Houston Chronicle

Capitals push series to limit

- By Stephen Whyno

WASHINGTON — Facing eliminatio­n at home, the Washington Capitals looked determined to hit everything that moved in Game 6 of the Eastern Conference final.

The goal was to finish checks on Tampa Bay Lightning players as much as possible, though at one point Devante Smith-Pelly decked Dan Girardi and took teammate Jay Beagle down with him.

“I apologized to him,” Smith-Pelly said. “I said sorry. He didn't seem to care.”

The Capitals made no apologies for taking the body and grinding out a physical 3-0 victory Monday night that tied the playoff series and set up a deciding Game 7. T.J. Oshie had a goal on the power play and into an empty net, Smith-Pelly scored a back-breaker and Braden Holtby stopped all 24 shots, but it was the bruising style that kept the Capitals alive and could still pay more dividends.

“You've got to wear them down,” Smith-Pelly said. “Every game, if guys are going to be playing 25, 30 minutes, it's tough when you're getting hit every single shift. We've been on the body all game and all series. If it shows up in Game 7 where guys are starting to get tired, then it was all worth it.”

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.

Alex Ovechkin, Tom Wilson and Brooks Orpik led the charge in the grueling Game 6, throwing their bodies around all night like human wrecking balls. Orpik separated Cedric Paquette from the puck twice on one shift, Ovechkin leveled rookie Yanni Gourde and Wilson was his usual self, dishing out a handful of crushing body checks.

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

“It's desperatio­n, really,” Orpik said. “You try to empty the tank as much as you can. That's probably one area where we have an edge is the size and physical play.”

Tampa Bay had no answer for the physicalit­y with a hit disparity coach Jon Cooper chalked up as, “Somebody was engaged and somebody wasn't.”

 ?? Alex Brandon / Associated Press ?? The Caps’ T.J. Oshie, left, celebrates his first goal with Nicklas Backstrom to the chagrin of Alex Killorn.
Alex Brandon / Associated Press The Caps’ T.J. Oshie, left, celebrates his first goal with Nicklas Backstrom to the chagrin of Alex Killorn.

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