The Post

Golden Knights outlast Capitals

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In a single nine-minute stretch of the third period, the Washington Capitals dramatical­ly took the lead before the Vegas Golden Knights replied with two goals of their own. Washington’s Tom Wilson also flattened Vegas forward Jonathan Marchessau­lt with a blindside hit that could reverberat­e through the Stanley Cup final.

After 10 goals and a final-record four lead changes overall in a fantastica­lly entertaini­ng opener, it’s tough to imagine what these unlikely opponents will do for an encore.

But the upstart Golden Knights have spent their entire inaugural season speeding past all expectatio­ns, and their first final game didn’t slow them down in the slightest.

Tomas Nosek scored the tiebreakin­g goal midway through the third period, and the expansion Golden Knights surged past the Capitals for a 6-4 victory yesterday.

‘‘We put fun ahead of everything, and you can tell,’’ said Ryan Reaves, who scored the Knights’ tying goal in the third period. ‘‘Guys here are having fun and they’re smiling.’’

The Eastern Conference champion Capitals hadn’t given up this many goals in 29 games since March 18, but they hadn’t seen anything like this charmed run by the upstart Knights.

With their sellout crowd of hometown fans at deafening volume all night, Vegas put their usual speed and relentless­ness on full display while overcoming that thirdperio­d deficit to win the opener of a matchup between two franchises seeking their first Stanley Cup titles.

Marc-Andre Fleury made 24 saves in an occasional­ly shaky performanc­e, but the three-time Stanley Cup winner’s new teammates carried the goalie who has so often carried them with a relentless outburst of offence.

‘‘We’re a good defensive group, but we weren’t tonight,’’ Marchessau­lt said. ‘‘They’re a team that’s very fast in the neutral zone, and we gave them too much respect with the puck. We need to be faster in the defensive zone. We’re going to fix that in our game.’’

The game one winners have won the last six Cups and 61 of 78 overall.

Braden Holtby stopped 28 shots for the Capitals, whose first Stanley Cup final game in 20 years was a defensive nightmare. Washington still played a strong offensive game and had chances to win, but never slowed the Knights.

 ?? AP ?? Vegas Golden Knights left wing Tomas Nosek celebrates a goal with teammate Ryan Reaves.
AP Vegas Golden Knights left wing Tomas Nosek celebrates a goal with teammate Ryan Reaves.

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