Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Hedman powers Lightning victory

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WASHINGTON — Victor Hedman figured all the Tampa Bay Lightning needed to get back on track was a shift in momentum.

The big defenseman took it upon himself to provide it.

Hedman scored his first goal of the playoffs and added two assists, and Andrei Vasilevski­y stopped 36 of 38 shots to help the Lightning beat the Washington Capitals 4-2 in Game 3 of the NHL Eastern Conference finals Tuesday night and cut their series deficit to 2-1. Hedman had the primary assist on power-play goals by Steven Stamkos and Nikita Kucherov and was a key part of three big penalty kills for Tampa Bay.

“I’m put in a position to produce, and I put that pressure on myself to do it,” said Hedman, who has a goal and 10 assists during an eightgame point streak. “For me, it’s about being effective at all ends of the ice and trying to be a difference-maker every time I step on it.”

Hedman was dominant all over the ice as Tampa Bay looked like an entirely different team than the one that lost the first two games of the series at home and now has a chance to tie it in Game 4 on Thursday. The Norris Trophy finalist who played a teamhigh 25:08 was most proud of successful penalty kills.

“He’s a perennial Norris guy,” Stamkos said of Hedman.

“We can’t describe how good he is out there. We rely on him a ton, he’s a horse and most nights if he’s going well, we’re going well as a team. Another big effort for him tonight, and you could see we all followed suit.”

It wasn’t perfect, but it was a more complete effort from Tampa Bay, which jumped out to a 3-0 lead before Brett Connolly answered for Washington in the second. Brayden Point’s goal less than five minutes later allowed the Atlantic Division champions to play with a comfortabl­e lead that survived Evgeny Kuznetsov’s 6-on-5 goal with 3:02 left.

Vasilevski­y was a big part of holding on to the lead as he made seven saves on the penalty kill as part of a bounceback performanc­e after being criticized for his play earlier in the series. It wasn’t perfect, but the Lightning began to make it up to Vasilevski­y for hanging him out to dry on so many odd-man rushes in Games 1 and 2 by improving their defensive-zone play.

The Capitals outshot the Lightning 38-23 but didn’t help goaltender Braden Holtby with six minor penalties. Holtby allowed four goals but was helpless on the one-timers on the power play by Stamkos and Kucherov.

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