When the Washington Capitals got on their airplane to leave Winnipeg
last night after their 6-1 win over the Jets, they did so with the knowledge
that they are now in tenth place in the Eastern Conference, only three points behind
the eighth-place Carolina Hurricanes and five behind the Southeast Division-leading Jets.
As for the game, the Caps picked up pretty much where they left off
from their 4-0 win on Thursday night at MTS Centre. Just as they did on Thursday night, the Caps
put two on the board in the first period.
Brooks Laich got things started with his first of the season at
12:10. Laich got it started when he
outfought Dustin Byfuglien for the puck at the left wing wall (not that
Byfuglien put up much “fight”). When Byfuglien tumbled to the ice (perhaps with
the help of a gentle tug on back of his his jersey by Laich), Mike Ribeiro
swooped in to pick up the loose puck.
Ribeiro continued his transit around to the back of the Winnipeg net,
but as he got to the edge of the trapezoid behind the net, he slid the puck out
to Laich, who had gone to the net. Laich
snapped the puck past goalie Ondrej Pavelec, and the Caps were running.
Less than four minutes later the Caps had their second goal. This one was all Troy Brouwer, with a side of
Ribs and sprinkle of Laich. After the
Jets buzzed the Caps with a couple of good scoring chances – an Evander Kane
drive hit the crossbar on one – the puck squirted out to the high slot. Defenseman Ron Hainsey jumped up for a shot
attempt, but as he was about to let fly, Brouwer chipped the puck past him and
took off the other way. Hainsey might have
made a race of it, but he skated right into Laich as the play started toward
the Winnipeg end. That left Brouwer and
Ribeiro on a 2-on-1 against defenseman Zach Bogosian. When
Brouwer dropped the puck for Ribeiro at the Jets’ line he curled off to the
left side and opened up for a return pass.
Ribeiro froze Bogosian and fed Brouwer for the one-timer that Pavelec
could not stop, and it was 2-0.
The Caps then put things in the hands, skates, and sticks of the fourth
liners. In the sixth minute of the
second period, Matt Hendricks, Joel Ward, and Jay Beagle played the
time-honoured game (in Canada…note the spelling) of “Chip and Chase.” Hendricks did the chipping, doing just that
-- dropping the puck into the left wing corner -- as he skated with the puck to the Winnipeg line. Ward took up the “chase,” beating Nik
Antropov to the puck behind the Jets’ net.
Ward moved the puck along the back wall, then fed a wide-open Beagle at
the edge of the right wing circle for another one-timer on which Pavelec had no
chance… 3-0.
Less than two minutes later, the “27’s” for the two teams – Eric Tangadi
for the Jets and Karl Alzner for the Caps – battled for a loose puck at the
referee’s crease at center ice. The puck
squirted away from them, where it was picked up by Marcus Johansson for the
Caps. Johansson circled through the
neutral zone and over the Winnipeg blue line, where he then found Alex Ovechkin
on his right. Ovechkin took one step to
set the puck on his stick, they wristed a shot to the wide side that eluded relief
goalie Al Montoya to make it 4-0, Caps.
Less than two minutes into the third period the Caps won another
unlikely battle for the puck. Behind the
net Byfuglien (6’5” and, well…XXXXL ) was trying to move the puck. Coming upon Johansson (6’1”, 205 in your
program and not generally thought of as a wall warrior), Byfuglien promptly fell
down…again. Johansson accepted the gift
of the puck and moved it around the back of the Winnipeg net eventually getting
it to Dmitry Orlov at the left point.
Orlov slid the puck to Mike Green, who had – and pretty much took – all the
time in the world to wind and drive. He
did so just as Jet forward Chris Thorburn skated across the line of flight of
the puck. It might have distracted
goalie Al Montoya just enough. The puck
sailed through and into the back of the net, and whatever faint hope of a competitive
game was gone… 5-0.
After Winnipeg got a window dressing goal, a Byfuglien shot that
ricocheted off the leg of Caps’ defenseman Mike Green and past goalie Braden
Holtby, the Caps put a cherry on top of the sundae with a power play goal. With Blake Wheeler off for tripping, the Caps
worked the puck around their 1-3-1 set up.
Nicklas Backstrom at the right wing wall to Mike Ribeiro at the goal
line extended… Ribeiro back to Backstrom… Backstrom out to defenseman John
Carlson at the high point… Carlson to Ovechkin at the left wing dot… boom. 6-1.
Other stuff…
-- The last time the Caps were this close to eighth place was February
4th. The Caps were 2-6-1
(five points), three points behind the 4-4-0 New York Rangers (eight points) in
eighth place.
-- That makes four straight games with a goal for Ovechkin (5-2-7),
three of them on the power play, and 10 goals in his last 15 games
(10-9-19). Mike? Anything to say?... Mike?
-- The Caps seem to have solved Winnipeg. In four games against the Jets the progress of
Caps goals scored has been: two, three, four, six.
-- So, too, at the other end.
Capitals goaltenders have stopped 91 of the last 92 shots they have
faced from Jets’ sticks dating back to the third period of the first meeting of
these teams this season. And in fact,
the one goal came not on a shot that beat a goaltender cleanly, but deflected
off a Capital (Byfuglien’s goal in this game).
-- Troy Brouwer is on a mini-goal scoring run of his own. His goal made
it back-to-back games with a score and three of his last four games.
-- Sustainability... the Caps scored 10 goals on 49 shots in the two
games against Winnipeg (20.4 percent). They
were 8-for-32 at even strength over the two games (25.0 percent), 5-for-13 in
this one (38.5 percent). Don’t count on
this going forward.
-- After going 1-for-4 on the power play, the Caps are now tops in the
league in that statistic (24.5 percent).
They have power play goals in five of their last six games, including
both games in Winnipeg.
-- After allowing goals on the first two power plays the Caps allowed
to the Jets in the Caps’ home opener on January 22nd, they have killed off the
last 14 shorthanded situations they have faced against Winnipeg, including all
three last night.
-- With two assists, Mike Ribeiro is now 1-5-6 over his last six games,
4-8-12 over his last 12. Consistent.
-- Somebody find out what Marcus Johnasson is drinking. With two points last night, that makes three
games in his last four of a multi-point variety. Johansson is 3-4-7 over his last five games.
-- Fourteen of 18 skaters finished the game with points for the Caps;
15 of 18 skaters for Winnipeg finished in “minus” territory. Symmetry.
-- Since being pulled 11:34 into the second period of a 4-1 loss to the
Rangers on March 10, Braden Holtby is 3-2-0, 1.81, .941.
In the end, it was a good win.
It showed what the Caps can do when reasonably healthy and
well-motivated. Winning back-to-back
games in arguably the loudest arena in the league is no mean feat. It was the first time the Jets lost
back-to-back home games on a single home stand since February 15-17, and that
was to Pittsburgh and Boston. The Caps
beat a team – twice – that had been 11-4-1 in their previous 16 games, and it
made the Caps 2-1-0 on this road trip.
And that brings us to the next game…what the Caps did in Winnipeg will
have a lot more meaning if they can use that momentum to beat the Rangers in
New York on Sunday. Madison Square
Garden has become something of a House of Heartbreak for the Caps, having lost
three straight one-goal decisions there (one in overtime) dating back to last
spring’s playoffs. We will see if the
Caps have turned a corner if they can turn a corner in Manhattan tomorrow
afternoon.
But in the meantime, nice job boys.
All makes sense but I think if they do crank it up, some others will fold up. I hope they win enough to make their own luck.
ReplyDeleteDamn it. They are drawing me in again and giving me hope...just in time to chunk it against New York(s).
ReplyDelete