Neither snow nor ice nor a three-goal deficit could keep Alex
Ovechkin and the Washington Capitals from stunning their archrivals and
winning a 14th straight game.
Ovechkin scored an arena-rocking hat trick and got the assist on the
winning goal in overtime Sunday, and the Capitals kept up their pursuit
of NHL history with a 5-4 win over the Pittsburgh Penguins.
Mike Knuble poked in the rebound 2:49 into overtime after Ovechkin's
shot hit the post during a Capitals power play, earned when Brooks
Orpik was sent off for high sticking.
Washington's winning streak is tied for the third-longest in league
history and three shy of the record of 17, set by the Penguins from
March 9 to April 10, 1993.
Ovechkin's three goals gave him a league-high 42, pulling away from
Sidney Crosby after the Pittsburgh star had tied him at 39 by scoring a
pair in the first period.
The Capitals trailed 4-1 late in the second period, but Eric Fehr
poked in his own rebound to cut the lead to two before Ovechkin took
over in the third.
The two-time reigning league MVP tried to redirect a shot, had the
puck deflect back to his feet and wristed it past Marc-Andre Fleury
with 13:09 left in the game.
Red hats flung to the ice
Ovechkin
then tied the score with a backhander from the edge of the right circle
after Nicklas Backstrom won a faceoff with 8:54 to play, making the
sellout crowd delirious as red hats flooded the ice to celebrate the
first hat trick of the season by any Capitals player — even though
Washington is by far the highest scoring team in the league.
Jordan Staal scored twice and Evgeni Malkin had two top-notch
assists for the Penguins, who nearly pulled off the win despite a
Friday-Saturday blizzard that paralyzed the U.S. capital with two feet
of snow and forced the visitors to scramble to find a way into town.
With the nearby airports closed, the Penguins had to fly into
Newark, N.J., from Montreal after their Saturday afternoon game against
the Canadiens. The team then took a five-hour bus ride, making a
midnight fast food stop in Maryland, before arriving in Washington at
2:15 a.m.
Despite the conditions, the arena was packed by the third period —
just in time to watch another Capitals rally. Washington has outscored
opponents 30-6 in the third period during the winning streak.
The Capitals haven't lost since Jan. 12, and it only would have
added to their misery if the streak had ended against the team they
dislike the most. Sure enough, the first part of the game — as the
Penguins raced to a big lead — had a similar feel to Pittsburgh's Game
7 6-2 win that knocked Washington out of last year's playoffs.
The victory also gave the Capitals a franchise record with 11
consecutive home victories — the 1999-00 team had 10 in a row — and
improved Washington to 23-3-3 at the Verizon Center this season.
Goaltender Jose Theodore extended his personal-best winning streak to
10, tying the franchise mark established by Pat Riggin in 1983-84.
The game included numerous penalties, including several 10-minute
misconducts. Ovechkin threw probably the best punch, knocking Kris
Letang to the ice and jumping on top of the Penguins defenceman, a bit
of aggression that was deemed worthy of just a roughing penalty.
Missed 1st-period chances
The
Capitals have regularly fallen behind during the winning streak — the
other team has scored first in eight of 14 games — but they were
especially out of kilter in the first period Sunday, failing to
capitalize on power plays and missing solid scoring chances by just a
fraction.
Tyler Sloan committed the most grievous error, turning the puck over
to Crosby with a lazy clearing attempt. Crosby intercepted the puck at
the blue-line and skated in to beat Theodore with an unassisted goal
nearly seven minutes into the game.
Crosby made it 2-0 — and temporarily tied Ovechkin for the NHL
goal-scoring lead — three minutes later on a power play, taking a
no-look pass from Malkin and beating Theodore one-on-one.
Ovechkin regained the No. 1 spot by himself — and pulled his team
within a goal — in the second period, skating ahead of the field to
chase down Jeff Schultz's two-line pass for a breakaway score.
But Staal scored on back-to-back shots later in the period, the
second one after a steal by Malkin near the blue line, to give the
Penguins a three-goal lead.