It was a record-setting night at Verizon Center on Tuesday
as the Washington Capitals doubled up on the Carolina Hurricanes, 4-2. The immediate concern for the Capitals was to
maintain their edge over the Boston Bruins and the Ottawa Senators for one of the
two wild card spots in the post season, and the win allowed the Caps to keep
pace with both of their pursuers, each winning their own game on Tuesday night.
It was made possible in part by Alex Ovechkin, who scored
his 50th goal of the season in the first period and who added an
assist on an insurance goal in the second period. It got started, though, in the game’s third
minute on a fluky play. Mike Green
chipped a puck from the low slot in front of his own net to get the Caps
started up ice on a three-man rush.
Curtis Glencross took the Green pass and moved it to Tom Wilson on his
right exiting the Caps’ zone. Wilson fed
the puck back to Glencross, who relayed it to Green filling in on the
left. Green skated down the left wing
wall and from the far edge of the left wing circle threw a pass in front of the
Carolina net. The puck did not reach its
intended target, instead clipping the skate of Hurricane defenseman Justin
Faulk and bending past goalie Cam Ward to give the Caps a 1-0 lead just 2:46 into
the game.
Less than nine minutes later it was record-setting
time. Matt Niskanen started the Caps out
of their end with a pass to Evgeny Kuznetsov skating up the middle. Kuznetsov skated through center ice, backing
off the Carolina defense until he entered the offensive zone. From the middle he backhanded a pass to Alex
Ovechkin skating down the left wing. The
puck was muffled by the stick of Alexander Semin, but it only had the effect of
teeing up a wrist shot by Ovechkin that beat Ward cleanly to the far side. The goal was Ovechkin’s 50th, the
sixth time in ten seasons he reached that mark, the sixth player in NHL history
to score 50 or more goals in a season six or more times.
It might have been the start of a rout for the Capitals, but
Carolina escaped the first period without any further damage done. Then, the Hurricanes did some damage of their
own by dominating the first half of the second period. Nathan Gerbe halved the Capitals’ lead five
minutes into the period. Gerbe and
Alexander Semin were off on a 2-on-1 break that looked as if it fell apart when
Semin skated the puck in too deep to the left of goalie Braden Holtby. Semin tried to reach back and stuff the puck
past Holtby from below the goal line, but the puck slid out the other side to
Gerbe low on the left side. Gerbe
snapped a backhand past two Capitals skaters trying to cover for Holtby, who
was sprawled at the post on the far side, and it was 2-1.
Eric Staal tied the game in the 11th minute by
slamming a rebound of a Chris Terry shot past Holtby, and things were getting
quiet at Verizon Center. Carlina could
not get the lead goal, though, and it was the Caps to stole the momentum in the
last half of the period. Jason Chimera
collected a loose puck at the Carolina blue line with speed. As he skated down the right wing wall he
flicked a backhand pass past defenseman Brett Bellemore to the front of the
Carolina net. Brooks Laich, skating hard
to the front of the net, got to the top of the crease just in time to redirect
the puck past Ward at the 17:06 mark to give the Caps the lead they would not
relinquish.
Washington was not done, though. Less than 90 seconds later the Caps scored on
what looked like an instant replay of the Laich goal. This time it was Ovechkin collecting the
loose puck at the Carolina line and skating down the right wing wall. As he sped down the flank he sent a pass
across and through three Hurricane defenders to the far side of the Hurricane
crease. Bellemore was the third
Hurricane defender on that play, and it looked as if he would be able to stop
the pass with his stick, but the puck was left between his skates. Joel Ward pounced, poking the puck from
between Bellemore’s skates and past Ward to make it 4-2 with just 1:32 left in
the period.
After that, the Caps were in lock down mode against the
Hurricanes for the third period. They
managed only one shot against Ward in the final 20 minutes, but they allowed
only five shots to reach Holtby, none of them finding paydirt. The Caps skated off with a 4-2 win and
maintained their three-point lead over the Boston Bruins for the first wild
card playoff spot.
Other stuff…
-- Alex Ovechkin joined Wayne Grertzky, Mike Bossy, Marcel
Dionne, Guy Lafleur, and Mario Lemieux as the sixth player to record six or
more 50-goal seasons in a career in the NHL.
His goal was his 472nd of his career, tying Peter Bondra for the
franchise record. He did it in his 755th
game, an average of 51 goals per 82 games over his career. Bondra scored his 472 goals in 961 games, an
average of 40 goals per 82 games in setting the record.
-- Ovechkin’s assist
on Joel Ward’s goal was his 419th as a Capital, passing Michal
Pivonka for second place in franchise history.
Nicklas Backstrom is the franchise record-holder with 422. The two points he recorded left Ovechkin tied
for second in the league scoring race with the New York Islanders’ John Tavares
and two points behind Pittsburgh’s Sidney Crosby for the league lead.
-- Evgeny Kuznetsov had a pair of assists and is on
something of a scoring run of his own. In his last 12 games he is 4-6-10,
plus-4.
-- Mike Green had a goal and an assist for his 12th
multi-point game of the season. Only
three defensemen – Roman Josi (15), Erik Karlsson (14), and Kris Letang (13) –
have more.
-- The win was the Caps’ 38th in regulation or
overtime, tying them with the Islanders and the Penguins for second in the
Metropolitan Division behind the New York Rangers (44).
-- Tim Gleason was a plus-3 in his first appearance against
his old club, the first time this season he reached a plus-3 for a single
game. It was the first time he was
plus-3 or better for a game since going plus-3 for Carolina in a 5-3 loss to
the Philadelphia Flyers on April 20, 2013.
-- Mike Green was a plus-3, he reaching that mark for the
first time this season as well. His last
plus-3 effort also came against the Philadelphia Flyers and also came in a
loss, a 5-4 overtime loss to the Flyers last March 2nd.
-- Carolina came into the game as the least penalized team
in the league (6.9 minutes per game), and they finished the game as the least
penalized team in the league (6.8 minutes per game). The Hurricanes were not whistled for a single
penalty. It was the fourth time this
season that the Hurricanes did not face an opponent’s power play, and it was
the second time this season that the Capitals were not awarded a power play,
the only other time taking place in St. Louis against the Blues in a 4-1 loss
on November 15th. It was the first time
that the Capitals were shutout on power play opportunities at home since going
without one in a 1-0 loss to the Philadelphia Flyers on March 4, 2012.
-- Jason Chimera’s assist made it points in consecutive
games for the first time in almost three months. The last time he recorded points in
consecutive games was January 12-14, an assist in a 2-1 win over Colorado and
the game’s only goal in a 1-0 win over Philadelphia.
-- Braden Holtby won his 38th game of the season. He stands alone with the second-highest win
total for a goaltender in franchise history.
Only Olaf Kolzig (41 in 1999-2000, a Vezina Trophy-winning season)
stands in front of him. Holtby is within
two wins of 100 for his career.
In the end…
A good win, a necessary win, a win that a team trying to
fend off playoff challengers needs to have against an also-ran opponent. It was not as convincing a win as that over
the Rangers on Sunday, but Carolina is not quite as bad as their record,
either, being a better possession team than their wins and losses would
suggest. What the Caps had that the
Hurricanes did not was, of course, the guy who scores 50 goals as a regular
occurrence on his resume. They also did
not have a defense that could clamp down when need be as the Caps did in the
third period.
Things will get harder for the Caps now, as they face five
opponents in their last five games that are either in the post season or
fighting for position. And, they get to
go on the road for three games to try to clinch one of those last spots. Hey, you didn’t think this would be easy, did
you?
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