The Washington Capitals looked to put the bitter taste of
their 8-7 overtime loss to the Pittsburgh Penguins on Monday behind them, and
they did so in a big way on Thursday night with a 7-3 win over the St. Louis
Blues at Scottrade Center in St. Louis.
Andre Burakovsky got the Caps off and running early in the
first period when he took a pass from Daniel Winnik, skated down the middle,
curled off, and snapped a shot through the pads of goalie Jake Allen at the
5:37 mark.
Jay Beagle doubled the Caps’ lead just over two minutes
later. Tom Wilson outskated Carl
Gunnarsson to a loose puck behind the Blues’ net and swept it back to
Winnik. Curling around the net, Winnik
found Beagle at the edge of the right wing faceoff circle, and Beagle wasted no
time snapping a shot past Allen to make it 2-0, 7:41 into the period.
St. Louis halved the lead just 19 seconds into the second
period. Jaden Schwatz took a feed from
Paul Stastny at the top of the right wing circle and wristed a shot through a
screen and past goalie Braden Holtby.
Three minutes and change later, the Caps had their two-goal
lead again. Alex Ovechkin had the puck
poked off his stick in the left wing faceoff circle, but it was Nicklas
Backstrom first to the loose biscuit.
Backstrom fed T.J. Oshie, and the former Blue backhanded the puck past
Allen from the hash marks at the edge of the left wing circle. Just 3:47 into the period, it was 3-1.
Brett Connolly added to the lead shortly thereafter. Burakovsky took the puck off the wall in his
own end and threw it cross-ice in Connolly’s direction. Taking the carom off the wall, Connolly took
advantage of Gunnarsson blowing a tire at his own blue line, breaking in alone
on Allen and snapping a shot over his glove at the 7:33 mark and chasing Allen
out of the crease for the evening.
Marcus Johansson made it 5-1 just 11 seconds later, taking
advantage of another Blues’ defender tumbling to the ice. Patrick Berglund was the victim this time,
losing his balance and the puck just inside his own blue line. Johansson collected the loose puck, circled
into the middle, and beat relief goalie Carter Hutton to make it 6-1, 7:44 into
the period.
The Caps added another goal late in the period. On a power play, Dmitry Orlov fed the puck to
Evgeny Kuznetsov at the right wing wall.
Kuznetsov angled for position, and then fed Justin Williams in the
middle for a one-timer that beat Hutton cleanly at the 13:30 mark.
The Caps had their seventh goal in the seventh minute of the
third period. From the left wing wall,
Oshie fed Kuznetsov entering the offensive zone. Kuznetsov angled through the middle, then
wristed a shot off the shaft of Alexander Steen’s stick and past Hutton to make
it 7-1, 6:20 into the period.
St. Louis added a pair of window-dressing goals in the last
ten minutes, both of them courtesy of Steen, but the matter was settled by that
point, the Caps skating off with a 7-3 win.
Other stuff…
-- The seven goals marked the first time the Caps scored
seven or more goals in consecutive games since the 1992-1993 season when they
beat the Blues, 10-6, then followed that up with a 10-3 win over the Los
Angeles Kings on February 11th and 13th of that season.
-- The Caps got goals from seven different players and
points from 13 different skaters.
-- The most amazing number of this game might have been this
one: 29. Washington had only 29 shot
attempts for the contest (18 shots on goal).
-- This was the first time in Caps history that they scored
seven or more goals on 20 or fewer shots.
It was the first time in Blues history that the team allowed seven or
more goals on 20 or fewer shots.
-- This made five straight games and eight in their last 11
in which the Caps scored five or more goals.
-- This was the second straight game in which the Caps faced
just one shorthanded situation. These
are the only two games this season in which the Caps were shorthanded once.
-- The 18 shots on goal was a season low for the Caps and
the third time they recorded 20 or fewer.
They won all three of those games.
-- Balance. The top line of Alex Ovechkin, Nicklas
Backstrom, and T.J. Oshie had a goal and four assists. The second line of Marcus Johansson, Evgeny
Kuznetsov, and Justin Williams had three goals and an assist. Andre Burakovsky, Lars Eller, and Brett
Connolly had two goals and two assists for the third line. The fourth line of Daniel Winnik, Jay Beagle,
and Tom Wilson had a goal and three assists.
-- Getting seven goals was odd in one respect. The Caps won just four of 16 offensive zone
faceoffs, accounting for their entire faceoff deficit for the game (23 wins, 35
losses/39.7 percent).
-- The Caps led the league in 5-on-5 goals scored/goal
against ratio (1.80), and they just added to it in this game. Outscoring the Blues at fives by a 6-3
margin, the Caps are now at 1.81.
In the end…
In its own way, this game was as odd as the one the Caps
played on Monday night. They generated
little by way of sustained offensive pressure, but it seemed everything they
threw at the net went in. It happens,
but that might be a sign of how iffy St. Louis’ goaltending is these days. Giving up the two goals late is something
coaches will no doubt notice and remind the players of as a warning to play to
the horn.
All that aside, this is a club that is fearsome on offense
these days. They have 54 goals in their
last 11 games. Only five of them have
been scored by Alex Ovechkin. Six of
them have been scored by T.J. Oshie, eight by Justin Williams. Even Brett Connolly has five goals in that
span, and Jay Beagle has four. It is a
team that scores in depth, and they do it at 5-on-5. That might be the best news of all, at least
for fans, who might be peeking ahead to how this club might do in the
spring. For the team, it is a matter of
building on what they have, and over the last 11 games, they have built
something quite special.