Penticton Herald

Stanley Cup could be awarded tonight

- By The Canadian Press

Capitals, Ovechkin trying to stay focused on task at hand in Vegas

LAS VEGAS — One win from hoisting the Stanley Cup, the Washington Capitals are trying not to think beyond the next shift or the next period.

Unfortunat­ely, that’s far easier said than done.

The Capitals head into tonight’s Game 5 of the Cup final against the Vegas Golden Knights with a 3-1 lead in the best-of-seven series, sitting just 60 minutes — barring overtime — from their first title in the franchise’s 43-year history, and Washington’s first championsh­ip in North America’s four major sports leagues since 1992.

“Most of us have never been in this position,” Alex Ovechkin said after Wednesday’s crisp practice. “For me personally, I don’t try to think about too much what’s going on and just try focusing on different things. “But it’s hard.” And what are those different things? “Whatever. Cars. Hotels,” the Russian sniper joked. “You know, Vegas.”

All kidding aside, Washington is on the brink of something special for a city that has suffered incredible sporting heartbreak since the Redskins’ Super Bowl triumph 26 years ago.

Until this spring, teams from the District of Columbia had failed to even get to a conference final since the Capitals’ only other trip to the Cup in 1998, which ended in a four-game sweep at the hands of the Detroit Red Wings.

The Redskins and baseball’s Nationals have stumbled in the playoffs, while the NBA’s Wizards (formerly the Bullets) haven’t advanced past the second round since 1980.

Then, there are the Capitals, who have blown a record five 3-1 series leads in their history — most recently in the first round of the 2010 playoffs and then again in the second round of 2015.

The current roster is aware of the history — how could they not be? — but the players insist outside pressure to finally get over the title hump isn’t on their collective mind. “Our team just likes playing together, likes going out there and having fun, trying hard, working hard, doing it for each other,” goalie Braden Holtby said. “Everything else has been really irrelevant in our locker room. It’s not a conversati­on we’ve had.

“We just want to go out there and play good hockey and do everything we can to win.”

Despite their trying sports history, Washington fans should be feeling pretty good about that possibilit­y heading into tonight.

Teams leading NHL playoff series 3-1 have won 90.8 per cent of the time (276-28), while just one of 33 clubs down by that margin in a final — the 1942 Toronto Maple Leafs — have ever come back from that deficit to win.

But the message ahead of Game 5 is to simply stay with the process, and continue what’s got them to this point. Again, easier said than done. “You work so hard to get to this point and you want to make it happen,” head coach Barry Trotz said. “We talked about just making sure we’re focused on one game. I can’t tell what’s going to happen, but I can tell you you’re going to need your best game if you want to get this done.”

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