ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) Joel Eriksson Ek and Frederick Gaudreau scored in the first period and the Minnesota Wild ended a seven-game slide by beating St. Louis 3-1 on Tuesday.

Matt Boldy added an insurance goal late and Filip Gustavsson made 23 saves for his first win in eight starts for Minnesota, playing its first game under coach John Hynes.

ā€œYou have all this change and everything like that, but I think it starts in the room, too. We havenā€™t been happy about the way weā€™ve been playing and the losses piling on top of each other. So, yeah, we had a motivated group tonight,ā€ said Boldy.

A former bench boss with Nashville and New Jersey, Hynes took over Monday after the Wild fired Dean Evason.

ā€œIt was a pleasure to coach the guys the way that they played tonight. Itā€™s nice to get the win, but they made it easy on the coach tonight,ā€ Hynes said.

Colton Parayko netted the Blues goal.

Jordan Binnington stopped 34 shots for St. Louis, including all 17 he faced in a second period owned by Minnesota. The Blues had just five shots on goal in the period.

ā€œWe knew they were going to come hard obviously with everything going on and have a good game,ā€ said Blues center Robert Thomas. ā€œWe were in it right until the end but need a better effort.ā€

Boldy scored on a breakaway with 2:52 left in the third, his first goal in 11 games, and second in the 13 games heā€™s played. He had 31 goals last season.

St. Louis had a four-minute man-advantage midway through the third period but couldnā€™t get its second goal.

ā€œWe had some looks. I had one and (Torey Krug) had one,ā€ said Brayden Schenn. ā€œYou got to try to find a way to capitalize and we didnā€™t. Power playā€™s been better as of late, but those are the ones you really need to get.ā€

Maybe it was as simple as the coaching change, but the Wild played with more energy which led to more offensive chances and better defensive coverage.

Six-win Minnesota is 31st in the league at 3.80 goals-against per game, ahead of only four-win San Jose (4.00). Additionally, the Wild has a league-worst 71.2% penalty kill, but St. Louis was 0 for 4 with the man advantage.

ā€œGuys were hungry. Gus made beautiful saves and for sure thatā€™s always good momentum for us,ā€ Gaudreau said.

Eriksson Ek scored his team-high 11th goal for Minnesota less than three minutes into the game off a feed from Mats Zuccarello, but Parayko answered midway through the first from the right circle.

Zuccarello has a seven-game point streak and 22 points in 20 games. Only Kirill Kaprizov (24 last season) and Marian Gaborik (24 in 2005-06 and 23 in 2008-09) have recorded more points through their first 20 games of a Wild season.

Taking advantage of a screen by Marcus Foligno, Gaudreau scored his first goal of the season from the right dot late in the first to make it 2-1.

Minnesota has led after the first period in just three of its 20 games, winning each. The Blues fell to 0-8-0 when trailing after one.

The Wild were without Ryan Hartman, the teamā€™s second-leading goal scorer who was suspended for two games by the league for slew-footing Detroitā€™s Alex DeBrincat on Sunday.

UP NEXT

Blues: Host Buffalo on Thursday.

Wild: At Nashville on Thursday.

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