Journal Pioneer

Moving on

Ovechkin, Trotz are in new territory with Caps in East final

- BY STEPHEN WHYNO

The smiling side of a handshake line at the end of the second round was a brand- new experience for Alex Ovechkin and Barry Trotz. Ovechkin received a message of good luck and a pat on the chest from Sidney Crosby, while Trotz got to enjoy a happy moment with longtime coaching friend Jacques Martin. Ovechkin acknowledg­ed he’d been in that position a lot of times - though never as the one moving on to the third round. Until now.

The Washington Capitals reaching the Eastern Conference final for the first time since 1998 is perhaps most special to the superstar captain and his coach who had never made it out of the second round before. No coach in NHL history had been behind the bench for more games than Trotz and no active player had been in as many playoff games as Ovechkin without reaching the conference finals.

“There is a kinship there, there’s no question,” Trotz said. “I’ve been at this for a while and it’s so hard to move forward sometimes. It’s always thrown in your face everywhere your turn. I know it’s thrown in Ovi’s face everywhere he turns, and he’s a great player in this league. ... I knew the frustratio­n because you’re so close and you just can’t get it, and you just got to stay with it.”

After 51 playoff games together, Ovechkin and Trotz will take part in their first East final starting Friday night in Tampa Bay against the Lightning. Now that they’ve gotten over a hump that defined their respective careers, Ovechkin, Trotz and the Capitals are in unfamiliar territory.

“It’s something new for us and cool,” Ovechkin said Wednesday, less than 48 hours after Washington eliminated the defending champion Pittsburgh Penguins. “Right now it’s just satisfacti­on we beat the Stanley Cup champions finally and we move forward and now we’re going to play against a very good team, against very good goaltendin­g and solid players over there.”

The Atlantic Divisionch­ampion Lightning present a formidable challenge, but the Capitals had to overcome something altogether different after losing in the first or second round in all nine playoff appearance­s that have come during the Ovechkin era dating to 2008. Beating the rival Penguins in overtime in a Game 6 on the road made the breakthrou­gh even more emotional.

“We should be proud of that,” defenceman Matt Niskanen said. “It’s a big achievemen­t. But I think we’ve got to be greedy. We’ve got to want more because this is a heck of a run. I don’t know if there is a group out there that knows how hard it is to get to this point.”

The Capitals are at this point with Ovechkin on top of his game with eight goals and seven assists, his best playoff output since 2009. And they’re here in large part because of Trotz, a well- respected, 19- year NHL coach who does not have a contract for next season.

“I had a summer which was very enlighteni­ng to me, and I just look at everything way differentl­y than I ever have,” Trotz said. “I just recognized that I can only control what I can control, and the other stuff I can’t.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Washington Capitals goaltender Braden Holtby ( 70) celebrates with Evgeny Kuznetsov ( 92), Jakub Vrana ( 13), Alex Ovechkin, top centre, and Matt Niskanen ( 2) after Kuznetsovs’ game- winning goal during the overtime period in Game 6 of an NHL second-...
AP PHOTO Washington Capitals goaltender Braden Holtby ( 70) celebrates with Evgeny Kuznetsov ( 92), Jakub Vrana ( 13), Alex Ovechkin, top centre, and Matt Niskanen ( 2) after Kuznetsovs’ game- winning goal during the overtime period in Game 6 of an NHL second-...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada