The Washington Capitals beat – and beat up – the Philadelphia
Flyers, 7-0, on Friday night. Seven
goals, five fights, a hat trick, a four-point night, a shutout. It was a full night.
It did not start that way.
In fact, it looked as if the Caps might spend the night missing their
absent captain, Alex Ovechkin, desperately.
In the first 15 minutes of the game the Flyers outshot the Caps,
7-0. It was the Caps, however, who would
get the game’s first goal. It started
with a fine keep-in by Nate Schmidt, who used his right skate to deaden a
bouncing puck that was heading out of the offensive zone. Schmidt then fed Martin Erat, circling around the
left wing faceoff circle to the middle of the ice. Erat found Nicklas Backstrom at the top of
the right wing circle, and Backstrom did the rest, one-timing the puck over the
right shoulder of goalie Steve Mason.
After the first intermission the Caps proceeded to embarrass
the Flyers with five goals in the second period. Joel Ward started the onslaught by
backhanding a loose puck under Mason at 1:24 of the period. Eighty seconds later it was Jason Chimera
splitting defensemen Erik Gustafsson and Kimmo Timonen at the Caps blue line to
pick up a loose puck and take off on a breakaway, lifting the puck over Mason’s
glove for a 2-0 lead.
The Chimera goal ended Mason’s night…well, his second
period, but we’ll get to that. Sixty
five seconds after Chimera’s goal it was Backstrom again, flipping a shot that
relief goalie Ray Emery was slow to react to, putting the Caps up, 4-0.
After things seemed to settle down, Joel Ward got his second
of the game with 3:35 left when he outdueled Vincent Lecavalier for the puck at
the left wing boards, left the puck for Chimera, then headed for the net. Chimera returned the puck to Ward, who
snapped it off the pipe and in for a 5-0 lead.
Troy Brouwer completed the second period barrage with a power play goal
with 1:40 left in the period.
In the third period Joel Ward found the back of the net for
his first career hat trick. On a Caps
power play, Mike Green started the scoring sequence feeding Eric Fehr for a
shot attempt from the left wing circle.
Emery made the save, but Jason Chimera was first to the loose puck. He backhanded a pass to the low slot where
Ward banged it home to give the Caps a 7-0 lead.
That ended the hockey portion of the evening.
Eight seconds after the Ward goal, things took a turn. Just after the faceoff following the Ward
goal, Tom Wilson and Wayne Simmonds locked horns along the left wing
boards. That was the cue for Ray Emery
to take off from his crease, race the length of the ice, and jump his
counterpart, Braden Holtby. Then it was
Alexander Urbom and Brayden Schenn. Then
it was Steve Oleksy and Lecavalier.
By the time things were sorted out, the Caps received 50
minutes in penalties, the Flyers 64, Emery getting the extra 14 for leaving
his crease and being an instigator, for which he was also assessed a game misconduct, ending his evening and returning Steve Mason to the nets. It
was thin gruel for a Flyers team thoroughly embarrassed on the ice by a team missing
its captain and leading goal-scorer.
Other stuff…
-- The seven goals allowed were the most by a Flyers team
since October 27, 2011, when they lost to the Winnipeg Jets, 9-8.
-- The third line took things into their own hands in this
game. Mikhail Grabovski, Joel Ward, and
Jason Chimera combined for four goals and six assists.
-- Until Friday night, Jason Chimera did not have a
three-point game since October 10, 2007, when he was skating for the Columbus
Blue Jackets against the Phoenix Coyotes.
That happened to be only the third three-point night of his career. With a goal and three assists, Chimera
recorded the first four-point night of his career. He is now fourth on the team in scoring (11
points) and is within three points of his total for all of last season (14).
-- Six Caps recorded multi-point games: Ward (3-0-3),
Chimera (1-3-4), Grabovski (0-3-3), Martin Erat (0-2-2), Eric Fehr (0-2-2),
Nicklas Backstrom (2-1-3).
-- Nicklas Backstrom had his first two-goal game since he
recorded a pair in a 5-4 win over the Anaheim Ducks on November 1, 2001 2010. He had the last-minute game-tying and the overtime
game-winning goal in that game (folks might remember that as the Ovechkin-benched-in-the-last-minute
game).
-- It was arguably the worst loss at home for the Flyers
since they lost to the Caps, 8-2, in Peter Laviolette’s first game as head
coach for the Flyers on December 5, 2009. It was the
biggest margin of victory by a visitor to Philadelphia in more than 40
years. The last time the Flyers lost by
seven or more goals on home ice was October 21, 1971, a 7-0 loss to the Los
Angeles Kings at the Spectrum.
-- Everyone contributes in their own ways. Michael Latta might not have joined in the
scoring, but he won nine of 14 draws in 11 minutes of ice time. And it was he who led Zac Rinaldo down the
primrose path to a ten-minute misconduct.
-- This is what the Flyers are these days… Zac Rinaldo: the misconduct
and a boarding penalty for 12 minutes in penalties. He had less than nine minutes of ice time.
-- Lost in the process of burning out the goal lamp and the
fisticuffs on the ice is the fact that Braden Holtby recorded the eighth
shutout of his career and first this season.
In his last seven appearances he is 5-2-0, 2.08, .942, with one shutout.
-- The retooled first line of Nicklas Backstrom, Eric Fehr,
and Martin Erat accounted well for itself.
Two goals, five assists, six shots on goal, eight shot attempts.
-- Notes on the extracurriculars…
- The results were not good for the home team. Steve Downie, who was engaged in a scrap with Aaron Volpatti earlier in the game, was taken to the hospital with what was reported to be a concussion. Vincent Lecavalier suffered facial injuries in his scrap with Steve Oleksy that will keep him out of the lineup for at least one game.
- For Urbom it was the second fight of his NHL career. His first was against Downie back in December 2011 when Urbom was with the New Jersey Devils, and Downie was with the Tampa Bay Lightning.
- The five fights more than doubled the Caps total for the season, from four to nine. It was the most fights in a game for the Caps since they engaged in five bouts on October 9, 2010, against the New Jersey Devils. For those of you who might have forgotten that night, it was the night when Mike Green and Ilya Kovalchuk kinda fought. Coincidentally, that was also a seven-goal night for the Caps, winning a 7-2 decision in the home opener that season.
In the end…
If any Caps fan has any problem with any player performance
in this game, you’re probably the type who finds Santa Claus too jolly. It was the kind of game that should make a
Caps fan smile for a week. Granted, it
was against a team that can’t find the back of the net with a map and a
flashlight, and it was a generally embarrassing performance in the last 40
minutes. But the Caps forced a lot of
that with a lot of players doing the kind of stepping up they needed when Alex
Ovechkin went out of the lineup.
From top to bottom, all eighteen skaters and Braden Holtby
played a role in this, some obvious, some not so much. It was the kind of complete performance that
had been absent through the first dozen games.
Just as good was the fact that the Caps finished up their road trip on a
high-note and a 3-2-0 record that lifts them into third place in the
Metropolitan Division.
It is something on which they can now build.
"-- Nicklas Backstrom had his first two-goal game since he recorded a pair in a 5-4 win over the Anaheim Ducks on November 1, 2001. He had the last-minute game-tying and the overtime game-winning goal in that game (folks might remember that as the Ovechkin-benched-in-the-last-minute game)."
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