The Washington Capitals and Columbus Blue Jackets brought
the playoff intensity on Sunday night in Columbus with the top spot in the Metropolitan
Division, if not the entire league, on the line. The Caps raced out to a 3-0 lead in the first
30 minutes, then held on for a 3-2 win to push the Blue Jackets into third
place in the Division, six points behind the Caps and one point behind the
Pittsburgh Penguins, who defeated the Carolina Hurricanes earlier in the day.
After a scoreless first period, T.J. Oshie got the Caps on the
board in the second minute of the second period. Oshie ran down a long cross-ice pass from
Nicklas Backstrom, took the puck off the right wing wall, cut against the grain
behind two Columbus defenders, and snapped a backhand past goalie Sergei
Bobrovsky just 72 seconds into the period to make it 1-0.
Less than two minutes later, the Caps doubled their
lead. Kevin Shattenkirk go the play
started by feeding Lars Eller in the neutral zone. Eller circled to his right to gain the
offensive zone, then carried the puck around the back of the net. From there, Eller spun and found Andre
Burakovsky filling in behind him.
Burakovsky sniped a shot over Bobrovsky’s left shoulder, just inside the
post and under the crossbar to make it 2-0, 2:56 into the period.
Washington made it 3-0 mid-way through the period when
Burakovsky intercepted a Jack John son pass just inside the Caps’ blue line,
then took off in the other direction with Matt Niskanen on his left. After crossing the Columbus blue line, he
eased off, then floated a pass between Johnson and Sam Gagner to Niskanen
cutting to the net. Niskanen snapped a
shot that beat Bobrovsky on the glove side, and it was 3-0 Caps at the 10:05
mark.
The Caps took that 3-0 lead into the third period and almost
gave it all away. Columbus got one back
in the tenth minute of the period when Johnson took a pass from Alexander
Wennberg as he was exiting the defensive zone, skated around John Carlson at
the Caps’ blue line, did the same to Tom Wilson in deep, and beat goalie Braden
Holtby at the 9:22 mark to make it a 3-1 game.
Kyle Quincey got Columbus within a goal six minutes later,
capitalizing on heavy pressure in the Caps’ end. Keeping the Caps pinned in, Brandon Saad
circled out through the left wing circle and fed Quincey at the left
point. Quincey’s floater through a maze
of players hit nothing until it found the back of the net at 15:33 of the
period to make it 3-2.
Braden Holtby stood tall in net after that, staving off a
late Columbus flurry in front of his net to secure the 3-2 win and strengthen
the grip the Caps have on the top spot in the division and league standings.
Other stuff…
-- At one point, when the Caps had a 3-0 lead, 15 different
Columbus skaters were minus-1. Only
Brandon Saad (who finished plus-2), Josh Anderson, and Boone Jenner missed out
on that fun among the 18 skaters.
-- Beating trends… Columbus came into the game with a 30-6-2
record this season when Alexander Wennberg had a point and had not lost a game
in regulation when Jack Johnson scored a goal (3-0-1). Well, that’s now 30-7-2, and 3-1-1.
-- Andre Burakovsky had a goal and an assist, his first
multi-point game he had a goal and an assist in a 5-2 win over the New Jersey
Devils on January 26th. He
went 13 games and a hand injury without one.
-- It was quite a jump start for Burakovsky, who skated just
four shifts and 3:02 in the first period without a single mark in any category on
his line of the score sheet.
-- Evgeny Kuznetsov had perhaps his most out-of-character
game of the season. He had one shot on
goal (his only shot attempt) and no points.
But he did have five credited hits to lead the team and won nine of 12
faceoffs (he came into the game winning 43.4 percent of his draws).
-- As a group, the Caps won 34 of 54 faceoffs (63.0
percent). No Caps taking more than one
faceoff was under 50 percent. Losing
three of the last four draws they took in the last 1:01 made things a bit more
interesting than they had to be.
-- Alex Ovechkin skated just 15:27, his lowest amount of ice
time since he skated 14:54 in a 6-4 win over the Anaheim Ducks on February 11th.
-- Nicklas Backstrom had an assist. That makes helpers in seven of his last 11
games, over which he is 2-15-17, plus-2.
-- Braden Holtby held the Blue Jackets to two goals on 37
shots faced. It was the first time in
six road games that he allowed fewer than three goals and his heaviest shot
volume on the road this season since he faced 45 shots in Winnipeg in a 3-2 win
last November 1st.
-- Columbus won the possession battle, out-attempting the
Caps, 57-41 at 5-on-5 (58.16 percent Corsi-for), and outshooting the Caps, 30-26
at fives (numbers from Corsica.hockey).
In the end…
Imagine seven games in a playoff series like this. It would be grueling for the players, no
doubt, but thrilling for fans of both teams (although we’d prefer to see a four
sleeper game series in which the Caps stomp the Blue Jackets). This might be thought of as “Game 0” of that
potential playoff matchup. It had that kind of close-quarter, nasty edge feel
to it. That the Caps could go into
Columbus and take the crowd out of the game for 40 minutes and take advantage
of opportunities, then grind out a win against a hard-charging team late speaks
well for their readiness for that environment.
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