After last night's games, here is how the three wild-card contestants in the Eastern Conference find themselves...
It's once and always Stanley Cup Champion Washington Capitals hockey, all day, all night, all the time . . . or when I get around to it
Friday, March 27, 2015
A TWO-Point Night -- Game 74: Capitals 3 - Devils 2 (OT)
The Washington Capitals shook off the rust of having had
four days off from game action just in time to escape their contest against the
New Jersey Devils with a 3-2 overtime win on Thursday night. Matt Niskanen did the honors for the Caps,
firing a slap shot from the left point that was redirected off a Devils player
and over the glove of goalie Cory Schneider 1:13 into the extra period (NOTE: the goal has been awarded to Evgeny Kuznetsov, who redirected the Niskanen shot).
The game up to that point was a close affair, closer than
one might have imagined it would be early on.
Karl Alzner got the Caps off and running less than three minutes into
the game. The scoring play started when
Marcus Johansson walked the puck around the top of the zone to the top of the
offensive zone before backhanding a pass to Niskanen at the right point. Niskanen reversed the flow and sent the puck
to Alzner at the left point. With the
Devils defense having shifted en masse to the right side of the ice, Alzner had
room to step up and let fly with a shot from the left wing circle that beat
Schneider cleanly over his right pad on the short side.
That would be all for the first period scoring, but
Washington got on the board with another early goal in the second period. In the second minute of the period the Devils
were having difficulty clearing the puck from the own zone. Eric Gelinas tried to clear the puck
from the crease by shooting it off the
side boards but managed only to put the puck on the stick of Eric Fehr at the
right point. Fehr sent the puck right
back at the New Jersey net and off the post past a startled Schneider to make
it 2-0 just 1:35 into the period.
The Caps let the Devils back into the game late in the
second period when, on a power play, they allowed the Devils to break cleanly
out of the defensive zone. Patrick Elias
skated into the Caps’ zone, pulled up, and fired a shot that goalie Braden
Holtby stopped with his right pad.
Travis Zajac followed up on the play and batted the rebound through
Holtby’s pads for the shorthanded goal, halving the Caps’ lead to 2-1.
That might have been all the scoring, but the Devils had one
more strike left in them. In the last
minute and their goalie pulled, the Devils worked the puck behind the Caps’
net. Scott Gomez found a passing lane
from the end wall to Steve Bernier standing at the edge of the blue paint just
off the post to Holtby’s left. Bernier
slammed the pass from Gomez past Holtby’s left pad before the goalie could get
across, and the game was tied, 2-2, with just 29.2 seconds left in regulation
time. That left it up to the Caps, and
Niskanen (uh...Kuznetsov), to end the game 73 seconds into the extra period to give the Caps the
extra standings point in the 3-2 win.
Other stuff…
-- The overtime goal was the 13th 4-on-4 goal
scored by the Caps this season (second in this game), tied for second-most in
the league. The Caps have out-scored
opponents by a 13-2 margin at 4-on-4.
-- After recording six game-winning goals for the Pittsburgh
Penguins last season, Matt Niskanen recorded his first game-winner as a Capital.
-- It was a Devils sort of game with shots and chances at a
minimum. The teams combined for fewer
than 100 attempts, the Devils finishing with 50 and the Caps with 47.
-- In addition to his game-winning goal, Niskanen added an
assist, giving him two multi-point games in his last four contests (1-4-5).
-- Karl Alzner also finished with a goal and an assist for
his second multi-point game this season (he had a goal and an assist against
Columbus on December 18th).
The Caps have had 33 multi-point games from defensemen this season. It is the second time this season that the
Caps had multi-point games from at least two defensemen against the
Devils. Brooks Orpik, Matt Niskanen, and
Mike Green each recorded a pair of assists in a 6-2 win over New Jersey on
October 16th.
-- Eric Fehr, Brooks Laich, and Tom Wilson started together
as a line, and they were active. The
threesome combined for 11 of the Caps’ 47 shot attempts, four of the 24 shots
on goal, and Fehr’s goal.
-- Maybe it was an odd night, or perhaps the official scorer
was a bit too focused on one statistic, but the Caps were charged with 16
giveaways to the Devils’ seven. John
Carlson was nicked for four, Matt Niskanen for three.
-- The Caps were five over .500 on faceoffs for the game
(31-for-57), but they were 13-for-21 in the offensive zone.
-- Evgeny Kuznetsov earned the second assist on the game
winning goal, giving him points in six of his last nine games (3-4-7...edit: 4-3-7). He is now ninth among rookies in points (9-22-31...edit: 10-21-31).
-- Braden Holtby has found himself in a rhythm of late. This was the third straight game in which he
allowed two goals. In his last 12
appearances he is 7-5-0, 2.08, .931, with one shutout. Three of those five losses came in games in
which he allowed, yes, two goals.
In the end…
On the one hand, a win is nice, especially when Ottawa lost
in regulation, and Boston lost in extra time.
The Caps now have a five-point lead on both clubs with eight games left
to play. And it was their fourth win in five games. On the other hand, getting out
to a two-goal lead, then allowing a shorthanded goal off a sloppy line change
and a goal in the last half minute to tie the game…really?
The adjectives head coach Barry Trotz used after the game – “poor”…”lucky”…”average
(at best)” – were apt. As he put it, “I
know I wasn't happy with that game, and I know they shouldn't be. If they are, then we’re fooling ourselves. We
didn't play very well.”
No, no one should be happy, and no one should fool
themselves that the Caps were anything but fortunate to play that sloppily against a team
that can’t score and has little but pride to play for, and yet still come out with a win. They will be tested more severely when
Nashville comes to town on Saturday and again when they head to New York to
face the Rangers on Sunday. They need to
get back into a playoff mind set, or playoffs might be something they watch
instead of something in which they participate.