The Washington Capitals had a win firmly in their grasp on
Tuesday night, let it slip from their fingers, then grabbed it back late
against the Winnipeg Jets to skate off with a 3-2 win to end their four-game
road trip.
The Caps built a slim, but solid two goal lead over the
first half the game. It started in the
last minute of the first period when Karl Alzner took a feed from Marcus
Johansson and, using Jets defenseman Ben Chiarot as a screen wristed a shot
over the glove of goalie Connor Hellebuyck.
Johansson got one of his own mid-way through the second
period. As the Jets were watching Evgeny
Kuznetsov skating the puck around the back of the Winnipeg net, Johansson set
up between the hash marks in front of Hellebuyck. When Kuznetsov came out on the other side of
the Jets net, he found a passing lane to Johansson and his pass was one-timed
through the pads of Hellebuyck to make it 2-0 8:15 into the period.
It looked as if that would be the way the game would end as
the clock wound down underseven minutes to play in the third period. Then Winnipeg struck twice. Blake Wheeler fought of the defense of Nate
Schmidt to work the puck off the right wing wall and feed it to Mark Scheifele
at the edge of the right wing faceoff circle.
Settling a bouncing puck, Scheifele took two swipes at the puck, the
second one eluding goalie Braden Holtby to cut the Caps lead to 2-1 at the
13”04 mark of the period.
Winnipeg tied the game with less than three minutes to play
in regulation when Adam Lowry scored his first of the season. Joel Armia fought
off Brooks Orpik to win possession of the puck at the right wing boards. Spinning off the wall, Armia found Lowry
cutting to the net. Lowry skated
patiently through the low slot, got Holtby to commit, then curled the puck
around Holtby’s right pad to tie the game with just 2:25 left in the game.
It might have gone to overtime from there, but with less
than a minute left, the Caps found an unexpected hero. It started and ended with Jay Beagle. Winning a faceoff cleanly to John Carlson,
Beagle darted to the Winnipeg net.
Carlson fed the puck through, and Beagle outfought Lowry for possession. With the puck now on his backhand, Beagle
spun and, using Kuznertsov as a make-shift screen, swept the puck past
Hellebucyk with 30 seconds left to break the tie and give the Caps the win to
end their road trip, 3-2.
Other stuff…
-- With a goal and an assist, Marcus Johansson had his third
straight multi-point game, a career best for consecutive multi-point
games. He now has five goals in nine
games. He did not record his fifth goal
last season until his 23rd game of the year.
-- Evgeny Kuznetsov had two assists for his first
multi-point game of the season. It was
his first multi-point game since March 18th of last sesason, when he
had three assists in a 4-1 win over the Nashville Predators. It was the first time he had a multi-point
game on the road since he had a pair of assists in a 4-3 loss to the Dallas
Stars last February 3rd.
-- The Caps were credited with eight missed shots on Tuesday
night. Alex Ovechkin had six of
them. That represented half of his 12
shot attempts (three shots on goal, three other attempts blocked).
-- In the unusual, T.J. Oshie was the only Capital that did
not record a shot attempt.
-- Winnipeg had 45 shots on goal for the game, the first
time this season that the Caps allowed more than 30 shots on goal in a game and
the most they allowed in a regular season game since the allowed the Pittsburgh
Penguins 45 shots in a 4-1 win last February 14th. The last time the Caps allowed more shots on
goal in a game was On November 17, 2013, when the St. Louis Blues recorded 47
shots in a 4-1 Caps win.
-- The possession stats were as bad as you might
expect. Winnipeg enjoyed a 48-39 edge in
5-on-5 shot attempts (55.17 percent Corsi-for; numbers from
Corsica.hockey). T.J. Oshie had what
was, for him, a rough night. His shot attempts differential, on ice, was
minus-12 in a little over 13 minutes of 5-on-5 ice time. And on the good side of that, Marcus Johansson’s
name pops up again. He was second in
Corsi-differential (plus-5 to Tom Wilson’s plus-6).
-- Hey, don’t look now, but this is three games in a row the
Caps did not allow a power play goal, extending their longest streak of games
without allowing a power play goal.
-- On the bad side of that, the Caps allowed nine power play
shots on goal in 6:01 of shorthanded ice time, three of them by whiz-kid
Patrick Laine. That’s playing with fire.
-- Braden Holtby made 43 saves, many of them of the
highlight variety. That was the most
saves he had in a game since stopping 44 shots in a 4-1 win over Pittsburgh
last December 14th. His save
percentage for the season is now .925, rising to 12th among goalies
facing at least 100 shots.
-- Karl Alzner has two goals in nine games. Last season he had his second goal in his 19th
game, what had been the earliest in his career hitting the two-goal mark.
In the end…
All in all, it was a good road trip. Three wins in four games in the western
provinces is never a bad thing, the Edmonton game to start the trip now looking
more like a hiccup. Still, one does not
like to see the team cough up a two-goal lead in less than a five-minute span
late in the third period. But there was
Jay Beagle with his seventh career game-winning goal among his 32 career goals. We have made the point before that when
Beagle scores, good things happen, and Beagle scored…good things happened. Now, the Caps get to do it again on Thursday.
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