The Washington Capitals had a special night at Verizon
Center as they dispatched the Winnipeg Jets, 5-1. For the Caps it was their third straight win
and seventh in their last nine games.
The Jets failed to extend what for them had been a two-game winning
streak coming into this game.
The Caps did not have their legs under them to start the
contest. Winnipeg took advantage of the
Caps playing their first game at home after a four-game road trip to pin the
Caps in their own end. What the Jets
could not do with their territorial advantage was get shots to the net. They did not get their first shot on net
until the 7:21 mark and had only four shots in 12:26 when Mark Scheifele took a
tripping penalty in the offensive zone to put the Caps on a power play.
The man advantage was all the Caps needed to end Winnipeg’s
momentum. John Carlson got the Caps on
the board off a faceoff win when he collected the puck at the right point, slid
to his left, and fired a shot through a screen set by Troy Brouwer and Marcus
Johansson, past goalie Andrej Pavelec’ glove and into the back of the net.
Four minutes later the Caps added to their lead on what
would be their only even strength goal of the night. Matt Niskanen moved the puck up and out from
deep in the Caps’ zone to Karl Alzner at the Caps’ blue line. Alzner relayed the puck to the Winnipeg line
where Alex Ovechkin and Jacob Trouba battled for it. Trouba could contain neither the puck nor
Ovechkin, who spun past Trouba, picked up the puck, and skated in on
Pavelec. Ovechkin cut to his right and
fired a shot through the legs of Mark Stuart and past Pavelec to make it 2-0
with just 1:25 left in the opening period.
The second period was relatively quiet on both sides until the
12th minute when Tobias Enstrom fired a shot from the top of the
offensive zone that hit Karl Alzner’s stick, then the heel of his skate, the
puck popping up and tumbling over goalie Braden Holtby’s right shoulder to
halve the Washington lead at the 11:17 mark.
Any momentum Winnipeg might have generated from that goal
was snuffed out when Blake Wheeler took a tripping penalty just 15 seconds
after Enstrom’s goal. The Caps grabbed
the momentum for their own once more on an odd play with the man
advantage. As the Caps were maneuvering
the puck in search of a scoring opportunity, Jets defenseman Tyler Myers took
down Troy Brouwer for a delayed penalty.
Play continued, and Mike Green slid the puck to Nicklas Backstrom on the
right wing wall. Backstrom eased out
from the wall and with his passing lanes covered, called his own number with a
harmless looking shot that leaked through Pavelec’ pads for the goal on a play
where the Jets seemed to stop skating when the delayed penalty was called.
Winnipeg took another penalty when Adam Pardy was sent off
for tripping to give the Caps a 5-on-3 advantage. The Caps did not convert the two-man
advantage, but the cashed in on the 5-on-4 on a bizarre play. Winnipeg had an ugly line change that left
them with too many men on the ice and another delayed penalty indicated. Despite too many men on the ice, the Jets had
only one man back as the Caps took the zone with a four-man charge. Marcus Johansson took a pass from Backstrom
and skated down the right side to the right wing faceoff circle before throwing
the puck across to Alex Ovechkin. From
the left wing circle, Ovechkin sent the puck back between the hash marks in the
slot for Backstrom filling in on the play.
The puck movement left Pavelec far out of position to defend a Backstrom
shot, and Backstrom buried the puck in the open net to make it 4-1 at the 15:47
mark.
That would be how the second period ended, the competitive
portion of the evening more or less over.
In the third period, with Brooks Orpik sent off for an interference
penalty in the 13th minute, Winnipeg head coach Paul Maurice pulled
out all the stops and his goaltender to make it a 6-on-4 power play. It backfired when Blake Wheeler tried to feed
the puck out of the corner to Andrew Ladd but managed only to put the puck on
the stick of Troy Brouwer. With no fear
of an icing call on the penalty kill, Brouwer turned and fired the puck the
length of the ice for the shorthanded goal to end the scoring for the evening
and give the Caps the 5-1 win.
Other stuff…
-- It was a special night for the Caps, indeed. Three power play goals and a shorthanded
tally made it seven special teams goals in two games, following up on the two
power play and one shorthanded goal scored against the Pittsburgh Penguins
Tuesday night in the 3-1 win in Pittsburgh.
-- Nicklas Backstrom’s three points (2-1-3) lifted him into
a tie with Chicago’s Patrick Kane for the league scoring lead. He is 5-16-21 in his last 16 games. It was Backstrom’s fourth game this season in
which he recorded three or more points.
-- Alex Ovechkin’s goal enable him to maintain his two goal
lead over the New York Rangers’ Rick Nash in the goal-scoring race. Ovechkin has 22 goals in his last 24
games. Four of those goals, including
his goal tonight, have been game-winners.
-- John Carlson’s goal gave him goals in consecutive games
for the first time this season.
-- Winnipeg came a long way on their trip, but as if to make
a point about it, they took five tripping penalties. Three of them, along with a too-many-men
penalty, came in a 4:15 span of the second period and pretty much doomed
whatever chance they had of making this a competitive game.
-- Marcus Johansson had a pair of assists, his first
two-point game since January 7th (2-0-2 in a 6-2 win over
Toronto). It was his first two-assist
game since December 9th when he had a pair of helpers in a 5-3 win
over Tampa Bay.
-- For goalie Braden Holtby it was the 19th time
in 49 appearances this season in which he allowed one goal or fewer. In his last nine appearances he is 6-2-1,
1.44, .947, with two shutouts.
-- Three power play goals on six chances makes it 6-for-16
on the power play for the Caps over their last three games (37.5 percent). Washington is 10-for-34 on the power play in
February (29.4 percent).
-- Shutting out Winnipeg on the power play (3-for-3 penalty
kill) makes it four straight games without having allowed a power play goal and
going 13-for-13 in the process.
-- Despite outshooting the Jets by a 33-20 margin, the Caps
were out-attempted by Winnipeg, 52-49.
In the end…
Once the Caps got the stiffness of the long road trip out of
their legs, there was not much to see here.
They dominated territory over the last 50 minutes of the game with a
very aggressive pursuit of the puck.
Hounding Winnipeg puck carriers into making quick decisions kept the
puck in the Jets’ end for much of the evening.
And when the Jets did make decisions, they looked like the wrong ones
far more often than not.
This could have been a game with a far worse narrative,
coming as it did between facing a fierce rival and hosting the Metropolitan
Division leading New York Islanders on Saturday. The Caps seem to be handling these sorts of “trap”
games much better than they have in recent years when there were some opponents
they did not seem to take too seriously.
Against Winnipeg, they did what they do well – score a power play goal –
then did it again and again. It is that
kind of ability to stand on an opponent’s throat that had been missing from the
Caps’ repertoire in a very long time. If
they can maintain that sort of attitude, then can be not only a team that does
not fall prey to misplaced focus, but they can be one that is very hard to play
against when the games matter more.
They certainly did what they had to do here. They're moving up a weight class in this weekend's games.
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