The Associated Press
Will Graves
PITTSBURGH–The Washington Capitals are well aware of their franchise’s inglorious past–one filled with unmet expectations and gut-wrenching collapses.
And they don’t care. It’s not 1992. It’s not 1996, 2009, or 2016 for that matter.
The Capitals have spent the better part of the season insisting things will be different this time. That they’re not burdened by the weight of the team’s history of playoff flameouts–one most of the guys in red, white, and blue had nothing to do with.
Backed up to the precipice against a rival that’s tormented them for decades, the Capitals finally punched back. Hard.
Andre Burakovsky scored twice, and Nicklas Backstrom got his sixth of the playoffs, as Washington beat the Pittsburgh Penguins 5-2 last night to force a Game 7 in their seesaw Eastern Conference semi-final.
This is the fourth time the two teams will meet in a winner-take-all.
The Penguins have won each of the previous three. Not that it bothers the Capitals.
“I haven’t been here forever but, one, I’ve never been in a Game 7,” said Washington forward T.J. Oshie, who opened the scoring with a first-period power-play goal last night.
“Two, I’ve never been past the second round,” he added.
“I know how much it would mean to me and I imagine it would be the same to every guy in this locker-room.”
The Capitals are as close as they’ve been to their first appearance in the conference final in 19 years after rallying from a 3-1 series deficit by sprinting past Pittsburgh in the third period at home in Game 5 and then delivering a masterful performance 48 hours later in a city that’s often been a burial ground for once-promising seasons.
A year ago, Washington trailed Pittsburgh 3-1 in the second round, then won Game 5 at home only to fall in overtime of Game 6.
Intent on not repeating history yet again, the Capitals jumped on the defending Stanley Cup champs early and didn’t relent until things were well in hand and a once raucous arena was largely empty.
“Since Game 3, we’ve had a sense of calmness about what we’re doing,” said Capitals’ coach Barry Trotz. “We’re having fun now.
“The fun part has been the obstacle.”
Jake Guentzel netted his playoff-leading ninth goal and Evgeni Malkin added another 52 seconds later late in the third period to make the score look cosmetically better, but the Penguins never were in it.
The Capitals controlled play throughout. Marc-Andre Fleury finished with 21 saves but received little help in front him.
“I think we were probably guilty of making a few mistakes early on and then probably chasing our mistakes after that,” said Pittsburgh captain Sidney Crosby, who had an assist in 20 minutes but largely was a non-factor in his second game back after missing Game 4 with a concussion.
Penguins’ coach Mike Sullivan tinkered with his line combinations, reuniting the “HBK” line (Carl Hagelin, Nick Bonino, and Phil Kessel) that played an instrumental part in the team’s Cup run last spring.
Sullivan also moved rookie Guentzel alongside Malkin and put Conor Sheary with Crosby.
None of it worked as Washington pushed the Penguins around. Crosby took a nasty spill in the first period when he was slammed into the end boards head-first while he tangled with Carlson.
He remained in the game.
“It just kind of knocked the wind out of me, kind of a fluky fall but not one you want to take too often,” Crosby noted.
Pittsburgh’s first shot in the opening 17 minutes was a 136-foot flip by Brian Dumoulin that made its way to Braden Holtby, who easily stopped it for the first of his 16 saves.
By then the Capitals already had a 1-0 lead on Oshie’s fourth of the playoffs.
It wasn’t unlike most of the first four games of the series, when Washington would control play for long stretches only to have Pittsburgh expertly counter on its way to a 3-1 advantage.
This time, there would be no response by the Penguins.
Pittsburgh had trouble executing even the simplest of plays.
Defenceman Ron Hainsey went to boards to retrieve a loose puck in the Penguins’ end only to get checked by Burakovsky, who skated away with the puck and stuffed a shot past Fleury 6:36 into the second.
Holding two-goal leads in the post-season has been a tenuous proposition at best, with 13 times teams letting them away so far in the post-season.
Yet instead of simply trying to protect its advantage, Washington kept pressing.
Backstrom flipped a wrist shot past Fleury 16 seconds into the third to make it 3-0. And when John Carlson fired one past Fleury 11:17 into the third, the arena began emptying out.






