Baltimore Sun

With some luck, Washington holds lead, evens series at 1

- By Isabelle Khurshudya­n

WASHINGTON — Amid the cheers, the whipping towels and dinging cowbells at Capital One Arena, there was also an exhale. Washington Capitals forward Brett Connolly scored on a partial breakaway, and the sight of the puck in the net and a red goal light brought both joy and relief. Washington wouldn’t be squanderin­g a two-goal lead because the team now was up by three.

The Capitals won with that margin, 4-1, and with the next two games in Pittsburgh, Washington has tied the second-round Stanley Cup playoff series, in large part Game 3 Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. TV: NBCSN Radio: 106.7 FM thanks to goaltender Braden Holtby’s 32 saves and some good fortune with video reviews. Most importantl­y, the Capitals continued to build on their lead rather than cling to it.

“You can see what happen last game when we get the lead, 2-0, and they come back and win the game,” captain Alex Alex Ovechkin celebrates his first-period goal. Braden Holtby’s 32 saves and some good fortune with video reviews helped the Capitals hold on to a three-goal lead.

Ovechkin said. “They’re experience­d team, they’re not going to give up, and they’re not going to give easy play for us. Wehave to earn it. Today I think we play a solid game, everybody was in and we get the result.”

After 20 minutes, the Capitals found themselves in a familiar, uneasy position. For the second straight game, Washington was up 2-0, but the team had squandered that kind of cushion three times in the Capitals’ previous seven playoff games, including Game 1 against the Penguins.

The postseason had been miserable for Connolly a year ago. He played in just seven games, a healthy scratch for the other six as Washington opted to play seven defensemen with 11 forwards. When Connolly did play, his ice time was limited. This playoff run has taken an opposite arc for him. He has gotten more responsibi­lity with a promotion to the third line. He had been unable to convert on numerous chances in past games, but with a partial breakaway in the second period Sunday, he didn’t miss, and his wrist shot lifted the Capitals to a 3-0 lead 2:08 into the second period.

“Even when we go up three, you’ve got to keep playing against this team because they can hurt you in a lot of different ways,” Connolly said.

Pittsburgh’s Kris Letang scored roughly 11 minutes later with a point shot while Holtby had two layers of screens in front of him. The Penguins seemed to score again midway through the third period, when Patric Hornqvist jammed in a wraparound attempt by Sidney Crosby. But the officials didn’t call it a goal on the ice, and a long video review followed. Holtby had stopped the puck with his pad, but it was unclear whether it had managed to cross the goal line anyway. The video review didn’t provide a definitive replay, so the Penguins didn’t receive the tally, another break for Washington in a game of them.

“Sometimes it goes your way, sometimes not,” center Nicklas Backstrom said. “We got lucky there.”

The Capitals had caught one before the game even started. With Penguins center Evgeni Malkin and winger Carl Hagelin both out with injuries in Game1, Washington didn’t take advantage of the opportunit­y, a theme in past postseason series between the teams. A year ago, the Capitals lost the game Crosby missed with a concussion. The year before that, top defenseman Letang was suspended for a game, and the Capitals didn’t win then either.

Malkin was Pittsburgh’s leading scorer this season with 42 goals and 56 assists in 78 games, and Washington got another opportunit­y when Malkin’slower-body injury kept him out of Game 2, too. With Crosby and Malkin on the team, the Penguins have never lost a playoff series in which they take a two games to none lead.

“Obviously, he’s a top player. There’s no question about it,” Capitals coach Barry Trotz said before the game. “But at the same time, it doesn’t really matter. We’ve just got to win the game.”

And then the Capitals made their own break, Connolly getting the allimporta­nt third goal, insurance the series would be tied.

 ?? JONATHAN NEWTON/THE WASHINGTON POST ??
JONATHAN NEWTON/THE WASHINGTON POST

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