The Daily Courier

Defending champs eliminated from race for Stanley Cup

Capitals eliminate Penguins with OT win

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PITTSBURGH — A cathartic celebratio­n 20 years in the making began with a poke of Evgeny Kuznetsov’s stick. It built as the puck that Kuznetsov tapped away from Sidney Crosby made its way to Washington Capitals teammate Alexander Ovechkin.

It neared its crescendo as Ovechkin flipped it back to Kuznetsov, who at this point had split two Penguins and was streaking toward the Pittsburgh net. And it culminated jubilantly and unexpected­ly in the corner moments later, with the puck in the net and Kuznetsov’s teammates mobbing him after he ended two decades of frustratio­n with a flick of the Russian’s wrist.

The ghosts of past playoff failures — many of them at the hands of the Penguins — were gone.

Dispatched over the course of six games of grit and guile, the last a 2-1 overtime win in Game 6 on Monday night that gave Washington a 4-2 series victory and a spot in the Eastern Conference finals against Tampa Bay.

“It’s pretty emotional,” Kuznetsov said after his seventh goal of the playoffs 5:27 into overtime pushed the Capitals into the NHL’s final four for just the third time in franchise history. “I don’t really have a word for it.”

Maybe because there aren’t many that can accurately describe the anguish Washington has felt during much of the Ovechkin Era — one filled with post-season failure after post-season failure, many of them coming with the team on the precipice of a breakthrou­gh. Only this time they didn’t crumble. Even with Nick Backstrom, Tom Wilson and Andre Burakovsky out.

Even with a handful of rookies — including Australian Nate Walker — thrust into the lineup.

Even on the road against a two-time defending champion with a special knack for torment.

“Again, it doesn’t matter what happened (before),” Ovechkin said. “We knew it was there, we just had to battle and we just had to fight through it.”

Alex Chiasson scored Washington’s only goal of regulation, giving the Capitals the lead in the second period.

Braden Holtby, benched at the start of the playoffs, stopped 21 of the 22 shots he faced and also received a dash of luck when Pittsburgh’s Tom Kuhnhackl hit the far post early in the extra period.

Play continued and a few minutes later Kuznetsov’s goal joined Dale Hunter’s overtime Game 7 winner vs. Philadelph­ia in the first round in 1988 and Joe Juneau’s poke by Dominik Hasek vs. Buffalo in the Eastern Conference final in 1998 among franchise lore.

“I’m not expecting myself to score gamewinner in that situation,” Kuznetsov said.

Maybe because it’s what the Penguins always seem to do instead.

Pittsburgh won nine of its 10 previous playoff meetings with Washington, including taut second-round triumphs in 2016 and 2017 on their way to becoming the first team in nearly 20 years to win consecutiv­e Stanley Cups.

A bid for a three-peat came to an abrupt end after another sluggish start. Kris Letang scored for the Penguins and Murray finished with 28 saves but couldn’t close his legs fast enough to stop Kuznetsov’s flick.

“You look at the last couple of games, it’s a one-shot difference,” Crosby said. “You need to get those big plays . . . unfortunat­ely couldn’t do it.”

Washington spent the series saying its forgettabl­e playoff history littered with squandered leads and blown opportunit­ies — particular­ly against the Penguins — is not a factor. That this time is different. That this team is different.

Twice the Capitals rallied in the third period to stun Pittsburgh, including a four-goal outburst in Game 5 that brought them to the brink of their first Eastern Conference final appearance in 20 years.

That last step, however, has always been tricky. Four times previously since 2008, the Capitals won three games in the second round only to come up short in Game 7. This time, a Game 7 wasn’t even necessary.

“It’s almost embarrassi­ng that it’s taken this long for us to get past it,” Washington owner Ted Leonsis said. “But the Penguins are an unbelievab­le franchise.”

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 ?? The Associated Press ?? Washington Capitals forward Evgeny Kuznetsov, left, celebrates his game-winning goal as Pittsburgh Penguins goaltender Matt Murray skates off the ice during overtime of Game 6 in their second-round NHL playoff series on Monday in Pittsburgh.The...
The Associated Press Washington Capitals forward Evgeny Kuznetsov, left, celebrates his game-winning goal as Pittsburgh Penguins goaltender Matt Murray skates off the ice during overtime of Game 6 in their second-round NHL playoff series on Monday in Pittsburgh.The...
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