The Washington Capitals made it two straight overtime wins
on Wednesday night with a 4-3 victory over the Boston Bruins at Verizon
Center. It was a game not without its
tense moments, and it was one that reflected much of what the Capitals’ season
has been to date.
The Caps got out of the gate quickly when Justin Williams
scored just 23 seconds into the game.
Alex Ovechkin started the play skating the puck up the left side to the
red line, where he sent it cross-ice to Evgeny Kuznetsov skating past the
player benches. Kuznetsov carried the
puck into the Bruins’ zone, stopping at the edge of the right wing circle. Drawing back just a bit to create space
between himself and Bruin defenseman Zdeno Chara, Kuznetsov floated a shot at
the Boston net. William, going to the
front of the net, got position on Brandon Carlo just enough to get his stick on
the puck as it was sailing by. The
deflection tumbled past goalie Tuukka Rask, and the Caps were off and running.
Seven minutes later, it was Williams again. It started with Dmitry Orlov keeping the puck
in the offensive zone at the left point, then feeding it to Ovechkin circling
behind him. Ovechkin moved it to
Kuznetsov entering the zone down the left wing.
Kuznetsov circled through the left wing circle in the direction of the
Bruin net, put he lost control of the puck on a lift check from Chara. Williams pounced on the loose puck, spun, and
snapped a shot past Rask’s pads to make it 2-0, 7:57 into the period.
That was how the teams went to the first intermission, but
the Caps picked up where they left off when they returned to the ice. Jay Beagle collected a loose puck at the red
line and skated it up the right wing wall.
Daniel Winnik jumped up to make it a 2-on-1 rush for the Caps, and when
Beagle snapped a crips pass past Carlo onto Winnik’s blade, it was only for the
latter to rip the puck past a lunging Rask to make it 3-0 at the 5:51 mark.
If Caps fans’ memories were starting to drift back to March
3, 2008, when the Caps beat the Bruins, 10-2, on this ice sheet, the Bruins put that notion to rest with goals 2:25 apart late in the second
period to get within one. Dominic Moore
got the first one when the Caps lost a faceoff in their own end
(details!...details!!), didn’t get to a loose puck in front of their own goal (goalie
Braden Holtby and defensemen Brooks Orpik and Dmitry Orlov finding it just out
of reach), allowed Anton Blidh (just off the set as an evil villain in a new
James Bond movie) to get a shot off, then lost track of Moore following up to
tuck the rebound past Holtby.
David Pastrnak got the B’s within a goal when he muscled
Evgeny Kuznetsov off the puck on the Bruins’ side of the red line, earing
himself a breakaway on Holtby. Pastrnak
skated in and, with Orlov desperately trying to close the gap, tucked the puck
between Holtby’s legs to make it 3-2 with just one minute left in the period.
Boston made it all the way back when the teams returned for
the third period. With Boston on a power
play, Brad Marchand occupied Nicklas Backstrom and Karl Alzner as he skated the
puck through the right wing circle toward the corner. He left it for Austin Czarnik, who relayed it
to Colin Miller for a one-timer at the top of the zone that beat Holtby through
a screen and into the top of the net to make it 3-3, 8:19 into the third
period.
That would be all for the scoring in regulation for the two
teams, and the Caps needed less than 100 seconds in the extra session to end
it. Nate Schmidt started the play by
moving the puck up and out of the Caps’ end to Marcus Johansson at the red
line. Johansson backhanded a pass
cross-ice to Backstrom on the right wing at the Boston blue line. He skated in and, from the top of the right
wing circle, fed Schmidt charging down the middle into the zone. Schmidt returned the puck to Backstrom, who
looked over his options and dialed his own number, snapping the puck through
Rask’s legs to give the Caps the 4-3 overtime win.
Other stuff…
-- Nicklas Backstrom’s goal in overtime was his 17th
game recording a point in his career against the Bruins. The Caps are 17-0-0 in those games. Backstrom is 5-26-31, plus-15 in those games.
-- Williams’ two-goal game was his third multi-goal game as
a Capital and his first this season. It
was also his first multi-goal game as a Capital against a team that was not the
New York Rangers.
-- Evgeny Kuznetsov had a pair of assists, his first
multi-assist game since the Caps beat the Winnipeg Jets, 3-2, back on November
1st, and his first multi-point game since he had a goal and an
assist against the St. Louis Blues in a 4-3 win on November 23rd.
-- The Caps had only 20 shots on goal. It was not their low for the season, but they
could see it from there. They had 18
shots on goal in a 3-0 win over the Colorado Avalanche on October 18th.
-- The Bruins might be feeling as if they let one get away
instead of the Caps barely escaping that fate.
Owing, no doubt, to score effects, the Bruins enjoyed a 72-47 advantage
in overall shot attempts, and a 57-40 edge in shot attempts at 5-on-5 (58.76
percent Corsi-for; numbers from Corsica.hockey).
-- In a scoring oddity, Brooks Orpik was the only Capital to
finish in minus territory (minus-1).
-- Tom Wilson… six hits, a minor penalty, no shot
attempts. Is this the player, or the
role the player is being asked to play?
-- It wasn’t all unicorns and accordions for Nicklas
Backstrom in this game. He won just four
of 16 faceoffs (he was 4-for-11 against Patric Bergeron, but Bergeron does that
to a lot of guys). And speaking of
which, Kuznetsov did have the infrequent over-50 percent game in the circle
(9-for-16/56.3 percent), but he did lose the defensive zone draw that led to
Dominic Moore’s goal.
-- Nate Schmidt’s assist broke a six-game streak without a
point, and he displayed an interesting transition aspect to his game, going
from “puck-moving defenseman” to clear the puck out of his own end onto a
teammate’s stick, then becoming “forward charging hard to the net” when the
Caps gained control in the offensive zone moments before Backstrom’s
game-winner off the pass from Schmidt.
It might be too much risk-versus-reward for the Caps to tolerate, but he
might be an intriguing overtime addition when teams are 3-on-3.
-- Braden Holtby’s win makes him 10-2-0 in 12 career
appearances against Boston, the last six wins coming consecutively with the win
last night. As if that isn’t impressive
enough, his career numbers against the Bruins are a goals-against average of
1.20, a save percentage of .948, and he has three shutouts. In those last six consecutive wins, he has
those three shutouts and has a 1.00 GAA with a .966 save percentage.
In the end…
So this is the Washington Capitals. As Nicklas Backstrom pointed out in the
post-game interview on the bench, the Caps are a team that plays well for 20
minutes here and there, but they don’t do it for 60 minutes often enough. Last night was an example. The Caps, even though the two early goals
were a bit fluky, threatened to run the Bruins out of the building. They built a 3-0 lead 26 minutes into the
game, then they seemed to let their minds wander. It cost them, almost to the point of giving
away at least one point and possibly two.
Twenty five games into the season, we are at the point where we might
ask ourselves, can this team turn its focus on when it has to down the road, or
is this the team they are? The former is
the hope, but the latter is the fear.
Something to watch going forward.
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