The Washington Capitals saw their once
all-but-insurmountable 3-0 lead in their first round playoff series over the
Philadelphia Flyers whittled to a 3-2 lead as the Flyers won Game 5, 2-0, in
Washington on Friday night.
Scoring was sparse, but not the ill-will, expressing itself
right off the opening faceoff when Washington’s T.J. Oshie and Philadelphia’s
Braden Schenn dropped the gloves, Oshie reminding Schenn that trying to chop
the knees out from under Evgeny Kuznetsov in Game 4 was remembered and something
to be dealt with.
The two had been yapping at one another all through the
prelude to the drop of the puck, and just ten seconds into the game they
expressed their mutual distaste for one another. We had the bout as a draw, and that is how
the first period ended, the teams scoreless.
It would be the Flyers breaking the ice in the second period
just as a Philadelphia power play was expiring.
Working the puck around the perimeter of the offensive zone, Sam Gagner
one-timed a pass from Mark Streit at the Washington net. The puck was deadened in front, but Ryan
White – the other stick in the ribs of the Caps in this series – managed to
poke the loose puck past goalie Braden Holtby to make it 1-0, 7:52 into the
period.
The Flyers and goalie Michal Neuvirth made that goal stand
up, and the Flyers scored an empty net goal by Chris VandeVelde with 30.8
seconds left for the final 2-0 margin
Other stuff…
-- The Caps picked precisely the wrong time to lose
consecutive games in regulation time for the first time this season. In another way, it should not be
surprising. In 20 Games 5 on home ice in
Caps history, the club is now 8-12.
-- A subplot to this series is emerging, that being which is
the stronger force, Justin Williams as the clutch playoff performer or the Caps’
playoff history of misfortune. They
intersected on Friday night in the form of four minor penalties taken by
Williams, three of them for high-sticking (including a double-minor barely a
minute into the game) and another for goaltender interference. Williams does not have a goal in this series
(two assists, both on power plays) and is a minus-4.
-- The 44 shots on goal for the Caps was not a team playoff
record for a game settled in regulation, but they could see it from here. Only three times did a Caps team record more
shots on goal in a 60-minute playoff game – 45 shots in a 4-3 loss to the New
York Rangers in Game 6 of their playoff series in 2015, 49 shots in a 7-1 win
over the Rangers in Game 3 of their 1990 playoff series, and 54 shots in a 4-1
loss to the Montreal Canadiens in Game 6 of their 2010 postseason series.
-- The shot differential of plus-33 (44-11) is a team
record, surpassing the plus-32 the Caps recorded in that 4-1 loss to Montreal
in Game 6 of the 2010 Easter Conference quarterfinals (54-22). The shots on goal allowed (11) ties for the
second fewest allowed by the Caps in a playoff game in team history. The Caps limited the New Jersey Devils to 10
shots on goal in a 2-1 loss in Game 3 of their 1990 series against the Devils.
-- This game was the 12th in his career that Alex
Ovechkin recorded eight or more shots.
It was the sixth time he did so and failed to record a goal.
-- Game 5 was the 14th time in club history that
the Caps were shut out in a postseason game, the ninth time on home ice. It was the second time a Flyer goaltender
turned the trick, the other time occurring in Game 2 of the 2008 series between
the clubs when Martin Biron stopped all 24 shots in a 2-0 win in Washington.
-- The magic for Jason Chimera seems to have been spent in
that 100-foot goal in Game 2. Since that
fluke goal, he has one shot on goal, none in the last three games, including
Game 5 last night.
-- The Caps started this series going 8-for-17 on the power
play in Games 1-3 (47.1 percent), all wins, but they are 0-for-5 over the last
two games, both losses. They now have
the second-best power play in the postseason (36.4 percent, to Pittsburgh’s 36.8
percent), but how they got there has come to matter in this series.
-- Braden Holtby has faced just 35 shots over the last two
games, stopping 32 of them. A 1.52 goals
against average over two games would suggest he added two wins to his record,
but the opposite is true.
-- The Caps had a Corsi-for at 5-on-5 overall of 78.8 percent
(63-17 in shot attempts). That is the
highest Corsi-for at 5-on-5 for the Caps in any game, regular season or
playoff, in the post 2004-2005 period (numbers from war-on-ice.com).
In the end…
Well, here we are.
Holding a 3-1 lead, losing Game 5 to make it 3-2. Talk about history not meaning anything at
this point sounds like whistling past the graveyard. More ominously, this series is now setting up
to look far too much like the 2010 Eastern Conference quarterfinal against the
Montreal Canadiens. Think about it (or
perhaps don’t)…Presidents Trophy winning Caps against an 8-seed that struggled
to make the post season. The Caps
dominate the series early, leaving the opponents in a quandary about
goaltending. Finally, a journeyman goaltender
emerges to frustrate the Capitals relentlessly, and the team in front of him
plays just well enough to eke out wins despite being utterly dominated
everywhere but on the scoreboard.
It was Jaroslav Halak who so frustrated
the Caps in 2010. Now, Michal Neuvirth
is trying to step into that role for the Flyers in 2016. The cruel irony of it, of course, is Neuvirth
having once been a draft pick and a playoff goaltender for the Caps.
The talk of another Caps collapse in the postseason will be
hard to avoid over the next 30 hours before the teams meet at high noon in
Philadelphia on Sunday. For the Caps and their
fans, it will be to wonder if the 3-0 lead the club took in this series was
just a different road to an inevitable destination...a Game 7 in Washington on
Wednesday night.
Plus, the Caps had even traded Neuvirth to acquire Halak -- back in 2014
ReplyDeleteI always liked Nuevy but it's time to crash the damn net. Break his concentration. Still fearful Peerless. Too long a Caps fan I guess. Last time the Caps cleared the second round I wasn't able to watch any of the games due to training... superstition is creeping in and it may be my fault.
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