Edmonton Journal

Capitals’ penalty killers see plenty of ice

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COLUMBUS, OhiO After another night that the Washington Capitals’ penalty summary was longer than the opponent’s, players quietly packed their equipment bags and explained how another night with too many whistles going against them hurt the team in a 3-0 loss to the Columbus Blue Jackets.

The Capitals didn’t allow a power-play goal, but the damage was done in other ways, disrupting their flow early in a game in which they never establishe­d one.

“Same old story with the penalties,” defenceman Brooks Orpik said. “Especially on a back-to-back night, it just wears you down and takes a lot of energy out of you.”

With the Capitals’ legs already tired after playing on Monday night, two stick infraction­s in the first period Tuesday had them on their heels early, skill players going cold on the bench while those who play on the penalty kill were taxed. Washington was called for a hat trick of hooking minors in the first period against the Kings the night before, and while the team went on to win that game 6-4, the issue persisted in Columbus.

The Caps took five minor penalties to Columbus’ two, the continuati­on of an unfortunat­e trend as the team is tied for the league lead in minors with 206 this season.

Coach Todd Reirden sent a message earlier this month when he benched forwards Evgeny Kuznetsov and Dmitrij Jaskin for the remainder of the first period after they each committed early stick penalties outside of the defensive zone against the Boston Bruins. Asked what it’s going to take for the team to learn its lesson, Orpik said, “I don’t know.”

The silver lining is that the penalty kill, which struggled mightily to start the season, has seemingly improved, allowing just three power-play goals in the past eight games. But perhaps more concerning than the Capitals repeatedly taking penalties is why it’s happening, seemingly the result of Washington getting hemmed into its own zone too often.

“We were a step behind, and what happens when you’re a step behind is you end up using your stick,” Reirden said.

“We were on the wrong side of some battles, and we used our stick to defend. And those are penalties. That’s an important part of game management in a back-to-back and a situation where the other team is fresh, and that’s difficult to overcome when you have to exert all of your energy trying to kill off penalties.”

 ??  ?? Brooks Orpik
Brooks Orpik

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