Buffalo opened the scoring just before the six-minute mark
when Zemgus Girgensons took a pass from Derek Grant just outside the Caps’ blue line, caught
defenseman Matt Niskanen flat-footed, stepped around him and then darted to the net to lift a backhand
over the left pad of goalie Braden Holtby.
The Sabres carried that 1-0 lead into the second period, but
Jay Beagle tied the game for the Caps just over five minutes into the
period. Beagle started and ended the
play, sending the puck up the boards to Daniel Winnik at the right point, then
darting to the net. Winnik moved the
puck across to Brooks Orpik at the top of the left wing circle, and Orpik threw
it at the net where Beagle was waiting to redirect it past goalie Robin Lehner
to make it 1-1, 5:23 into the period.
Ten minutes later, the Sabres had their one-goal lead
back. It was a turnover by Niskanen that
started things, his attempted pass from below the goal line picked off by
William Carrier, who fed Ryan O’Reilly in the low slot. O’Reilly’s shot was stopped by Holtby, as was
the rebound attempt from Kyle Okposo.
The second shot came back out to Okposo drifting across the slot, and he
had an open net to shoot at, converting the chance to make it 2-1 at the 15:23
mark of the second period.
It looked as if the Sabres would nurse that one-goal lead
through the third period, but with 6:18 left, Marcus Johansson made a new game
of it. With Evander Kane in the penalty
box on a hooking call, Justin Williams won the ensuing faceoff to Lehner’s left
back to John Carlson. Carlson backed off
a step and let fly with a shot that Johansson redirected inside Lehner’s glove
to tie the contest.
That would be how regulation ended, leaving things to the
3-on-3 freestyle competition. In the
third minute, Johansson skated the puck down the middle and into the Sabres’
zone. He left the puck for Evgeny Kuznetsov
crossing behind him, and Kuznetsov found Dmitry Orlov at the top of the left
wing circle. Orlov faked a slap shot and
sent the puck across to Johansson coming through the right wing circle. The pass hit Johansson in stride, and his one-time
slap shot beat Lehner cleanly over his left pad to give the Caps the 3-2 win.
Other stuff…
-- That was the Caps’ first win this season when trailing at
the end of two periods. They were 0-5-2
in such games coming into this contest.
-- OK…we’ll take credit for having Marcus Johansson as our “playerto ponder” in the prognosto.
The two-goal night was Johansson’s third this season and first since October 30th.
It was his ninth career multi-goal game, fourth most on the club since his came
into the league.
-- Jay Beagle scored a goal. The Caps win when Jay Beagle
scores a goal. They are now 27-1-5 in
games in which he scores a goal over his career, 4-0-0 this season.
-- At the other end, Alex Ovechkin had one shot on goal,
that coming in the third period. He has
15 shots on goal in his last five games (since the hat trick against St.
Louis), which might not sound noteworthy, but for him it’s almost a drought. He is now five games without a goal, his
longest streak without a goal since he went five games without one in Games
62-66 last season.
-- The Caps were credited with 24 hits. Defensemen had 16 of them, led by Taylor
Chorney (five).
-- Lars Eller…minus-2, three shots on goal (no points), lost
five of seven draws. Not an inspiring
night.
-- Tom Wilson…no shot attempts in 13 minutes and change…ditto.
-- Whatever his effectiveness, Dmitry Orlov was a whirling
dervish on the ice tonight. Carrying the puck end-to-end, getting good looks at
the net, playing decent defense for the most part. An assist, plus-2, four shot attempts. But that chance he had from in tight that
rolled off his stick and went wide…gotta bury that.
-- Don’t lose sight of the fact that Braden Holtby stopped
31 of 33 shots and shut the door in the third period, turning away all nine shots
he faced. Given the Caps’ woes in the
third periods of games, that was a big lift.
-- There is possession, and there is possession that means
something. The Caps won the 5-on-5 shot
attempt battle, 52-49 (51.9 percent Corsi-for; numbers from Corsica.hockey), but lost the shots battle,
29-23 and the goal battle, 2-1.
In the end…
OK, the comeback was, for lack of a better term,
gritty. But let’s remember, this Sabres
team came into the game with the worst scoring offense in the league (2.00 goals
per game) and lived up to their average.
This wasn’t the 2010 Capitals the Caps were facing. And, it could have been worse. Buffalo had one goal disallowed (the dreaded “offside
before the goal was scored” video) and another barely avoided with a pileup in
the crease. For 45 minutes, the Caps
looked as if they were having a leisurely skate up the C&O Canal.
It was Jay Beagle who served as something of an example, fighting for pucks, going to the net, winning faceoffs, doing the little things that this whole “will” part of “will over skill” is supposed to embody. And give Marcus Johansson some credit for going against recent type and shooting the puck (and going to the net for a redirect). Good things happen when pucks are on net. Things to keep in mind as the Caps prepare to host the Boston Bruins on Wednesday.
It was Jay Beagle who served as something of an example, fighting for pucks, going to the net, winning faceoffs, doing the little things that this whole “will” part of “will over skill” is supposed to embody. And give Marcus Johansson some credit for going against recent type and shooting the puck (and going to the net for a redirect). Good things happen when pucks are on net. Things to keep in mind as the Caps prepare to host the Boston Bruins on Wednesday.
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