Medicine Hat News

Caps, Bruins win key OT decisions

- JONAS SIEGEL

Maple Leafs head coach Mike Babcock uttered the same phrase to each and every staff member at Verizon Center as he strode to the team bus following an overtime loss that put his team on the brink of eliminatio­n.

“See you in a couple days,” Babcock said.

The Leafs fell 2-1 in Game 5 to go down 3-2 in their best-of-seven series with Washington after Justin Williams beat Frederik Andersen five-hole 1:04 into yet another overtime. But that didn’t mean Babcock, or his players, felt like hope was lost with Game 6 ahead at the Air Canada Centre on Sunday night.

Quite the opposite given how tight this series continues to be.

All five games, most tellingly, have been decided by a single goal with four of the five finishing in OT. Washington has scored 16 goals overall to 15 for Toronto. The two teams have fired exactly 175 shots each.

“I don’t think we’re hanging our heads on this,” Auston Matthews said.

“We understand that we played a pretty good road game and somehow they just found a way,” added Nazem Kadri, who had a noisy night in defeat. “That’s what good teams do and we’ve got to respond heading back to Toronto.”

This was a much tighter affair than the four that preceded it. Space was limited, the pace slowed down and scoring chances were relatively few in number between two of the highest scoring teams in the NHL during the regular season. Shots were 27-25 at the end of regulation.

Washington went ahead at the tailend of a first period that turned noisy on account of Kadri, who tried to get a piece of Alex Ovechkin near the Capitals blue line, but instead struck the left knee of the Washington captain.

Kadri was penalized for tripping while Ovechkin had to be helped off the ice, putting no pressure on his left leg.

The Verizon Center crowd, many clad in red Ovechkin jerseys, howled at the foul — which appeared to better meet the criteria for clipping as an “act of throwing the body...across or below the knees of an opponent.”

“I thought he got rid of the puck and I just kind of tried to get a piece of him,” Kadri said, pleased that Ovechkin managed to return for the second. “It’s not like I stuck my knee out or got my arms high or anything like that. It happened pretty quick. From what I saw I thought it was OK.”

Washington took advantage, scoring their fifth power-play goal on the series on T.J. Oshie’s third of the post-season.

The Leafs pulled back even six minutes into the second on yet another goal from Matthews, who was named a finalist for the Calder trophy earlier in the week. The 19-year-old took advantage of some stellar puck protection around the net by fellow rookie running mate, William Nylander, and then buried the rebound from his shot attempt.

It was a third straight game with a goal for Matthews, who went pointless in the first two games of the series. The Caps have increasing­ly struggled to slow him and his linemates down and will have less of an advantage with respect to matchups as the series shifts back to Toronto on Sunday night.

BRUINS 3, SENATORS 2, 2OT

OTTAWA — Sean Kuraly scored his second goal of the game in double overtime as the Boston Bruins defeated the Ottawa Senators to stave off eliminatio­n.

The Senators lead the Eastern Conference quarter-final series 3-2. Game 6 is Sunday in Boston.

Kuraly scored the winner at 10:19 of the second overtime, stunning the 19,209 on hand at Canadian Tire Centre.

David Pastrnak also scored for the Bruins. Tuukka Rask stopped 41 shots.

Mark Stone and Jean-Gabriel Pageau scored for the Senators as Craig Anderson made 36 saves.

The Bruins had the best chances to end the game in the first overtime.

Boston failed to capitalize on the power play when Clarke MacArthur was called for high sticking and then had Noel Acciari’s goal called back at 14:25 due to goalie interferen­ce. The Bruins challenged the call to no avail.

The Senators had two great chances to win the game in the third as the Bruins took a delay of game and too many men penalty in the final six minutes of the period, but Ottawa managed just two shots on goal.

The Bruins made a game of it in the second period.

Trailing 2-0 after the Senators scored in the opening minute of the second Boston scored twice to tie things up.

An already depleted Bruins lineup took another hit as David Krejci left the game late in the first after a collision with Chris Wideman.

 ?? AP PHOTO/NICK WASS ?? Washington Capitals right wing Justin Williams (14) celebrates his winning goal with center Marcus Johansson (90) in the overtime period of Game 5 in an NHL Stanley Cup hockey first-round playoff series against the Toronto Maple Leafs, Friday in...
AP PHOTO/NICK WASS Washington Capitals right wing Justin Williams (14) celebrates his winning goal with center Marcus Johansson (90) in the overtime period of Game 5 in an NHL Stanley Cup hockey first-round playoff series against the Toronto Maple Leafs, Friday in...
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