If Game 1 of
the playoff series between the Washington Capitals and Pittsburgh Penguins is
an indicator of what the rest of the series will be like, it will be one for
the ages. The Caps took a lead then fell behind, dominated then were dominated.
But in the end, they prevailed in overtime, taking Game 1 in the first extra
session, 4-3.
T.J. Oshie
was the hero for the Caps, recording a hat trick, including the game-winner in
overtime. It was Andre Burakovsky who got the Caps started, however. He started
the play by muffling a pass from Evgeni Malkin in the Caps’ zone and starting
the puck the other way. Taking a pass from Jason Chimera to start the ensuing
rush, he carried the puck down the right side into the Penguins’ zone. At the
top of the right wing circle he fed Chimera skating down the middle. Chimera’s
shot was stopped by goalie Matt Murray, but Burakovsky followed up and batted
the loose puck into the empty net past Murray at the 10:13 mark.
That goal
held up until mid-way in the second period when the Pens struck twice in short
order. Ben Lovejoy followed up a shot by Nick Bonino, sneaking it past the
right pad of goalie Braden Holtby at the 10:40 mark to tie the game. Then,
Evgeni Malkin struck just 57 seconds later on a superb backhand shot that he
lifted over the right shoulder of Holtby to make it 2-1, Penguins, 11:37 into the
period.
The Penguin
lead lasted just 33 seconds, though. T.J. Oshie gladly accepted a giveaway by
defenseman Olli Maatta just inside the Caps’ blue line and headed the other
way. Skating in on Murray, Oshie snapped a shot over the goalie’s left shoulder
and under the crossbar to tie the game 12:10 into the period.
Oshie gave
the Caps the lead early in the third period, the product of another turnover by
the Pens at the Caps’ blue line. This time it was Alex Ovechkin collecting the
loose puck and racing down the left side. His shot from the left wing circle
was blocked by defenseman Trevor Daley, but the puck came back to Ovechkin. He
spied Oshie cutting down the middle and fed him for a backhand shot that slid
under the right pad of Murray to make it 3-2, 3:23 into the third period.
Pittsburgh
tied the game mid-way through the period, taking advantage of some misfortune
on the Caps’ part. The Penguins moved the puck around the wall from Phil Kessel
to Carl Hagelin behind the Caps’ net. Hagelin fed Nick Bonino cutting to the
net. Bonino one-timed the puck, the shot ticking off the stick of defenseman
Nate Schmidt and past Braden Holtby to make it 3-3 at the 8:42 mark.
That would
be all the scoring in regulation. Overtime was hardly a passive affair, the
teams exchanging a healthy volume of shots. It was the Caps’ eighth shot of the
extra period that would decide the contest, and not without some controversy.
Trevor Daley tried to backhand the puck up the wall at the players bench, but
had his attempt intercepted by Oshie in the neutral zone. Oshie skated into the
Penguin zone diagonally across the ice, then circled around the Pittsburgh net.
His wrap-around shot appeared to beat Murray’s right pad to the post and sneak
over the line, and it was signaled thus by the referee as a good goal. The play
went to video review, where it was upheld, Oshie’s hat trick goal being the
game-winner at the 9:33 mark, giving the Caps the 4-3 win and a 1-0 lead in the
series.
Other stuff…
-- Team
defense was occasionally an adventure for the Caps in this game. The goal
scored by Ben Lovejoy might have been the most obvious example. With Nick
Bonino entering the Caps’ zone with the puck at the start of the play, Nate
Schmidt and Dmitry Orlov bumped into one another, allowing Bonino to step
around them and take an unimpeded path to the net. His initial shot was stopped
by Braden Holtby, but Lovejoy was there for the follow-up with neither
defenseman in sight.
-- This is
the eighth time in nine meetings against the Penguins in Caps franchise history
that the Caps won Game 1 of the series.
They are 1-7 in their previous eight series in which they won Game 1,
their only win coming in their only series win against the Pens in franchise
history, beating Pittsburgh, four games to two, in 1994.
