Capitals cruise, head home up 2-0 on Lightning
Send a link to a friend
[May 14, 2018]
The Capitals scored twice in the
final 62 seconds of the second period to gain control, and
Washington beat the Tampa Bay Lightning 6-2 on Sunday night in
Tampa, Fla., to take a 2-0 lead in the Eastern Conference finals.
Lars Eller and Evgeny Kuznetsov each had a goal and two assists for
Washington while Tom Wilson and Alex Ovechkin added a goal and an
assist apiece. Devante Smith-Pelly and Brett Connolly scored the
Capitals' other goals.
The best-of-seven series shifts to Washington for Game 3 on Tuesday
night.
Brayden Point and Steven Stamkos scored on power-play goals in the
first period for Tampa Bay. They also each had an assist.
"We're getting away from what has made us successful in the past,"
Stamkos said. "When you're at home and you drop the first two, it's
disappointing."
Capitals goalie Braden Holtby made 33 saves. Tampa Bay's Andrei
Vasilevskiy stopped 31 shots.
Eller scored the go-ahead goal with 1:02 remaining in the second
period. Kuznetsov then tallied on a power play with 2.9 seconds to
play in the period, with Ovechkin and Eller assisting, to put
Washington on top 4-2.
"It's all about the power plays," Kuznetsov said. "Guys stepped up
and made the plays. Overall it doesn't matter who you play in the
playoffs, you should focus on your game. We shared the puck well."
Eller, filling in on the second line for Nicklas Backstrom (hand),
drew praise from Washington coach Barry Trotz.
"He's got all of the qualities of a playoff-type player," Trotz
said, according to USA Today Sports. "He's big, he's strong and he's
got experience. He's very competitive. He's got a good skill level
and he's playing that way. He's playing to his ability right now.
We've had people step up, but he's one of the guys that has stepped
up in a major way for us. The guys in the room they know how
valuable he is."
It was the second time in as many games that the Capitals struck in
the waning seconds of a period after they scored with 2.9 seconds
remaining in the first period of Game 1.
Ovechkin's goal just 3:34 into the third period pushed the advantage
to 5-2. Connolly capped the scoring at 12:57 of the final period.
[to top of second column] |
Capitals left wing Alex Ovechkin (8) and right wing Devante
Smith-Pelly (25) celebrate after defeating the Tampa Bay Lightning
of game two of the Eastern Conference Final in the 2018 Stanley Cup
Playoffs at Amalie Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement-USA TODAY
Sports
"We're just not there, especially defensively," Tampa Bay defenseman
Anton Stralman said. "You can't win a playoff game allowing six
goals."
Lightning coach Jon Cooper added, "If there is one thing I can sit
here and say about these two games, it's that we just played
tentative and a little bit slow. We didn't get 113 points by playing
that way. We didn't win the first two rounds by playing that way.
These first two games, that's the way we've played."
Wilson scored 28 seconds into the game, deflecting what looked like
a rather routine delivery by defenseman Matt Niskanen from inside
the blue line.
That was perhaps a jarring development given that the Capitals also
had a strong start in Game 1.
The Lightning responded, taking the lead less than 10 1/2 minutes
into the game.
Point scored to tie the game at 7:08 before Stamkos converted on a
power play at 10:22. The second goal was set up by Nikita Kucherov's
pass.
The Capitals were a bit disjointed early, taking three penalties in
the first 12:06 of the game.
Smith-Pelly pulled Washington even just 2:50 into the second period.
Washington's John Carlson notched two assists, his 10th and 11th
assist of the postseason.
Defenseman Victor Hedman assisted on the Lightning's first goal,
giving him eight assists during the past seven games. The seven-game
points streak is a Tampa Bay playoff franchise record.
--Field Level Media
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|