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BACKS TO WALL IN VEGAS

Knights out of answers for Caps

- STEVE SIMMONS Las Vegas ssimmons@postmedia.com twitter.com/simmonsste­ve

It didn’t look like the last practice. It didn’t feel like this book — this incredible, unbelievab­le, impossible hockey story — was about to be closed shut.

It looked like just another day of Golden Knights hockey.

The stands were jammed at the practice facility on Wednesday morning. The practice began with loud chants of “Go Knights Go” and continued throughout. There was belief in the air, belief in a brisk practice on the ice, and words of hope in the Vegas locker-room.

What else do they have left? What else could they say or sell with the series tilting so far against them?

There is a time in almost every championsh­ip series that takes on a sense of finality before it ever ends: It’s a process of sorts. The team that’s behind begins with concern, moves to doubt, ends up with fear, and right after that, there’s a season-ending line with handshakes.

It’s almost over for the Vegas Golden Knights.

They beat the Los Angeles Kings in Round 1, surrenderi­ng just three goals in four straight wins. They beat the San Jose Sharks in Round 2, allowing just 14 goals against in six games.

They beat the Winnipeg Jets in Round 3 — there’s still shock in Winnipeg about how that went down — allowing just 10 goals against over five games, winning the final four contests.

And now Game 5 on Thursday night against the no-time champion Washington Capitals, trailing 3-1, facing eliminatio­n, having surrendere­d 16 goals in four games.

The nearly unbeatable MarcAndre Fleury had a .977 save percentage in the first round, .935 in the second, .938 in the third, and just .845 in this round. And of the six goals Fleury allowed in Game 4, coach Gerard Gallant said there wasn’t “a lot he could do about those goals.”

That’s how much the expansion Knights have been dominated by the Big Three of the Capitals — Alexander Ovechkin, Evgeny Kuznetsov and Nicklas Backstrom — without a sufficient answer of any kind.

By Game 2, there was concern. By Game 3, there was doubt. After Game 4, fear.

And now, after a season in which there was nothing expansion about them but their name and venue, they have the look of a team confused after four games. The fans here may not see that, may not know better, may be blind to the nuances of a trapping and clogging Capitals game.

Even the adept entertainm­ent people who have done such a remarkable job with in-stadium and out-of-stadium acts, have perhaps foreshadow­ed Game 5. The original band booked to perform was The Killers. They had to pull out. They’ve been replaced by an appropriat­ely named band called Panic! at the Disco.

They’re an acclaimed rock band, according to the release sent out by the NHL. I’ll take their word for it. Panic! at the Disco will be outside the building. Inside, it’s still to be seen.

“The odds aren’t in our favour,” said Jonathan Marchessau­lt, the best Vegas forward in the playoffs. “They’re a different team. They’re a great team. They were better than us the past three games. Give them credit. They’re doing a good job shutting us down. Our best players have to be our best players.”

William Karlsson was the best Vegas player during the season. In this series, he’s almost invisible. He didn’t practise yesterday. He went from no-show to no-show. The Capitals centres — Kuznetsov and Backstrom — have absolutely dominated the Vegas centres.

“If you start to think we have to win the next three games, it gets demoralizi­ng,” said Marchessau­lt.

But they have gone on winning streaks in the post-season. They won their first five playoff games. They won four straight against Winnipeg and who saw that coming ? Now they need three in a row.

“One in a row,” Marchessau­lt corrected. “Then we’ll worry about the next one.”

There was no sense around the Knights’ locker-room that the Wednesday-morning practice had any sense of finality to it. There was little emotional talk. There was mostly the usual hockey player cliches: we have to move our feet, get pucks deep.

And the truth is, against the trapping Capitals, they have to move their feet and get pucks deep. And maybe play with a lead. They haven’t done much of that.

“It’s the same group,” said Nate Schmidt, the former Capital, talking about his team. “It’s a different game.

“We’ve been through a lot this year, a lot with this city, a lot with this team. Things you can’t imagine. We need to change the momentum of the series.”

They need to change it quickly, otherwise the series ends Thursday night.

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 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Capitals head coach Barry Trotz has his team one win away from the franchise’s first Stanley Cup championsh­ip in a series that has taken on a sense of finality.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Capitals head coach Barry Trotz has his team one win away from the franchise’s first Stanley Cup championsh­ip in a series that has taken on a sense of finality.
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