Toronto Star

CAPS FORCE GAME 7

Blank Bolts 3-0 to stay alive

- STEPHEN WHYNO

Washington’s T.J. Oshie celebrates with Nicklas Backstrom after opening the scoring in Monday night’s Game 6 of the NHL’s Eastern final against Alex Killorn and the Lightning. Facing eliminatio­n, the Caps shut down the Lightning to force a deciding Game 7 on Wednesday night in Tampa. Winner takes on the Vegas Golden Knights for the Stanley Cup starting next Monday. The Capitals have a lot of experience with Game 7s — most of it not so good. They’re 3-7 in the Alex Ovechkin era.

WASHINGTON— T.J. Oshie and Devante Smith-Pelly scored, Braden Holtby stopped all 24 shots he faced and the Washington Capitals beat up the Tampa Bay Lightning 3-0 Monday night to even the Eastern Conference final and force a deciding Game 7.

Alex Ovechkin, Tom Wilson and Brooks Orpik led the charge, throwing their bodies around all night in Game 6. Tampa Bay got 31 saves from goaltender Andrei Vasilevski­y in another impressive showing but had no answer for Washington’s hit-everything-that-moves approach facing eliminatio­n at home.

Game 7 is Wednesday night at Tampa Bay. The winner faces the Vegas Golden Knights, who are in the Stanley Cup Final in their first season.

The Capitals outhit the Lightning 39-19 and outshot them 34-24, bruising and battering them all over the ice.

Orpik separated Cedric Paquette from the puck twice on one shift, Ovechkin levelled rookie Yanni Gourde and Wilson was his usual self, dishing out a handful of crushing bodychecks.

With a physical tone set, the Capitals kept testing Vasilevski­y and eventually cracked him. There wasn’t much he could do on Oshie’s second-pe- riod power-play goal from the slot after a deft pass from Nicklas Backstrom gave Vasilevski­y little time to adjust for the onetimer.

Drawing a penalty made all the difference for Washington, which hadn’t had a power play since the second period of Game 4. Lightning defenceman Braydon Coburn hooked Smith-Pelly to give the Capitals that opportunit­y, and their penalty kill kept Tampa Bay’s potent power play off the board for just the second time in the series.

With the Lightning pressing and Holtby shining under pressure, the Capitals had chances to go the other way. Smith-Pelly scored Washington’s second goal midway through the third, beating Vasilevski­y after fellow fourth-liners Chandler Stephenson and Jay Beagle did the work on the forecheck to set it up.

As strong as Vasilevski­y was, the physical game took a toll on the Lightning, who weren’t able to muster a comeback. Oshie iced it with an empty-netter in the final minute. The Lightning missed a chance to close out an opponent for the first time in these playoffs. They eliminated New Jersey and Boston in five games apiece but are now on the brink themselves.

The Capitals improved to 10-2 in the Ovechkin/Backstrom era when facing eliminatio­n any time before Game 7. They’re 3-7 in Game 7 over that time.

Washington improved to 4-5 at home in the playoffs.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
ALEX BRANDON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
 ?? ROB CARR/GETTY IMAGES ?? Washington Capitals forward Devante Smith-Pelly celebrates his third-period goal against Nikita Kucherov’s Tampa Bay Lightning in Game 6 of the Eastern Conference final on Monday night.
ROB CARR/GETTY IMAGES Washington Capitals forward Devante Smith-Pelly celebrates his third-period goal against Nikita Kucherov’s Tampa Bay Lightning in Game 6 of the Eastern Conference final on Monday night.

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