It was a game that featured more fireworks than most Super
Bowls and provided appropriate entertainment for a Super Sunday. The Washington Capitals snatched victory from
the jaws of defeat, not to mention embarrassment, when they took away two points
in a 6-5 overtime win over the Detroit Red Wings in the back half of their
home-and-home weekend series.
The Caps avoided the sweep at the hands of the Red Wings
when Alex Ovechkin pounded a one-timer past Jimmy Howard 2:37 into the extra
session, the Caps’ third power play goal of the game. The game-winner spared the embarrassment that
might have been felt by a team that had three two-goal leads in the game.
The Caps established their first two goal lead in the first
period with Jason Chimera and Joel Ward scoring just 2:37 apart. For Chimera it was a case of finishing off
some fine forward pressure deep in the Red Wing zone, pinning the Red Wings
behind their own goal line before the puck squirted out to Chimera all alone on
the dot in the right wing faceoff circle.
With goalie Jimmy Howard’s head on a swivel, he could not find the puck,
and Chimera had an open net to shoot at before Howard could realize where the
puck had gone.
Ward finished the first Caps power play of the game when,
while occupying the right wing half wall spot normally manned by Nicklas
Backstrom, Marcus Johansson found Ward in the slot with shooting room. Ward settled the puck and wristed it past
Howard before the Red Wing defense could converge, and the Caps had their first
two-goal lead.
After Gustav Nyquist halved the lead on a power play goal at
the 11:20 mark, John Carlson restored the two-goal advantage when he took a
pass from Nicklas Backstrom in the high slot and pounded a slap shot past
Howard’s blocker to make it 3-1.
Detroit got back within a goal at 13:30 of the second period
on a Tomas Tatar goal that seemed to fool goalie Michal Neuvirth from the left
wing circle. However, Joel Ward put the
Caps up by two goals for a third time just 19 seconds later. Ward started it, and he finished it. From the left wing wall Ward dumped the puck
into the far corner where defenseman Connor Carrick was headed. Carrick threw the puck at the crease, but
defenseman Jakub Kindl had Jason Chimera tied up. No one bothered to track Ward coming from the
far side, however, and he jumped into the slot and stuffed the puck past Howard
for his second goal of the game.
Nyquist got the Red Wings within a goal for a third time
with a power play goal – his second goal of the game – with just 1:11 left in
the second period, something of a momentum changer as it turned out. The Red Wings capitalized on the momentum
change just 42 seconds into the third period when Nyquist completed the hat
trick. The Caps took it back, though,
less than four minutes later.
Although he would not get the goal, nor even an assist on
the play, the tie-breaker was largely the product of hard work by Martin
Erat. Firt, Erat chased down Justin
Abdelkader, who was himself in flight into the Detroit zone to try to gain
control of a loose puck. All Abdelkader was
able to do as a result was poke the puck across to Jonathan Ericsson. When the puck slid past Ericsson, it was Erat
pouncing in the opposite corner to pressure the defenseman into a
turnover. The puck slid out to the left
wing circle and past Nicklas Backstrom and Henrik Zetterberg, finding its way
onto the stick of Troy Brouwer in all alone on Howard. Brouwer made good on the chance, snapping the
puck to the long side and inside the post to give the Caps a 5-4 lead.
That lead did not hold up, either. Abdelkader got it back just 1:57 later – yet
another goal allowed less than two minutes after scoring one – and the game was
tied for the last time. The Red Wings
sealed their fate when Brendan Smith was sent off 1:26 into the extra session
to give the Caps the advantage of numbers and open ice. When John Carlson fed Alex Ovechkin barely a
minute later, the Caps took one more, one last, one final lead, and sent fans
home to their Super Bowl parties happy.
Other stuff…
-- Ovechkin had the game-winning goal, 11 shot attempts, two
hits, and a takeaway in 24 minutes of ice time.
He was also a minus-1. Wonder
what will get the attention on Monday morning.
-- Speaking of Ovechkin, one wonders if he ever had as open
a net as the one in front of him with two seconds left in the first
period. If the Caps make it 4-1 there,
does Howard return for the second period?
Do the Red Wings come back? Would
Lassie get the sheriff to the well to save Timmy in time to watch the Super Bowl?
-- In the two-minute goal sweepstakes, the Joel Ward goal 19
seconds after Tomas Tatar scored in the second period was the ninth time this
season that the Caps scored a goal less than two minutes after giving one
up. When Gustav Nyquist returned the
favor 1:17 after Troy Brouwer scored in the third period, it was the 24th
time it happened to the Caps.
-- The three power plays on six chances made it 6-for-18 in
the Caps’ last four games (33.3 percent).
It was the first time the Caps had three power play goals in a game
since December 20th in a 4-2 win over Carolina.
-- The Caps have not lacked for offense against Detroit
recently. Six goals made it 24 in their
last five games against the Red Wings.
It was the most goals the Caps scored at home since beating the New York
Islanders, 6-2, back on November 5th.
-- For Nicklas Backstrom, his two assist day made it his
first multi-point day since he was he had a goal and an assist in a 3-2 win
over the New York Rangers on December 27th.
-- The Caps abused the Red Wings in the circle. They were 13-for-21 on faceoffs in the offensive end,
15-for-26 in the defensive end, and 18-for-29 in the neutral zone. Eric Fehr (10-for-12), Nicklas Backstrom
(12-for-21), and Jay Beagle (14-for-19) were beastly.
-- Speaking of Fehr, Backstrom, and Beagle, those three tied
for the team lead in hits with five apiece.
-- For Joel Ward it was his second three-point game of the
season, his other one coming when he recorded a hat trick against Philadelphia
in a 7-0 win on November 1st.
-- Connor Carrick had his first multi-point game in the NHL
with a pair of assists.
-- Marcus Johansson had a shot on goal and a missed
shot. It broke a string of four games in
which he did not have so much as a shot attempt. He had an assist for good measure.
-- Martin Erat had 20:36 in ice time, a season high for him
and only the second time this season he topped 20 minutes. Erat has five assists in his last five games,
including the helper he had this afternoon.
In the end…
At this point, you take the points where you can get them,
however you can earn them. The Caps had
a chance to put this game away early with three goals (and what should have
been four) in the first period. But no
lead is safe with this team, and it was simply a case of outracing the usual
demons – losing focus after a goal, letting teams back into games,
underwhelming goaltending.
However, the Caps did have balance – five skaters with
goals, nine with points – and did not allow momentum changes to overwhelm
them. They had secondary scoring, they
had stretches in which they exerted great pressure on Red Wing skaters in their
own end. Actually, what they had in the end was the
puck on Alex Ovechkin’s stick, and that made all the difference.
It was definitely more interesting than the Super Bowl...
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