We are here with the second in a series of ten memorable goals in the history of the Washigton Capitals. Number 10 was odd, but Number 9 was a record-setter against an opponent you love to see on the other end of the score.
January 8, 1984 – Bengt Gustafsson, “Five-by-Five”
January 8, 1984 – Bengt Gustafsson, “Five-by-Five”
The
1983-1984 Washington Capitals were having trouble shaking off the
distractions of the mid-winter holidays. Starting on the day after
Christmas 1983, when they dropped a 5-4 decision to the Philadelphia
Flyers, the Caps went 2-3-1 in their next six games, leaving them a game
under .500 (19-20-3) when they traveled to Philadelphia on January 8th
for a rematch against the Flyers at The Spectrum.
There
was no love lost between these two teams, and the bitterness was
perhaps more keenly felt by the Caps, who dropped their previous two
decisions to the Flyers, allowing 14 goals in the process, including a
9-4 pasting at The Spectrum on December 15th.
It
did not look a lot better for the Caps when the Flyers opened the
scoring 5:20 into the game on an unassisted goal by Dave Poulin. The
goal might have been the last straw of frustration that the Caps
experienced for the better part of a month. Just 59 seconds after the
Poulin goal, Bengt Gustafsson scored for the Caps on his first shot of
the game. Less than five minutes later, Gustafsson put his second shot
of the game on goal, and it found the back of the net behind goalie
Pelle Lindbergh to give the Caps a 2-1 lead.
When
Dave Christian scored less than three minutes after the second
Gustafsson goal, the Caps had a 3-1 lead at the first intermission and
had pelted Lindbergh with 16 shots on goal. The Flyers restored some of
the tilt in the ice to start the second period, but mid-way through the
frame Doug Crossman went off on a holding penalty, and Gustafsson made it
three-for-three, shots and goals, on the ensuing Washington power play.
That
would be all the scoring in the second period, but the Capitals were
hardly through. Wes Jarvis rubbed some salt in the Flyer would with an
unassisted shorthanded goal in the fourth minute of the third period to
make it 5-1. Less than two minutes later, Gustafsson recorded his
fourth goal of the game on his fourth shot, tying the club record for
goals in a single game originally set by Stan Gilbertson against
Pittsburgh on April 6, 1975 in an 8-4 win.
The
only question left was, did Gustafsson have another goal left in him.
He had his chance when Poulin was sent to the box for an elbowing
penalty 9:37 into the period. Less than a minute later, Caps fans had
their answer. Taking a pass from Mike Gartner, Gustaffson tried to move
the puck to defenseman Rod Langway, but the puck hit a Flyer defender
and rebounded back to Gustafsson. The second time on his stick was the
charm as he collected the puck in the right wing faceoff circle and
fired it past Lindbergh a fifth and final time, on his fifth shot of the
game. The Caps rolled to a 7-1 victory.
The goal
set a club record that would stand for more than ten years, until Peter
Bondra tied it in February 1994 in a 6-3 win over Tampa Bay in what was a
different kind of stunning efficiency – Bondra accomplished the feat in
24:46 of game clock time. The five-goal effort by Gustafsson against the Flyers was
accompanied by a three-assist night for Gartner and a two-assist night
for Langway.
Perhaps
even more important, the win set off a three-game winning streak for
the Caps – all on the road – that was the start of a stretch run in
which they went 29-7-2, going from fourth in the Patrick Division to
second in the Division by seasons’ end. They would set a club record
for wins (48) and finish with more than 100 standings points for the
first time in club history (101). Gustafsson finished the season with
what would be career-highs in goals (32) and points (75, tied two
seasons later).
That
the fifth goal would come on the fifth shot against, at the time,
arguably the Caps’ most hated rival, and sparking the club to one of the
best finishes in its history makes that goal one to chalk up in the
“memorable” category.
B. Miller/Getty Images
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