinds of shenanigans ignored by the men in stripes.

Winnipeg was two-for-two on the kill and zero-for-one on the power play.

KEY PLAY

Iafallo’s 14th goal of the year with just under 13 minutes to play was the winner.

THREE STARS

1. Jets Alex Iafallo: Game-winning goal, 6 shots

2. Blues Joel Hofer: 24 saves

3. Jets Josh Morrissey: 1A, 7 shot attempts, team-high 25:45

EXTRA EXTRA

Get the ice packs. The two teams combined for 38 blocked shots (20-18 for the Blues) and 57 hits (31-26 for the Blues).

The Jets were once again without injured forwards Nikolaj Ehlers (lower-body), Rasmus Kupari (concussion), Gabe Vilardi (upper-body) and D Neal Pionk (lower-body). D Colin Miller also missed the contest due to illness. The only healthy scratch was D Ville Heinola.

St. Louis was also missing a couple key skaters in forward Dylan Holloway and defenceman Colton Parayko.

The Jets will take Tuesday off and then skate on Wednesday before hitting the road for a huge Thursday night showdown in Dallas, followed by a visit to Chicago on Saturday. Then it’s home for the final two games of the season — Edmonton (Sunday) and Anaheim (next Wednesday).

mike.mcintyre@freepress.mb.ca

X and Bluesky: @mikemcintyrewpg

Mike McIntyre

Mike McIntyre
Reporter

Mike McIntyre is a sports reporter whose primary role is covering the Winnipeg Jets. After graduating from the Creative Communications program at Red River College in 1995, he spent two years gaining experience at the Winnipeg Sun before joining the Free Press in 1997, where he served on the crime and justice beat until 2016. Read more about Mike.

Every piece of reporting Mike produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press‘s tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press’s history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates.

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