It might have been a bit too long coming for Capitals fans,
but the Caps shook off the rust that was clogging their offensive game and won
a 5-2 decision over the Vancouver Canucks on Saturday night. It was the first time in seven games that the
Caps recorded more than four goals in a game and just the second time they
recorded more than three goals.
The offense for the Caps did not come early, but when it
arrived it did so in waves. Late in the first period, Brendan Gaunce tried to
backhand the puck off the side boards and out of the Vancouver zone, but
managed only to get as far as Matt Niskanen at the blue line. Niskanen sent a shot at the Canuck net, just
as Marcus Johansson was crossing in front in the low slot. Johansson got enough
of the puck as it was sailing by to redirect it past goalie Jacob Markstrom,
and it was 1-0 for the Caps at the 17:17 mark.
Fifteen seconds later, the Caps had a 2-0 lead. From behind
his net, Markstrom tried to send the puck around the boards and out of danger,
but Karl Alzner pinched down the wall and sent the puck back the way it
came. Johansson got to the puck and fed
Evgeny Kuznetsov behind the cage.
Kuznetsov sent the puck out into the high slot where Tom Wilson was
filling in. His shot snuck under a
leaping Alzner and past Markstrom at the 17:33 mark.
It might have made for a great end to the first period, but
Vancouver halved the lead with just 5.6 seconds left when Jannik Hansen was
left all alone to the right of goalie Philipp Grubauer, in the right position
to snap home a rebound of an Eric Gudbranson shot to close the first period scoring.
Washington restored their two-goal lead mid-way through the
second period on a power play. Nicklas
Backstrom patiently surveyed the Canuck defensive layout from the right wing
wall, selecting T.J. Oshie for a shot from between the hash marks. Oshie’s
drive hit the post to Markstrom’s right and caromed behind him to the other
side of the net. Johansson batted home
the loose puck before Markstrom could recover, and it was 3-1 8:58 into the
period.
Vancouver got back within a goal late in the period, a case
of just one too many Canucks getting to loose pucks in close. A shot by Jake Virtanen was stopped by
Grubauer, but the puck popped out to Sven Baertschi to Grubauer’s left. His shot caromed behind Grubauer to Bo Horvat
on the other side of the net, and Horvat had a lay up to make it 3-2 with just
2:43 left in the period.
Washington nursed the one-goal lead for 17 minutes of the
third period; then they put the game away.
Nate Schmidt fed the puck from his blue line up to Andre Burakovsky
sailing down the right wing. Gaining the
Vancouver zone, Burakovsky fed the puck to T.J. Oshie skating down the
middle. Oshie unloaded a howitzer that
beat Markstrom cleanly over his blocker, and it was 4-2 with just 2:27 left in
the game.
Karl Alzner closed the scoring when he collected a loose
puck in the corner to the left of Grubauer and fired the puck off the boards
and down the ice, a shot that took six full seconds from Alzner’s stick to the
back of the empty Canuck net (we timed it).
And with that, the two-game losing streak was history, Caps beating the
Canucks, 5-2.
Other stuff…
-- Goals by Tom Wilson and Karl Alzner were their first
goals of the season, respectively.
-- T.J. Oshie’s “assist” on Marcus Johansson’s power play
goal, coming off a shot attempt that hit the post and caromed to Johansson, was
Oshie’s first assist of the season.
-- The Caps killed all three Vancouver power plays, breaking
a three-game streak in which the Caps allowed a power play goal. It was the second time in seven games the
Caps shut out the opponent’s power play.
-- Every Capital had at least one shot on goal except Dmitry
Orlov and Zach Sanford.
-- The Caps were 14-for-23 on offensive zone faceoffs (60.9
percent), offsetting a 12-for-25 effort in the defensive zone (48.0 percent).
-- Evgeny Kuznetsov had an assist, making it four games in
five that he recorded a point. He also
was on the good side of 50 percent on draws (7-for-13/53.8 percent), which has
not been a regular feature of his game this year.
-- This was the sixth straight game in which the Caps
allowed fewer than 30 shots on goal.
They have yet to allow more than 30 in a game this season, having
allowed 30 shots to Pittsburgh in the season opener against the Penguins.
-- Alex Ovechkin did not record a point, the first time he
failed to record a point in a game in which the Caps scored five or more goals
since he was blanked in a 5-2 win over the Philadelphia Flyers on November 12,
2015. He had at least a point in ten straight
games in which the Caps scored five or more goals until last night.
-- Andre Burakovsky had a bit of an odd game. He had an assist, three shots on goal, five
shot attempts. He did not have another
mark on his score sheet. No hits, no
blocked shots, no takeaways, no giveaways, no faceoffs taken.
-- The Caps had an overwhelming possession edge, outshooting
Vancouver, 31-20 at 5-on-5, and out-attempting them 56-35 (61.5 percent
Corsi-for; numbers from Corsica.hockey).
In the end…
Good game, good timing.
This is more what Caps fans expect, but it is hard to perform at this
level consistently, especially on the road.
But the Caps got a lot of contributions from a lot of different
sources. Four different players had
goals (none named “Ovechkin), and nine of the 18 skaters had points, including
three of the six defensemen (Karl Alzner, Matt Niskanen, and Nate
Schmidt). It was a nice result to serve
as just the lead-in for the next game, Sunday night against Calgary.
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