Stars beat Blues in chippy Game 4

DALLAS (AP) — The first-year coach for the Dallas Stars switched up his top two lines, a move that put rookie Roope Hintz skating with captain Jamie Benn and Alexander Radulov.
Tyler Seguin, the top-line center who had Benn and Radulov on his side, instead started with Jason Dickinson and Mats Zuccarello.
Rookie coach Jim Montgomery told his team from the beginning of the season that he liked to switch lines. The latest switches sure worked in a crucial game for the Stars.
"They all rolled with it. And now because we've done it all year, they easily just assimilate with whoever they're playing with," Montgomery said.
The Western Conference semifinal series returns to St. Louis for Game 5 on Friday night, and then back to Dallas for Game 6 on Sunday.
Dickinson had an early tying goal after St. Louis went ahead 1-0 only five minutes into the game. Jason Spezza and John Klingberg also scored for the Stars. Zuccarello has six assists in this series, with helpers in every game.
"They were desperate and we didn't match that desperation in the first two periods," Blues coach Craig Berube said.
Vladimir Tarasenko had a power-play goal for the Blues, who lost for the first time in their five road games this postseason.
Dallas went up 4-1 late in the second period when Radulov and Benn assisted Hintz's third goal of the series.
About halfway through the second period, Dickinson forced a turnover at center ice. Zuccarello got the puck to Seguin, who made a cross-ice pass to Klingberg, whose sniper shot whizzed to the left of rookie goalie Jordan Binnington and into the net.
"They came out hard. That's going to happen. We just have to stay in control," Binnington said. "They switched up their lines a bit. That's expected. Whatever is thrown at you, you've got to handle it."
Binnington stopped 27 shots, including a backhander by Andrew Cogliano, a breakaway by Miro Heiskanen and another charge by the Dickinson-Seguin line on shifts before Klingberg's second goal of the playoffs — he had the overtime winner in Game 6 against Nashville that clinched the first-round series.
Ben Bishop, who had 27 saves, didn't stop Tarasenko's fifth goal of the playoffs that glanced off the Dallas goalie's left arm and into the net.
"This is exactly where we're supposed to be at this point, right? Supposed to be 2-2. Now it's a three-game series," Dickinson said. "The only thing I think we can take from that is confidence. I don't think we can read too much into how the last series went because it's a whole new thing now."
After going down 2-1 in their first-round series against Nashville, the Stars won three in a row and clinched the series in Game 6 at home.
Spezza scored on a power play in the final minute of the first period to put Dallas up 2-1, when Binnington was shielded by one of his teammates. It was the first lead change between the two teams all season — in this series and during the regular season when the Stars won three of the four meetings.
NOTES: At the end of the second period, Benn poked his stick at Binnington, who reacted with a forearm to the head of the Stars captain. Benn was assessed an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty, while Binnington was given penalties for roughing and slashing.
UP NEXT
Game 5 is Friday night in St. Louis, where the Blues are 2-3 this postseason.