After splitting the first four games of their Eastern
Conference quarterfinal matchup, each team winning both games played on their
respective home ice sheets, the Washington Capitals returned home to host the
Carolina Hurricanes in Game 5 on Saturday night. The Caps scored early, applied pressure when
they could, killed penalties effectively when they had to, and used a lethal
power play to put Carolina on the brink of elimination with a 6-0 win.
First Period
Carolina did not score in the first minute, which might have
been progress for the Caps, but when provided a chance to do more good, they
failed to cash in on an early power play. Nevertheless, the Caps dominated
early. The teams settled in a bit until
an exchange of penalties a minute apart around the five-minute mark. The first penalty was taken by Brett
Connolly, a hooking call at 4:41.
Carolina could not solve the penalty kill, and when Lucas Wallmark took
a penalty at 5:42, it negated the man advantage.
When the Caps went on the power play on the expiration of
Connolly’s penalty, it was Carolina that had a chance despite Washington having
a man advantage. There was the
opportunity for a 2-on-1 , but Alex Ovechkin broke up a cross-ice pass at the
Caps’ blue line. John Carlson picked up
the loose puck and started the other way, finding Tom Wilson curling down the
left side. Wilson skated into the zone
and returned the puck to Carlson in the middle.
Carlson fed the puck across to Nicklas Backstrom, closing through the
right wing circle. His first shot was
stopped by goalie Petr Mrazek, but Backstrom slid the rebound through Mrazek’s
pads, and the Caps had a 1-0 lead, 7:33 into the period. That would begin and end the scoring for the
period.
-- The Caps held the Hurricanes without a shot attempt over
the first 4:09 of the period. The first
shot attempt for Carolina was credited as a shot on goal from 128 feet.
-- Washington out-shot the Hurricanes, 10-6, in the period
and out-attempted them, 18-15.
-- The Caps were credited with 21 hits in the period. Alex Ovechkin had five, and Tom Wilson had
four. Carolina was not credited with a
single takeaway in the first period.
Second Period
There was only one shot on goal for either team in the first
four minutes, an 89-footer by Carolina’s Justin Williams, and indicator of how
tough this game was being played in all three zones. In the fifth minute, Evgeny Kuznetsov was
sent off on a high-sticking penalty. Carolina
managed only one shot, that by defenseman Jaccob Slavin, and the Caps skated
off the disadvantage.
The Caps were sent shorthanded less than two minutes after
the Kuznetsov penalty expired, John Carlson charged with goaltender
interference for being pushed into Mrazek (sarcasm). The Caps killed that one off without allowing
a shot on goal.
A third penalty was charged to the Caps, this one a hooking
call on Jonas Siegenthaler 12 minutes into the period, putting the ‘Canes on
their third power play of the period. Carolina
did apply more pressure – three shots on goal – but goalie Braden Holtby was up
to the task, turning all of them all of them aside.
The inability to convert bit the Canes shortly thereafter. Alex Ovechkin circled up the right side of the
ice from his own blue line. Upon gaining
the offensive zone, he laid out a saucer pass to Nicklas Backstrom steaming
down the middle. Backstrom snapped a
shot over Mrazek’s blocker to make it 2-0, 14:21 into the period.
Less than two minutes later, the Caps upped their lead. From his own blue line, Backstrom sent a pass
up to Alex Ovechkin, but the puck slid by.
Dougie Hamilton went after it, and whether he thought it was icing or he
looked over his right shoulder and saw Ovechkin barreling down on him, he
stopped, allowing Ovechkin to retrieve the puck and sent it out front. Brett Connolly snapped up the present and
rifled a shot past Mrazek before he could react, and it was 3-0 at the 16:11
mark.
Sebastian Aho was sent off on a tripping call with 53
seconds left in the period. Washington
was unable to convert on that amount of power play time, but the man advantage
would carry over to the third period and the Caps holding a 3-0 lead.
