Toronto Star

CAPITALS A WINNER IN VEGAS

Washington heads home with the split after taking Game 2, 3-2. Coverage on

- JOSHUA CLIPPERTON THE CANADIAN PRESS

The Capitals’ Andre Burakovsky celebrates a second-period goal by Brooks Orpik in Game 2 of the Stanley Cup final on Wednesday night in Las Vegas.

LAS VEGAS— Lars Eller had a goal and two assists and Braden Holtby made 37 saves as the Washington Capitals defeated the Vegas Golden Knights 3-2 to even the Stanley Cup final 1-1 on Wednesday night.

Alex Ovechkin also scored for the Capitals, while Andre Burakovsky added two assists.

James Neal and Shea Theodore replied for the expansion Knights. Marc-Andre Fleury stopped 23 shots in taking the loss.

The best-of-seven series now switches to Washington for Game 3 on Saturday and Game 4 on Monday.

Game 5 will be back in Vegas next Thursday.

With temperatur­es soaring as high as 37 C in the hours leading up to the late-afternoon puck drop at T-Mobile Arena, the Capitals put in a much better effort on the heels of a sloppy performanc­e from both teams in Monday’s chaotic opener that the Knights won 6-4.

After killing off a penalty early in the second, Washington pushed ahead on a power play at 5:38 when Ovechkin scored his13th goal of the playoffs from a tight angle thanks to Eller’s slick cross-ice pass.

Eller then set up Orpik, who didn’t have a goal in the regular season and last scored in the playoffs all the way back in April 2014, on a shot that struck the leg of Vegas forward Cody Eakin and bounced past Fleury at 9:41 to make it 3-1.

The Knights entered Monday with a 7-1 home record in the playoffs — outscoring opponents by 31-16 in the process — and got back to within one with 2:13 left when Theodore’s see- ing-eye snapshot from the point on a power play found its way through traffic with T.J. Oshie in the box for ill-advised cross-checking penalty.

Vegas got a 5-on-3 power play for 1:09 when Tom Wilson took an interferen­ce penalty and Eller was whistled for hooking early in the third, but Holtby, who allowed five goals on 33 shots in Game 1 after posting back-to- back shutouts to close out the Tampa Bay Lightning in the Eastern Conference final, managed to hold the fort.

Holtby made one of his biggest saves of the night with just under two minutes left to play, diving to his right, stopping Alex Tuch’s point-blank shot with his stick to keep the score 3-2.

The Knights continued to push pulling Fleury for an extra attacker, but Holtby and the Capitals kept them off the scoreboard the rest of the way to knot the series and wrestle away home-ice advantage.

The usual pre-game pomp at T-Mobile Arena, which includes showgirls lining the glass in the Washington end of the rink during warmups and a knight defeating an opponent in a sword battle on the ice, also featured a performanc­e by Las Vegas band Imagine Dragons and an appearance by UFC legend Randy Couture.

Both teams promised a tighter checking game after Monday’s 10-goal outburst, and Holtby and Fleury looked much better early before Neal opened the scoring at 7:58 of the first.

The winger knocked teammate Luca Sbisa’s flipped clearing attempt out of midair at the offensive blue line in front of Dmitry Orlov, who tried to knock the puck down with his glove, before stepping past the Capitals defenceman and beating Holtby for his fifth.

The Knights have scored first in all nine of their playoff home games, with each occurring in first period and six coming in the first eight minutes.

 ?? HARRY HOW/GETTY IMAGES ??
HARRY HOW/GETTY IMAGES
 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Vegas winger Reilly Smith hits the deck after colliding with Washington’s John Carlson during Stanley Cup final action Wednesday night in Vegas. Game 3 goes Saturday night in Washington.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Vegas winger Reilly Smith hits the deck after colliding with Washington’s John Carlson during Stanley Cup final action Wednesday night in Vegas. Game 3 goes Saturday night in Washington.
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