Imperial Valley Press

Wilson scores in OT as Caps survive scare to beat Leafs

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Heavily favored to beat the young and inexperien­ced Toronto Maple Leafs, the Stanley Cup-contending Washington Capitals weren’t supposed to be the team that flubbed and floundered at the start of the playoffs.

Playing some of their worst hockey of the season, the Capitals fell behind by two goals early but came back to force overtime. Tom Wilson scored 5:15 into extra period for a 3-2 victory in Game 1 on Thursday night. “It’s hard to say what was up there,” captain Alex Ovechkin said. “Maybe we was a little bit nervous, maybe kind of feel the pressure a little bit. But when they score, all the bench said, ‘Just calm down and let’s play our way.’ Coming back in after first there was no panic, obviously still lots of minutes to play . ... We just grinded it out and win in overtime.”

Playoff star and 2014 Conn Smythe Trophy winner Justin Williams scored twice in regulation and Braden Holtby stopped 35 of the 37 shots he faced to give Wilson the opportunit­y to be the hero. The fourth-line winger who grew up a Maple Leafs fan in Toronto beat Frederik Andersen to the far side for his first NHL playoff goal.

Williams said to Wilson afterward, “It feels good, doesn’t it?” The Presidents’ Trophy-winning Capitals could exhale because they survived a serious scare from the Maple Leafs in their playoff opener.

Despite having nine players making their playoff debuts, Toronto showed no fear of Washington, as rookie Mitch Marner scored 1:35 in and Jake Gardiner made it 2-0 at the 9:44 mark. Andersen made 41 saves but lost track of the puck in front of him on Williams’ second goal and should have stopped Wilson’s shot.

“I thought Freddie was really good, and then he’d probably like to have that back,” coach Mike Babcock said. “But he gave us an opportunit­y, so I don’t think you can argue with that.”

Williams gave the Capitals the opportunit­y to bounce back from their rough start with the fourth two-goal game of his playoff career. Defenseman Kevin Shattenkir­k, who led all players with nine shots on net, said the team rallied around Williams — the veteran who reassured everyone at intermissi­on.

“In between periods it was basically Justin just kind of calmed everyone down, said, ‘Relax, we’re not going to win every period,’” Holtby said.

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