Penticton Herald

Canucks blanked by Capitals, Holtby

Washington goaltender outduels Markstrom for victory over Vancouver

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WASHINGTON — Alex Ovechkin ended a scoring drought, reached another milestone and — most importantl­y — helped the Washington Capitals notch their fourth straight victory.

Ovechkin scored a power-play goal in the first period and Braden Holtby made it stand up by stopping 20 shots to carry the Capitals past the weary Vancouver Canucks 3-0 on Sunday afternoon.

Washington nursed a 1-0 lead until Ovechkin earned an assist on a goal by Justin Williams with just under 15 minutes left. Tom Wilson sealed the win by scoring into an empty net with 52 seconds remaining.

“That was one of our best games of the year, obviously,” said Holtby, who was rarely tested in his 25th career shutout.

Ovechkin’s goal was his first in eight games, a wrist shot from the left circle at 13:46 of the opening period. He became the 18th player in NHL history with 200 career power-play goals.

It was his 13th goal of the season, the first since he completed a hat trick the night before American Thanksgivi­ng.

“Obviously I’ve been in this situation before. I just have to fight through it and maybe get a lucky one on the power play,” Ovechkin said. “Right now, the most important thing (is) we get two points. It doesn’t matter who scores, who’s not scoring.” And reaching 200 power-play goals? “It’s a big number, obviously,” he said. On the other end of the ice, Holtby and Washington’s defence killed Vancouver’s five power plays.

The Canucks were playing their second game in less than 24 hours and fourth in six days. Vancouver hastily travelled up the East Coast after losing 4-2 to the Florida Panthers on Saturday night.

“I think the schedule got to Vancouver a little bit,” Capitals coach Barry Trotz said. “They had a real good push in the first (period) and we sort of started to overwhelm them as the game went on.”

Vancouver kept it close but simply couldn’t find a way to put the puck past Holtby, who now has two shutouts this season.

“We kept it a one-goal game into the third, but overall they were better than us,” said Canucks centre Henrik Sedin, who dismissed the notion that the team was tired.

“The most frustratin­g part is our power play,” he said.

Jacob Markstrom started in goal for veteran Ryan Miller, who missed a second straight game with an undisclose­d injury.

The 6-foot-6 Markstrom had another solid performanc­e, stopping 26 shots in defeat.

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