Times Colonist

What happens in Vegas: A Stanley Cup final

Caps agree expansion club’s success a great story, but they intend to spoil the ending

- FRED GOODALL

TAMPA, Florida — Alex Ovechkin is thrilled, though hardly satisfied.

The Washington Capitals star is headed to the Stanley Cup final for the first time in his 13-year career, eager to put more distance between the Eastern Conference champions and a perception of Ovechkin and the Caps as playoff underachie­vers.

“Finally we get what we want, be in the Stanley Cup final,” the 32-year-old Russian star said. “There’s still a lot of hockey to play.”

Ovechkin scored just over a minute into Washington’s 4-0 victory over the Tampa Bay Lightning in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference final Wednesday night.

Braden Holtby stopped 29 shots to notch his second straight shutout. Andre Burakovsky scored two goals, and Nicklas Backstrom added an empty-netter to help the Capitals close it out.

Now, they’ve got to do it again against the expansion Vegas Golden Knights, who are Western Conference champions in their inaugural season.

“I feel very happy, but we’re not finished yet,” Ovechkin said. “We’ve been waiting for this moment a long time.”

The Golden Knights breezed through the Western Conference, scoring 43 goals and allowing 27 while going 12-3 to eliminate the Los Angeles Kings, San Jose Sharks and Winnipeg Jets during an improbable run to the Stanley Cup Final.

Vegas went 2-0 against the Capitals in the regular season, winning 3-0 at home on Dec. 23 and 4-3 at Washington on Feb. 4.

“It’s a great story. They’re a good hockey team, they have a lot of good players, players from other teams. I know a lot of people say we didn’t want those players, but we all did,” Capitals coach Barry Trotz said.

The Golden Knights’ top scorer during the playoffs has been former Lightning forward Jonathan Marchessau­lt with 18 points (eight goals, 10 assists). Alex Tuch is second among league rookies with nine points (six goals, three assists).

Goalie Marc-André Fleury, who’s in the Stanley Cup final for the third straight season and fifth time overall, has been a huge part of the team’s success, too, with a 1.68 goals-against-average and .947 save percentage.

Fleury and teammate James Neal return to the Cup final after facing each other in the championsh­ip round last year — Fleury with the Pittsburgh Penguins, Neal with the Nashville Predators.

“They’re deep. They’re probably the most veteran team still playing in the playoffs. But they’ve done a fabulous job,” Trotz said.

“They’re a fabulous story. … It’s a great story, not only for our game, but for everybody.”

But when the final opens Monday at 5 p.m. PDT at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, the Capitals intend to start writing an ending to that story that would conclude with Ovechkin hoisting the Stanley Cup over his head.

 ??  ?? Capitals captain Alex Ovechkin, left, and Golden Knights goalie MarcAndré Fleury can expect to see a lot of each other as of Monday.
Capitals captain Alex Ovechkin, left, and Golden Knights goalie MarcAndré Fleury can expect to see a lot of each other as of Monday.
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