-- Carolina, owing to a significant power play ice time
advantage, out-shot the Caps by a 15-7 margin in the period and out-attempted
them, 28-15.
-- With all the Carolina power plays, Ovechkin skated only
5:36 in the period, 1:36 of that to close the second period. Backstrom skated only 5:39, also with 1:36 of
that to close the period. Rounding out
the big three, Kuznetsov skated only 5:55, 58 seconds of that to close the
period.
-- Backstrom led the club with three shots on goal through
40 minutes. In a role reversal, Ovechkin
had only one shot on goal through 40 minutes.
Third Period
The Caps made short work of converting the carryover power
play. As the clock ticked past one
minute into the period, an attempted clear by the Hurricanes was flagged down
by John Carlson. From the blue line,
Carlson sent the puck deep to Kuznetsov at the top of the crease. His attempt was foiled, but Tom Wilson was
right there to use his reach to sweep a shot back at the Carolina net. It might not have crossed the goal line on
its own momentum, but defenseman Justin Faulk kicked it the last three feet to
give the Caps a 4-0 lead at the 1:04 mark.
Mid-way through the period, Dougie Hamilton slashed Nic Dowd’s
stick on a breakaway, and Dowd was awarded a penalty shot. Dowd skated in and busted an old Matt
Hendricks “Paralyzer” move before snapping the puck through Mrazek’s pads, 8:57
into the period.
Less than two minutes later, Brock McGinn was about to break
in alone on Holtby, but Wallmark hooked Dmitry Orlov to keep him from getting
into the play, putting the Caps on a power play. It took the Caps two seconds to convert. Backstrom won the draw to Kuznetsov on his
right, who sent the puck across to Ovechkin for a one-timer from the office to
make it 6-0, 10:14 into the period.
The Caps shut the Hurricanes down from there, and they
skated off with the 6-0 win, the fifth time in five games that the team scoring
first won.
Other stuff…
-- Backstrom finished the game with four points (2-2-4), his
second career playoff game with four or more points, tying him with Dino
Ciccarelli and Evgeny Kuznetsov for the franchise lead.
-- Ovechkin had three points (1-2-3), the seventh time in
his postseason career that he recorded three or more points. He is second in franchise history to
Backstrom (nine games, including this one).
-- Washington recorded three power play goals in four
chances, the third time in their last four home playoff games, dating back to last
spring’s Stanley Cup final, that they had multi-power play goal games. The Caps are 8-for-17 in those four games
(47.1 percent).
-- John Carlson had two assists, his sixth career two-assist
playoff game, one behind the all-time franchise leader, Calle Johansson.
-- Braden Holtby finished with a 30-save shutout, his seventh
career postseason shutout, breaking a tie him with Olaf Kolzig for most in team
history.
-- Washington was credited with 48 hits in this game and put
more pressure on the Hurricanes in Carolina’s defensive zone. Every Capital except John Carlson recorded at
least one. Ovechkin led the team with 11 hits.
-- Carolina out-shot the Caps, 30-28, and the clubs split
110 shot attempts down the middle, 55 apiece.
-- Tom Wilson had a fine game, recording a goal, an assist,
six hits, a takeaway, a blocked shot, and a win on his only faceoff.
-- Devante Smith-Pelly was solid in his return. In 10:43 of ice time, he had a shot on goal,
three shot attempts, and five hits. The
Caps won their fifth straight playoff game with DSP in the lineup.
-- Three Caps did not have a shot attempt, all of them
defensemen – Dmitry Orlov, Brooks Orpik, and Jonas Siegenthaler.
In the end…
There is a fine line between playing angry and
undisciplined, and playing angry with focus.
The Caps of old might have been the former, running around looking for
retribution for the hit on T.J. Oshie that likely ended his season. This team played the latter and made an
emphatic statement that any path deep into the postseason is going through
Washington. Hopefully, the next time
that path winds its way to Washington, the Caps are hosting a second-round
playoff game.
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