Times Colonist

Leafs, Capitals resume exciting playoff series

WASHINGTON 5 TORONTO 4 Series tied 2-2

- JONAS SIEGEL

TORONTO — Mike Babcock watched a young team, much like his own, get spanked by a veteran opponent on Tuesday night and wanted his team to be prepared for a similar situation.

He told his players how the level of play would rise higher with every game that passed.

“It’s so important that you get off to a good start here tonight and prepare to compete,” Babcock said before Game 4 on Wednesday. “They’re going to compete. We have to compete.”

It didn’t happen, as everything Babcock warned his players about materializ­ed in a 5-4 loss that pulled Washington even with Toronto at two games apiece in their first-round matchup.

The Capitals came out of the gate in the first period, scoring twice in the first five minutes for the second straight game. They pumped two more past Frederik Andersen before the opening frame was done, overwhelmi­ng the Leafs with their tenacity, skill, size and presence in the offensive zone.

Toronto looked fast and full of skill in snatching two of the first three games, but none of that was evident through two periods on Wednesday night. The Leafs struggled to gain more than a single flurry of pressure against Braden Holtby.

“I thought today was the first time that maybe we weren’t scared enough of them and it looked like it because our competitio­n level wasn’t good enough,” Babcock said afterward.

The Leafs coach wasn’t so dismayed by a Game 1 loss for the confidence it brought the group. This was different. This was a missed opportunit­y to wrestle hold of a series that his group wasn’t supposed to win.

Instead, opportunit­y slipped away.

Tom Wilson, who scored the overtime winner in the opener, had a pair in a dominant first period that saw the Caps outshoot the Leafs 15-6 and manage 26 even-strength shot attempts to just 14 for Toronto.

Wilson was everywhere on both goals, displaying the spirit Babcock was looking for in his group. The 23-year-old first stopped Morgan Rielly’s shot from sneaking across the goalline and then raced to the other end to deflect an innocent Lars Eller shot. He scored on his next shift to give the Caps a 4-1 advantage after bowling over Rielly near the Washington blue line.

“We’ve got to be more prepared,” said Auston Matthews, who scored late in Toronto’s comeback attempt.

OTTAWA 1 BOSTON 0 Ottawa leads series 3-1

BOSTON — After playing the hero in Game 3, Bobby Ryan scored the winner in Game 4 at 5:49 of the third period as the Ottawa Senators beat the Boston Bruins 1-0 on Wednesday night to grab a 3-1 lead in their Eastern Conference quarter-final series.

Ryan, who netted the winner 5:43 into overtime on Monday to seal the Senators’ 4-3 win in Game 3, poked the puck past Tuukka Rask after Erik Karlsson set him up on an intentiona­lly wide slapshot just inside the blue line. “I had a good feeling,” Ryan said. “[Karlsson] sees plays that the rest of us just don’t. I knew it was going to be the vicinity. It hit my stick and just died on it, and gave me an opportunit­y to put it in — just the perfect pass.”

It was Ryan’s team-leading third goal of the series. Karlsson picked up his 20th career playoff assist, tying Martin Havlat for the sixth-most in franchise history.

Craig Anderson made 22 saves in his fourth career playoff shutout for the Sens.

“Andy was a rock for us and probably stole this one for us,” Karlsson said of Anderson. — CP

ANAHEIM 3 CALGARY 1 Anaheim wins series 4-0

CALGARY — The Calgary Flames were eliminated from the Stanley Cup playoffs Wednesday, falling to the Anaheim Ducks 3-1 in Game 4 of their first-round series. It meant the Ducks swept the best-of-seven set 4-0.

Patrick Eaves, Nate Thompson and Ryan Getzlaf scored for Anaheim, which will play either Edmonton or San Jose in the second round. Sean Monahan responded for the Flames. — CP

 ??  ?? Washington Capitals goalie Braden Holtby celebrates his team’s win against the Toronto Maple Leafs on Wednesday.
Washington Capitals goalie Braden Holtby celebrates his team’s win against the Toronto Maple Leafs on Wednesday.

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