The Washington Capitals made it eight wins a row last evening with a
very complete 5-1 demolishing of the Toronto Maple Leafs at Verizon Center.
The win prevented the Maple Leafs from clinching their first trip to
the playoffs since 2004 and allowed the Caps to maintain their four point lead
on Winnipeg, which resides in second place in the Southeast Division and ninth
place in the Eastern Conference.
The teams spent the much of the first period looking for an opening but
finding none until the 15th minute of the period. Eric Fehr outdueled Mark Fraser for the puck
behind the Leafs’ net and slid it to Jason Chimera along the left wing
wall. Chimera had difficulty fishing the
puck out from his skates but managed to move it along to Jack Hillen at the
left point. Hillen fired a shot that
nicked the stick of Toronto’s Nazem Kadri on the way through, the puck angled
just enough to jump over the glove of goalie Ben Scrivens and in, giving the
Caps the 1-0 lead.
The Caps put the game away in the second period with three goals, two
of them coming in short order early in the period. The first came just after a Toronto penalty
expired when an Alex Ovechkin drive from the left faceoff circle was tipped in
from the top of the crease by Martin Erat.
It was Erat’s first goal for the Caps.
The second goal of the period came less than three minutes later and
started with a pile up in the neutral zone.
Mike Ribeiro and Jake Gardiner got tangled up with Gardiner tumbling to
the ice, creating just enough confusion to allow the Caps to get free with a
3-on-2 break. John Carlson and Troy
Brouwer led the rush, Carlson feeding Brouwer in deep for a deke and a backhand
through the legs of Scrivens to give Washington a 3-0 lead 7:55 into the
period.
The competitive portion of the evening ended late in the second period
when Alex Ovechkin scored a goal of his own on a power play. Mike Ribeiro got things started when he
carried the puck into the Toronto zone, held up to get the traffic pass him by,
then skated the puck down the right wing wall.
From there he moved the puck back out to Mike Green at the right
point. Green spied Ovechkin in the left
wing circle and sent the puck over for a one-timer than Ovechkin blew past
Scrivens.
The teams exchanged third period goals, Toronto spoiling goalie Braden
Holtby’s bid for his fifth shutout of the season when Mikhail Grabovski scored
on a deflection of a Ryan Hamilton shot.
Marcus Johansson got it back midway through the period on a power play
when he put back the rebound of a Mike Green shot that bounced hard off the
back wall. That would be all for the
scoring, the Caps skating off with a 5-1 win.
Other stuff…
-- The Caps’ power play is alive again.
The two power play goals makes it 5-for-15 in the last three games. We made the point that the Leafs were among
the most penalized teams in the league, and the six power plays awarded to the
Caps certainly were consistent with that.
The six power plays for the Caps were topped in only two games this season, one being
a seven power play contest against Philadelphia on February 27th (a
4-1 loss) and an eight power play game against New Jersey on January 25th
(a 3-2 overtime loss).
-- Keeping Toronto off the scoreboard early was a key. Only one team in the league had more wins in
when leading after one period, making the 1-0 lead the Caps took to the locker
room at the first intermission a bonus.
-- How they got to that first intermission with a lead was due, in no small part, to winning the first ten faceoffs taken in the game. No puck, no score.
-- How they got to that first intermission with a lead was due, in no small part, to winning the first ten faceoffs taken in the game. No puck, no score.
-- There was also the matter of volume and getting shots on goal with a
goalie that had not played since March 26th. The 37 shots on goal recorded by the Caps –
25 in the first two periods when the game was still competitive – was five
shots above their season average.
-- Mike Ribeiro’s two points make him 1-7-8 in his last six games and
lift him into a tie for 12th place in the league in points.
-- Martin Erat’s goal was not only was his first as a Capital, but it ended
a bit of a drought. He had not scored a
goal since potting one in a 5-3 Nashville Predator win over Calgary on March 21st. He had not scored a goal in nine games until
last night’s tally.
-- Mike Green had his first two-assist game of the year and his first
since he had a pair of assists in a 7-1 win over Detroit on October 22,
2011. He is 2-2-4 in his last three
games.
-- It was John Carlson’s first two-assist game of the year, too, and
his first since getting a pair in a 5-3 win over Ottawa on December 7, 2011.
-- Every Capital skater had a shot on goal except John Erskine and
Mathieu Perreault.
-- Maybe it was the fact that Toronto played on Monday night, but the
Maple Leafs managed only 27 shot attempts (18 on goal) over the first two
periods.
-- With 29 saves on 30 shots, Braden Holtby went to 6-0-0, 2.28, .935
over his last six games.
In the end… the game turned on a five-minute sequence late in the
first period. Less than a minute after the
Hillen goal, Jay McClement rode Nicklas Backstrom into the boards in front of
the Leafs’ bench. Alex Ovechkin “leaped
over the turnbuckle” (as the Toronto broadcasters put it) to come to Backstrom’s
defense. Ovechkin would get the only
penalty – a charging call – and the Caps would kill the ensuing Toronto power
play. Then, when McClement reappeared on the ice, Jason Chimera made sure he paid his pound of flesh for the pain visited on Backstrom, outdueling McClement in a battle of fists.
It could have ended much worse for the Caps – an injured Backstrom when
he was boarded by McClement (a call that was not made), Ovechkin getting hurt
in the scrum that followed, the Maple Leafs tying the game on the power play
that followed. But in the “all’s well
that ends well” frame of mind, the Caps stood up to the aggravation, killed a
penalty, held the lead, and built on it from there. It was five minutes that could be important
to this team down the road.