In what might have been a preview of a playoff series in
June, the Washington Capitals dropped a 3-2 decision to the Chicago Blackhawks
on Sunday afternoon at United Center in Chicago.
The Capitals did do something in the first period they did not
do in their previous three games – score a first period goal. Marcus Johansson got the Caps going when he
finished a play started by Nicklas Backstrom.
With the Caps on a power play, Justin Williams jumped on to the ice for
T.J. Oshie and filled in down the middle in the offensive zone. Backstrom spied him for a one timer that
goalie Corey Crawford got a glove on, but the puck was not secured. It popped into the air to Crawford’s left
where Johansson, camped out at the post, swatted the puck out of mid-air and
past Crawford to put the Caps up, 1-0, 6:13 into the game.
Chicago tied the game just 31 seconds later. Williams tried to chip the puck out of the
Caps’ end, but it made it only as far as the blue line where Trevor van
Riemsdyk took control of it. He slid a
pass through to Patrick Kane behind the Caps defense, and Kane deked goalie
Braden Holtby to the ice before sliding the puck behind him to make it a 1-1
game at the 6:44 mark.
The Blackhawks scored the only goal of the second period,
courtesy of Jonathan Toews on a Chicago power play. Chicago did a fine job of breaking down the
Capitals’ defense in deep, working the puck deftly between the faceoff circles
until it ended up on Toews’s stick low in the left wing faceoff circle. He snapped a shot into the back of the net
before Holtby could get across, and the Blackhawks led, 2-1, with just 1:45
left in the period.
Chicago added to their lead mid-way through the third period
on a controversial play. With the puck
sliding deep into the Caps’ end, Nate Schmidt had a step on Richard Panik. When the puck reached the end wall, an icing
call seemed in orders, but the linesman kept his arm down, and play
continued. The Caps let up just enough,
expecting the icing call, to let Dennis Rasmussen get to the front of the
net. Panik found him with a pass, and it
was only for Rasmussen to snap the puck into the net past Holtby’s glove to make
it 3-1, 12:47 into the period.
Washington got one back late in the period on a power play
on a broken play. Chicago won a faceoff
to Crawford’s left, but a clearing attempt up the wall by Duncan Keith was
blocked by Backstrom. The puck caromed
toward the net where Evgeny Kuznetsov was battling Brent Seabrook. It was Seabrook getting his stick on the
puck, redirecting it to the end wall, but it had enough force to rebound hard
off the end wall. It was a bit of good
fortune for Kuznetsov who gained control of the puck and from below the goal
line backhanded the puck off Crawford and in to make it 3-2 at the 16:39 mark.
The Caps put pressure on the Blackhawks immediately after
the Kuznetsov goal, but Chicago clamped down an prevented the Caps from
recording so much as a shot attempt in the last two minutes, holding on for the
3-2 win.
Other stuff…
-- The Caps scored the first goal, breaking a string of
seven straight games in which they allowed the first goal. It was just the second time this season that
the Caps lost a game when scoring the game’s first goal (28-2-0). They still have the league’s best winning
percentage in such games (.933).
-- It was just the eighth loss in regulation this season for
the Caps when trailing after two periods, still the fewest such losses in the
league (6-8-2).
-- Five power play opportunities was the most the Caps had
in a loss since they had eight chances in a 5-2 loss to the Florida Panthers on
February 2nd (they did not score a goal).
-- This was the first game in which the Caps scored more
than one power play goal since before the All-Star Game break when they went
2-for-2 against the Columbus Blue Jackets in a 6-3 win. They had gone 14 straight games without scoring
more than one power play goal in a game.
-- This was the first game in which the Caps did not score a
goal at 5-on-5 since December 10th in a 4-1 loss to Florida. It broke a 33-game streak of scoring at least
one goal at 5-on-5.
-- Mike Richards was the only Capital to win more than half
of his faceoffs (6-for-10). The rest of
the club went 14-for-41 (34.1 percent).
-- Richards was the only Capital not to be credited with at
least one hit. The Caps had a 47-27 edge
in that statistic.
-- This was the sixth time in his last nine appearances that
Braden Holtby allowed three or more goals.
In those nine appearances he is 6-2-0 (on no-decision), 3.09, .893.
-- Marcus Johansson led the team in shot attempts
(seven). His four shots on goal was the
most he had in a game since he had four in a 5-4 Gimmick loss to Columbus on
January 2nd.
-- The Caps fought the Blackhawks to a draw in 5-on-5
possession numbers overall, 39-39 in shot attempts. It should not be considered an
achievement. The Caps held a 24-11 edge
in the first period, a 17-6 edge in shots overall, and a 14-6 edge in scoring
chances, yet were tied, 1-1, after 20 minutes (numbers from war-on-ice.com).
It was a case of letting the home team off the hook.
In the end…
There were things in this game a Caps fan could dwell on – the
inability to score at 5-on-5, the Chicago top line having a more productive game than
the Caps’ top line, the curious slump in which Braden Holtby finds
himself. But in a game as close as this,
it came down to a play in which the Caps, as a team, assumed something that was
not there – an icing call. And, they got
burned for it. That is how close the
margins are in the postseason. Sure, it
looked as if it was the wrong call, but if this was a legitimate preview of a
potential Stanley Cup matchup, it is a lesson the Caps had better
remember.
Good point on the magnified importance of small errors. First Chicago goal also the product of losing sight of Kane in order to rush up ice.
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