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Vladimir Tarasenko will have surgery on dislocated left shoulder

St. Louis Blues v Toronto Maple Leafs

TORONTO,ON - JANUARY 16: Vladimir Tarasenko #91 of the St.Louis Blues skates during the warm-up prior to playing against the Toronto Maple Leafs in an NHL game at the Air Canada Centre on January 16, 2018 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. (Photo by Claus Andersen/Gety Images)

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ST. LOUIS (AP) -- Three days after missing the playoffs, the St. Louis Blues learned their star forward Vladimir Tarasenko will need surgery on Wednesday for a dislocated left shoulder.

Tarasenko was hurt in the first period of the regular-season finale on Saturday in Colorado. The Blues needed a point in the game to reach the playoffs, but lost 5-2.

Tarasenko revealed he had a dislocated shoulder while standing with his left arm in a sling Tuesday as teammates cleared out their lockers. The recovery after surgery can take up to six months.

''We’ll see how it goes,’' Tarasenko said. ''It was a hard year all the way around.’'

The 26-year-old led the team with 33 goals and 66 points. It was his lowest point total in four seasons. The Blues won 44 games this season and finished with 94 points.
[NBC’s Stanley Cup Playoff Hub]

Mike Yeo wrapped up his first full season as the Blues coach. St. Louis is 66-40-8 since Yeo replaced Ken Hitchcock as coach on Feb. 1, 2017. That’s the 10th-best regular-season record in the NHL in that period.

But it’s little consolation for a team missing the playoffs for the first time after six straight seasons. Two years ago, the Blues were playing for the conference championship.

''We understand we’ve taken a step back this year,’' General Manager Doug Armstrong said. ''That lies firmly on my shoulders. My job is to deal in reality. The formula we had this year did not breed success and we need to find that formula.’'

Armstrong said the play of special teams needs to improve.

The Blues were 30th on power-play success at 15.4 percent. They finished 18th in penalty killing at 79.7 percent. During the previous six seasons making the playoffs, the Blues ranked No. 1 in the NHL in penalty killing with a rate of 84.3 percent.

However, the Blues scored only 38 power-play goals.

''As a coaching staff, I promise you we won’t just sit around and just assume things will get better next year,’' Yeo said. ''We have to look at everything from the way we manage it, operate it and holding guys accountable and the personnel we’re using and the tactics.’'

When Yeo coached the Minnesota Wild, the power play also was stagnant.

''I’ll take responsibility for it,’' Yeo said. ''I don’t dodge that. That’s on me.’'

Armstrong backs his coach.

''Mike and I are tethered together and we’re going to figure this thing out,’' Armstrong said.

St. Louis was just 24-17 on home ice this season.

''You can’t have the home record we had and be satisfied,’' Armstrong said. ''The people that come here work for a living and we need to send them home happy. If we’re in the top 10 in home records, we’re in the playoffs.’'

The salary cap should increase about $4 million for next season. Armstrong said the Blues ownership will continue to spend to the cap.

''We spend to the cap,’' Armstrong said. ''We’ve had a good run here. We’ve got to get back to that.’'

Goalie Jake Allen was signed to a four-year, $17.4 million contract on July 1, 2016. He finished with a 27-25-3 record, a 2.75 goals-against average, a .906 save percentage and one shutout.

''I definitely need to be more consistent,’' Allen said. ''I know I’m capable of it. I don’t think I need to change much. I’m a pretty good goalie.’'

Backup goaltender Carter Hutton is an unrestricted free agent. Hutton was 17-7-3 with a 2.09 goals-against average and a .931 save percentage. He had three shutouts.

Armstrong said he wants to bring Hutton back.