We take up the second of six games that mattered in the 2013 season with one that made a welcome statement for the Caps…
February 23, 2013: New Jersey (10-3-4) at Washington
(5-10-1)
Result: Capitals 5 – Devils 1
The Background: As
February was coming to a close, the Capitals were struggling and in danger of
falling out of the playoff race almost before it began. Washington finished the one-third mark of the
season in last place in the Eastern Conference.
A large part of that disappointing start was the fact that the Caps were
2-8-1 against teams outside of the Southeast Division, including the 3-2 loss
they suffered to the New Jersey Devils in the first half of a scheduling quirk
– back-to-back games against the Devils hosted by the Caps on February 21st
and 23rd.
The first game of the back-to-back was especially hard to
swallow, given that the Caps twice held one-goal leads and gave up the lead for
good when the Devils scored two goals barely two minutes apart midway through
the third period. The last one came on
what would be the Devils’ sixth power play of the contest, Ilya Kovalchuk doing
the damage for the game-winning goal once more.
The penalty that led to it – an interference call on Tom Poti – was the
sixth minor penalty charged to the Caps in the third period.
The sixth time was the charm. It would be the only successful power play on
the evening for the Devils. It was a
frustrating night overall for the Caps, punctuated by Troy Brouwer going off on
a rant at an official at the 20:00 minute mark, smashing his stick on the
bench, and drawing a ten-minute misconduct penalty for his tirade.
Why it mattered: From
one perspective, the Caps were only six points out of a playoff spot when they
took the ice against the Devils in the back-half of the back-to-back
games. Then again, the Caps had just
those two wins against a team not in the Southeast Division, and they were in
jeopardy of suffering their third losing streak of the season of at least three
games after just 17 total games played.
The Caps needed to make a statement and needed to make it
with their top players. In the 3-2 loss
in the first game against the Devils in the back-to-back set, Mike Green did
not dress, while Alex Ovechkin and Nicklas Backstrom combined for one assist (Backstrom)
and a minus-3.
Green would not dress for the second game of the set,
either, meaning that someone had to step up for the Caps. After 25 minutes of this game, though, it was
hard to see just who it might be to step up for either team. The clubs split just ten shots on goal in the
opening period without a goal being scored, and five minutes into the second
period the Caps were turned away on the only shot they recorded, and the Devils
were denied on the three shots on goal credited to them.
But with just over five minutes gone in the second period
Mike Ribeiro, of all people, separated Adam Henrique from the puck at the back
of the Washington net. The puck squirted
out to Alex Ovechkin, who fed the puck to John Erskine heading up ice. Erskine moved the puck back up to Ovechkin
heading down the right side. Ovechkin
dropped the puck for Jason Chimera, who skated with it into the Devils’ zone,
spun, and found Ribeiro skating down the middle. When the Devils’ defense closed on Ribiero,
he ladled the puck to Ovechkin in the left wing circle. A one-timer past goalie Johan Hedberg’s
blocker later, and the Caps had a 1-0 lead.
The Devils tied the game in the last minute of the period –
Ilya Kovalchuk being a nuisance to the Caps yet again – and that might have
deflated the Caps entirely. However,
just 83 seconds into the second period Ovechkin took a long feed from Matt
Hendricks, skated into the New Jersey zone, and using defenseman Anton
Volchenkov as a screen snapped the puck past Hedberg’s blocker on the long side
to give the Caps the lead for good.
Eric Fehr gave the Caps a two-goal lead while shorthanded
when after the Caps cleared the puck down the ice, Hedberg misplayed it in his
skates, allowing Fehr to pick his pocket and wrap it around the post before
Hedberg could return to position.
Ovechkin drove a stake through the Devils on the power play
with just under five minutes left not long after he was robbed at the door step
on a pad-save by Hedberg. His next
chance found the back of the net off a feed from Mike Ribeiro from the goal
line extended, through the slot and onto Ovechkin’s stick in the left wing
circle.
When Troy Brouwer added a power play goal less than two
minutes later the Caps had their first five-goal game against a team not named
for a large cat (Florida Panthers). The
Caps also avoided another three-or-more game losing streak (they would have
only one more of that length over the rest of the season), and it got them
started on a 5-1-0 run that would help turn around their season.
The Takeaway: For
Ovechkin it was an especially welcome night.
For him it was his first hat trick of the season, first multi-goal game
since March 23rd of the 2011-2012 season, his first hat trick since January 22,
2011, his first hat trick and four-point game at home since February 7, 2010, when
he was 3-1-4 against the Pittsburgh Penguins.
For the Caps it was their most convincing win to date on the
schedule, their 5-0 win over Florida on February 9th
notwithstanding. Mike Ribeiro had a pair of assists, and seven other Caps
recorded a point. Matt Hendricks was
credited with six hits. Jay Beagle and
Mathieu Perreault won a combined 16 of 21 faceoffs (76.2 percent). The Caps as a team held the Devils to only 22
shots (only twice all season would the Caps hold an opponent to fewer), and
Braden Holtby stopped 21 of them in goal, including a penalty shot attempt by
Steve Bernier that could have tied the game mid-way through the second period. Ovechkin got most of the attention after the
contest, but it was a team effort with a lot of guys stepping up after a tough
loss to the same team on the same ice sheet just two nights earlier.
In the end…
The Caps were not the same team after this game. They went on a 5-1-0 run starting with this
game and would go 10-7-2 outside the Southeast Division over the rest of the
year after starting the year with a 2-8-1 record against those teams. Starting with this game the Caps averaged
3.22 goals per game over their last 36 contests and allowed an average of just
2.38 goals per game. If they were not
quite The Greatest Show on Ice that they were in the 2009-2010 season, they
were a very productive team over those last 36 games. And because that run started with this game,
the February 23rd game against the Devils is one that mattered.
Photo: Bruce Bennett/Getty Images North America
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