The Washington Capitals went to Montreal with the mission of
extending their winning streak to six games, tying their longest of the season.
Mission: accomplished. The Caps
scored three third period goals to break a 1-1 tie and defeat the Canadiens, 4-1,
on Monday night at Bell Centre.
Nicklas Backstrom opened the scoring mid-way through the
first period. He started the play by
digging out a loose puck in the corner to the right of goalie Carey Price and
sliding it out to Alex Ovechkin at the left point. Ovechkin leaned into a shot that Price
stopped. The rebound leaked out into the
top of the crease where Backstrom was arriving.
He took the puck on his backhand and wrapped it around Price’s left pad
to make it 1-0, 11:03 into the period.
That was where the score stood until the third period when
the Canadiens tied the game on a power play, Tomas Plekanec solving the chaos
in front of goalie Braden Holtby to stuff in a loose puck at 7:18 of the
period.
Less than a minute later, the Caps had the lead for good on
a sparkling play by Evgeny Kuznetsov.
Working his way around Max Pacioretty to collect a loose puck just
outside the Montreal blue line, he then dangled around defenseman Jeff Petry to
break in on Price. He lifted a shot past
Price’s blocker, and the Caps had a 2-1 lead 8:12 into the third period.
Brett Connolly increased the lead less than three minutes
later. Carey Price was a bit too
lackadaisical in leaving the puck for Petry at the goal line to his right. It was just the opportunity Kuznetsov took
advantage of, darting in front of Petry to collect the puck and circle around
the Canadiens’ net. Coming out the other
side, he spied Connolly coming into the offensive zone. Connolly took Kuznetsov’s pass and snapped a
shot past Price to make it 3-1 at the 11-minute mark.
The Caps closed the scoring late in the third on a power
play. NIcklas Backstrom and Marcus
Johansson exchanged passes on the right side before Backstrom stepped out and
sent a pass across to Alex Ovechkin at the top of the left wing circle. Ovechkin settled the puck and in one motion snapped
a shot that snuck through and eluded Price’s glove on the far side to give the
Caps a 4-1 win.
Other stuff…
-- The win allowed the Caps to jump over the New York
Rangers into third place in the Metropolitan Division and tie the Pittsburgh
Penguins in points (57). Metropolitan
Division teams now occupy the top four spots in the Eastern Conference
standings.
-- Alex Ovechkin had a three point night (1-2-3) to bring
him to within one point of 1,000 for his career. It was Ovechkin’s first two-assist game of
the season. His goal was the 544th
of his career, lifting him into a tie with the legendary Maurice “Rocket”
Richard for 29th place all-time in NHL goal scoring. Next in Ovechkin’s sights in the all-time
rankings is Michel Goulet with 548 goals.
-- Nicklas Backstrom and Evgeny Kuznetsov each had two-point
games. For Backstrom it was his eighth
multi-point game of the season, tying Marcus Johansson for the team lead. It was Kuznetsov’s seventh such game.
-- Liam O’Brien saw his first action of the season after his
recent call-up from Hershey. He skated
eight shifts and was the only Capital without a shot on goal (he did not have a
shot attempt in 6:08 of ice time).
-- Brett Connolly’s fifth goal of the season came in another
win. That’s 5-for-5 for Connolly in
terms of goals and wins, and the Caps are 19-5-2 with him in the lineup.
-- The Caps enjoyed a 39-23 edge in shots on goal, their
biggest shot differential on the road this season.
-- Karl Alzner had a good night in the underlying numbers,
finishing a team-best plus-3 and blocking six of the 24 shots the Caps blocked
on the evening.
-- The Caps were 4-for-4 on the penalty kill, extending
their recent run of success to 56-for-59 in their last 14 games (94.9 percent).
-- Braden Holtby’s shutout streak ended at 167:18 when Tomas
Plekanec scored in the third period.
Nevertheless, he is 5-0-1, 1.11, .957, with two shutouts in his last six
games.
-- The Caps enjoyed a 68-62 overall shot attempt advantage over
Montreal, 56-47 at 5-on-5 (CF% of 54.37 percent; numbers from Corsica.hockey).
In the end…
Even with T.J. Oshie out with an injury, the Caps kept
humming along in one of the less friendly venues for road teams in the NHL. If anything, the Caps got stronger as the
game went on, dominating the shot attempts from the 30-minute mark on. If there was a dark spot in that regard, it
was that the fourth line of Jay Beagle, Daniel Winnik, and Tom Wilson, along
with the defensive pair of Karl Alzner and John Carlson, were all under 50
percent CF at fives, the only Caps to do so.
Nevertheless, the Caps took advantage of a depleted team and
abused goalie Carey Price far more than they did in their previous meeting,
when the Caps managed only 21 shots in a 2-1 loss. The four goals allowed by Price tied his
season high, while the 39 shots the Caps fired at him was the fourth-highest
total he has faced (it might be worth noting that in the three games with
higher shot totals, Price was 2-0-1).
It was a good start to the week, but now things get harder
with the Pittsburgh Penguins coming to town on Thursday night. It will present an opportunity – two in
fact. Alex Ovechkin could reach the
1,000 point mark in his career, and more important, the Caps could jump over
the Penguins into second place in the Metropolitan Division with the Columbus
Blue Jackets the only team remaining between them and the best record in the
league.
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