Although the Washington Capitals have been eliminated from
post-season competition, they are making sure that in their last act for the
2013-2014 season they are still belting out tunes popular with the fans. On Friday night those show-stoppers included
a pair of goals from Jay Beagle, a two-point effort from Alex Ovechkin
(including his 51st goal of the season), a two-point game from
Nicklas Backstrom, and a 34-save effort from goalie Jaroslav Halak, who
recorded his first shutout with the Caps in Washington’s 4-0 win over the
Chicago Blackhawks.
Chicago put itself in a hole early when Marcus Kruger was
caught holding Backstrom 63 seconds into the game. Just 61 seconds after that, John Carlson took
a divot out of the ice on an attempted shot at the top of the offensive zone.
The puck squirted to Ovechkin, who returned it to Carlson. On the reset, Carlson slid the puck back to
Ovechkin who one-timed it past goalie Corey Crawford to give the Caps the
lead.
From the predictable to the incredible... In the tenth
minute Evgeny Kuznetsov skated the puck around the back of the Blackhawks net
with Ben Smith trailing in his wake.
Kuznetsov skated out from behind the net to Crawford’s left and from
the faceoff circle found Dmitry Orlov at the opposite point. Orlov walked into the left wing faceoff
circle looking for a shooting lane but found Beagle just below the right wing
hash marks. Beagle took one swipe at the
puck, then another. The second one slid
into the open net vacated when Crawford stepped out aggressively to challenge
the anticipated shot from Orlov.
That would be how the first period would end, but just 79
seconds into the second period the Caps all but ended the competitive portion
of the game. Karl Alzner foiled an
attempt by Brent Seabrook to clear the puck off the boards and out of the
Chicago zone. Ovechkin collected the
loose puck at the top of the left wing circle and slid it down to Nicklas
Backstrom in the corner. From a severe
angle, made more so because Backstrom is a left-handed shot, he threw the puck
at the net where it squeezed between Crawford's left pad and the near post,
giving the Caps a 3-0 lead.
Back to the incredible… With the second period winding down,
Jay Beagle backhanded a loose puck down the left wing wall into the corner to
Crawford’s right. Joel Ward eased the
puck on its route along the wall to Jason Chimera behind the Chicago
net. Chimera turned and whipped a
no-look pass in front where Beagle had circled from the left wing wall. Beagle eluded a half-hearted attempt by
Patrick Sharp to tie him up to one-time the puck past Crawford for his second
goal of the game and the final tally of the Caps’ 4-0 win.
Other stuff…
-- Jay Beagle’s two goals represent his first two-goal game
in the NHL. The last two-goal game he
had was with the Hershey Bears in the AHL back on April 3, 2010, a 6-1 win for
the Bears over the Syracuse Crunch. It
also happened to be Beagle’s first two-point game in the NHL. He tied a career high in goals with the
pair. Four goals on the season matched
the four he had in 41 games in 2011-2012.
He now has nine points on the season, a career high. Big night for the big dog.
-- The Caps are only the second team this season to score
four or more goals against the Blackhawks twice. The Ottawa Senators are the other. The Caps scored four in a 6-4 loss in Chicago
on Opening Night.
-- After going without a power play goal in three straight
games, the Ovechkin power play goal made it power play goals in two of the Caps’
last three games over which they are 3-for-8 (37.5 percent).
-- Tyson Strachan skated 21:26 in ice time, making it three
games in four that he topped 20 minutes, averaging just a shade under 22
minutes a contest.
-- For Jaroslav Halak it was his fifth shutout of the
season, tying him for third place in the league. More important, it broke “The Curse of the Mask.” It was his first win in the red, white, and
blue mask he donned after shedding his all-white lid after a 3-2 win in Anaheim
on March 18th. In six games
with the fancy helmet he is 1-2-3, 2.27, .928.
-- Ovechkin’s 24th power play goal of the season
leaves him tied for the third highest power play goal total since the 2004-2005
lockout. Teemu Selanne had 25 in
2006-2007, and Ilya Kovalchuk had 27 in 2005-2006.
-- Connor Carrick and Tyson Strachan tied for the team lead
in hits? Sure, each had only three, but
still.
-- The Backstrom-Ovechkin-Grabovski line had 13 of the Caps’
27 total shots on goal for the game. Evgeny
Kuznetsov was the only other Capitals with more than two (3).
-- On the other side, every Blackhawk skater recorded at
least one shot on goal. Marcus Kruger
led the visitors with five shots on goal.
-- Fancystatting…
Yeah, the Caps lost the fancystats again, getting out-Corsi-ed at 5-on-5
close and out Fenwicked. But remember,
there were less than nine minutes of 5-on-5 close score in this game and only
15 Corsi events. Not much of a night to
look at the underlying metrics.
In the end…
It was a look back at the way things used to be. Power play goal, a good night from what is
left of the Young Guns, a big night from a hard-working pug who deserved a
spotlight, some fine goaltending. It
might not have meant a lot in the larger scheme of things, and that made it a
little bit sad. But it was certainly
entertaining, and it was a professional job done by guys who struggled
sometimes this season with just such a thing.
No comments:
Post a Comment