-- Jay
Beagle was a force of nature in this game, in a figurative sense. He exhibited an uncommon force of gravity
with respect to sticks, getting one caught in his visor (giving him the look of
a unicorn drawn by Salvador Dali) and another caught in his skate. He still managed to record six hits, block
two shots, and win 12 of 19 faceoffs.
-- Speaking
of hits, Tom Wilson had six, but the long term effects of his effort might not
be reflected in that column of the score sheet.
He endeared himself to Penguin fans for his on-the-edge takedown of
Conor Sheary (that Pens fans, no doubt, will consider a kneeing penalty that
wasn’t called) and goading Evgeni Malkin into an embellishment penalty. Wilson took a coincidental cross-checking
penalty on the play, but that is an exchange the Caps will take.
-- In the “game
within a game,” strength versus strength favored the Caps in this contest. The top line for the Caps (Alex Ovechkin,
Nicklas Backstrom, and T.J. Oshie) were on-ice for three goals for, while the
top line for Pittsburgh (Sheary, Sidney Crosby, and Patric Hornqvist) was on
ice for the same three goals against.
-- In the “game
within a game, part two,” Crosby was held without a point, had one shot on
goal, but did win 19 of 28 faceoffs.
Ovechkin recorded an assist, had four shots on goals, and was
credited with seven hits.
-- Every one
of the 18 Pittsburgh skaters, except for Olli Maatta, recorded at least one
shot on goal.
-- Braden
Holtby allowed more than two goals in a game for the first time since he
allowed four on 28 shots in a 4-3 Game 6 loss to the New York Rangers in last
year’s Eastern Conference semifinal. In
the next seven playoff games he played leading up to last night, he was 4-3,
0.98, .964, with two shutouts. Only in
that context could a .933 save percentage (42 saves on 45 shots) last night
even hint at an “off” night.
-- Brooks
Orpik returned to action last night and logged 25:58 in ice time. He was one of four defensemen to get more
than 25 minutes on the night. Why? Nate Schmidt finished with 12:13 in ice time,
and Dmitry Orlov finished with a total of 5:44, getting only one shift after
the second period, none in the last 27:25 of the game.
-- The
Penguins edged the Caps in 5-on-5 shots attempts, 66-63 (51.2 percent
Corsi-for). They also had the edge in
total scoring chances (29-24) and in high-danger scoring chances (10-9). It was fueled largely by a dominant second
period in which the Pens out-attempted the Caps at 5-on-5, 27-13. The scoring chances were also heavily tilted
to the Pens, 16-4 overall and 6-0 in high-danger scoring chances (numbers from
war-on-ice.com).
In the end…
Don’t get
cocky, Caps fans (as if you could, given this team’s history). The Penguins have a bad recent history in
Game 1’s and in playoff overtime. The
loss was Pittsburgh’s eighth straight loss in overtime of a playoff game. The last time they won one, it was Brooks
Orpik delivering the game-winner to eliminate the New York Islanders in
2013. It was also the seventh straight
time the Penguins lost Game 1 when playing on the road. And we won’t linger on the matter of the Pens
and Capitals and Game 1’s and their utter lack of influence on the final series
results.
Still, the
Caps played well. One could argue that
they could play better, two of the goals coming from breakdowns that allowed
Penguins far too much open space in the middle of the ice to dart to the
net. Then again, another goal was off a
Capital, but that’s hockey.
The Caps got
what they so sorely lacked in previous playoff games, especially against this
opponent – someone to have a big game who is not named “Ovechkin.” T.J. Oshie stepped up in a big way in this
game, scoring in a variety of styles – off the rush, in close, using speed
around the net. It is that next
dimension of skill that makes this Caps team as formidable as it is. But that is hardly a collection of slugs and
shrinking violets they are facing, too.
Game 1 is done. Put it away, and
get ready for Game 2. Count on the Pens
being ready.
If you're not going to play Schmidt or Orlov, then they need to put in someone else. They can't go the whole series with 4.5 D.
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