Toronto Star

End of an era for Isles

- HOWARD FENDRICH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON— The precocious Russian forward drafted in the first round by the Washington Capitals finally delivered a breathtaki­ng, winning goal in a Game 7.

No, not Alex Ovechkin — Evgeny Kuznetsov.

Skating around every opponent on the ice, Kuznetsov scored the goahead goal with less than 7 1⁄ min

2 utes left in Game 7 and Braden Holtby only needed to make 10 saves Monday night, lifting the Washington Capitals past the New York Islanders 2-1 in the first round of the Eastern Conference playoffs.

Kuznetsov, a rookie, scored the sort of athletic, breathtaki­ng goal his better-known teammate, Ovechkin, often does, taking the puck from the right boards and heading across the ice before sending a rising shot over sprawling goalie Jaroslav Halak.

Joel Ward gave Washington a 1-0 lead late in the second period and Frans Nielsen pulled New York even early in the third.

The Capitals now face the Presidents’ Trophy-winning New York Rangers, who eliminated Washing- ton from the 2012 and 2013 playoffs — in Game 7 each time.

That’s part of a long history of postseason failures for the Capitals, including never advancing beyond the second round since Ovechkin arrived and started earning MVP trophies and leading the NHL in goals year after year. This was the eighth time in 10 playoff series involving Ovechkin that went to a Game 7 and his team was only 2-5 in such contests until Monday.

Until Kuznetsov, a 22-year-old centre, came through, adding to the two goals and assist he had in Game 3.

The Islanders’ loss ends their playing days at Nassau Coliseum, which opened in 1972. The team is moving to Brooklyn next season.

You have to go back 22 years to find a playoff series won by the Islanders, and that victory in 1993 came against — guess who? — the Capitals. Since then, New York has lost seven consecutiv­e first-round series.

This was the first Game 7 of this year’s NHL playoffs and it was a fitting conclusion to this particular matchup, given how even these two teams are. Through the first six games, each team scored 14 goals. Each won on the road. Each won in overtime. And during the regular season, both finished with 101 points and three of their four head-to-head meetings went to overtime.

 ?? BRUCE BENNETT/GETTY IMAGES ?? Body language of Isles’ Johnny Boychuk says it all as the Caps win Game 7.
BRUCE BENNETT/GETTY IMAGES Body language of Isles’ Johnny Boychuk says it all as the Caps win Game 7.

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