The Washington Capitals became the first team in the NHL to
clinch a playoff berth this season when they defeated the Carolina Hurricanes,
2-1, in overtime last night at Verizon Center.
The teams played to a scoreless first period, but less than
two minutes into the second period the Caps broke in front. Jason Chimera circled the puck out and around
the top of the right wing faceoff circle and fired a shot at the Carolina net
that was kicked out by goalie Eddie Lack.
Defenseman Michal Jordan swatted the rebound into the left wing corner,
but Chimera, who had circled all the way over to the other side of the ice,
collected the loose puck. He sent it to
the top of the crease where Justin Williams had inside position on Nathan
Gerbe. Williams had only to get the
blade of his stick on the puck to flick it past Lack to give the Caps a 1-0
lead 90 seconds into the period.
Carolina tied it mid-way through the period on a feat of strength
by Jordan Staal. Carrying the puck
through the right wing faceoff circle while wearing Jay Beagle like a fur stole
about his shoulders, he still managed to get off a shot on goalie Braden
Holtby. His initial shot was stalled in
front, but Dmitry Orlov’s attempt to clear it was a whiff. It allowed Staal to follow up his own shot
and from the edge of the left wing circle he was true on his second attempt,
snapping the puck past Holtby’s left shoulder at the 10:50 mark of the period.
That would be the extent of the scoring in regulation. Overtime was another matter. It was a matter of two players playing their
primary roles. Alex Ovechkin started the
last sequence by fighting off Brett Pesce in the Olympia corner and sliding the
puck to Evgeny Kuznetsov behind the Carolina net, then crossing in front of him
to take up station in front of Lack.
Kuznetsov held the puck for an instant, then floated a saucer pass over
the stick of defenseman Noah Hanafin and out to Ovechkin backing into the right
wing circle. Ovechkin one-timed the puck
under Lack’s right arm and into the back of the net, giving the Caps the 2-1 win
and the first postseason clinch in the league this season.
Other stuff…
-- The Caps got a gift. The game-winning scoring play originated when
Evgeny Kuznetsov carried the puck into the Carolina zone…or did he? As Kuznetsov approached the Carolina blue
line, it was clear he had possession of the puck, but the puck must enter the
zone before the player. You be the judge…was
Kuznetsov in clear possession of the puck, or was he offsides?
-- With the win, this edition of the Capitals became the
fourth 50-win team in franchise history, joining the 1985-1986 team (50 wins),
the 2008-2009 team (50), and the 2009-2010 team (54).
-- Alex Ovechkin’s goal snapped a five-game streak without
one, his longest drought of the season.
His 517th career goal leaves him one behind Dale Hawerchuk
for 35th place in NHL history.
-- The Jay Beagle Experiment had mixed results. Playing top-line minutes (only Alex Ovechkin
had more even strength ice time among forwards), Beagle had just one shot
attempt (a miss), two takeaways, and he won the only faceoff he took. And, he was outmuscled for position by Jordan
Staal on the Hurricanes’ lone goal.
-- Hey, did we call it?
We noted in the prognosto that Justin Williams might be ramping up for a strong
stretch run with points in his previous three games. Well, make it four and goals in his last two
with his goal on Tuesday night.
-- This was the fifth game this season in which the Caps and
their opponent combined for three or fewer power play opportunities (Carolina
had two, the Caps had one) and the second time the Caps did it against the
Hurricanes. The teams combined for three
power play chances on New Year’s Eve (Carolina getting all of them). Tuesday night was the Caps’ first win this
season in such a situation since they defeated the Chicago Blackhawks, 4-1,
back on October 15th.
-- Jason Chimera is not generally known for a high volume of
assists, but he did break a ten-game streak without a helper when he assisted
on Justin Williams’ goal.
-- Evgeny Kuznetsov became the 16th player in
Capitals history to record 50 or more assists in at least one season. He is the first not named Nicklas Backstrom
or Alex Ovechkin to do it since Mike Green had 57 assists in the 2009-2010
season.
-- Braden Holtby was solid in goal for the Caps. But for a singularly noble effort by Jordan
Staal (or a little more support from Dmitry Orlov clearing a puck in front of
him), he might have had a shutout in this one.
In his last three games he is more Holtbeastly 2-0-1, 1.90, .929.
-- It was a low-volume of events sort of game, the teams
combining for just 104 shot attempts for the game and only 92 at 5-on-5. The Caps won that battle, 51-41 and are 52.6
percent Corsi-for at 5-on-5 over their last three games.
In the end…
No, it wasn’t pretty.
Maybe that was to be expected, what with the forward lines a bit of a
fruit salad. But it was a win like a lot
of others this season, finding a way to squeeze out a one-goal margin. And make no mistake, the Caps were playing a
team that is still fighting to stay in playoff contention; they were no
pushover. What they did on Tuesday that
they haven’t done much of lately was hold a team without a first period goal
and then getting the game’s first goal for themselves. That’s the sort of thing folks need to see
more often, so in that respect consider this game a success. Oh yeah, and for the win, too.
When a team is attacking the zone, the puck must completely cross the inside edge of the blue line prior to the skates of any attacking players. (*However, a player actually controlling the puck who crosses the line shall not be considered "off-side," provided he had possession and control of the puck prior to his skates crossing the blue line.) A player deemed to be in control and possession of the puck can skate backwards into the zone and not violate the off-side rule.
ReplyDeleteInteresting offsides. So the rule is possession and control. When is Kuzy ever not in possession and control? And was he NOT in possession and control if you think of the play like he was skating backward, you would need to see the stick play before and afterwards to determine that yes? Not a single photo of the moment?
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