Las Vegas Review-Journal

Knights deep-six Caps

Nosek’s late goals help Vegas rally in Stanley Cup debut

- COMMENTARY By David Schoen Las Vegas Review-journal

There’s something about Tomas Nosek and Game 1 of a championsh­ip series.

A year ago while playing for Grand Rapids in the American Hockey League, Nosek scored the winning goal with 13.9 seconds remaining in the opening game of the Calder Cup final.

But that doesn’t compare with what he managed Monday night.

Nosek tallied twice in the third period, including the go-ahead goal with 10:16 remaining, to help the Golden Knights rally for a 6-4 victory over the Washington Capitals at T-mobile Arena in the first game of the Stanley Cup Final.

“This is another level, so it feels great,” Nosek said. “We tried to keep the things simple and go hard to the net. I think that’s what made us good in the third period. We have to keep doing that. Just keep things simple and be hard on the forecheck and create some chaos in there.”

Ryan Reaves notched his second

KNIGHTS

sport having this devilish way of altering a perceived narrative, and in this sense, Game 1 hardly played out as most envisioned.

The talk was about how goaltender­s would define whoever emerged champion between the Knights and Capitals, and that certainly could still prove correct.

But for openers, Fleury and counterpar­t Braden Holtby weren’t sharp, certainly not to the level each performed earlier in the playoffs.

“As a goalie, you don’t want to give up so much on both sides, but some nights it’s going to go that way,” said Fleury, who faced 28 shots to 33 against Holtby. “You’ve got try to be able to stay with it, try to make the next save. I have a lot of confidence in our guys.

“It was a little too exciting for the goalies. It was a little too interestin­g. It doesn’t matter what number (of game) it is in the series. Nothing is over, right?”

Fleury entered the final amid a deserved buzz of Conn Smythe chatter, playing at a playoff MVP level while offering a 1.68 goalsagain­st average and .947 save percentage.

Holtby wasn’t even a first-round starter, but then grabbed hold tight of the spot and posted shutouts in Games 6 and 7 against Tampa Bay in the Eastern Conference Final.

He hadn’t allowed a goal in 159 minutes, 27 seconds, entering Monday.

So it went that those defending in front of Fleury were better than those aiding Holtby, although no portion of either team was outstandin­g sans the fourth line of Vegas, a central reason Washington didn’t steal home ice in Game 1.

Vegas had some bad luck when Fleury accidental­ly kicked a puck into his net for a Washington goal to make it 4-3 Capitals early in the third, and then some incredible fortune when Lars Eller missed an open net in front (with the aid of Brayden Mcnabb’s defensive stick) that would have tied the game in the waning seconds after Holtby had been pulled for an extra skater.

“Both teams will say there was some rust, and I think both believe they can take it to another level,” said Capitals coach Barry Trotz. “I know we can. I think you look at what they have done defensivel­y and what Marc-andre has done (coming in), but we had a good plan. We didn’t win the game. I would have

rather gotten five or six (goals) against him than four.”

Both sides will watch tape and tighten things up and be better in Game 2 on Wednesday, but if this is even close to a preview of what is to come, alert the faint of heart to view with caution.

Exciting doesn’t always translate to crisp play.

Sometimes, it’s just exciting.

Sometimes, what you think might occur doesn’t come close to being so.

“Obviously it’s not what was expected of both of us, or what I want,” Fleury said of himself and Holtby. “It’s not gonna go perfect every night. I put (one) in my net by myself. It happens. It’ll happen again at some point in my career. You just gotta brush it off, forget about it, and try to stop the next one.”

You just have to understand that sport can be devilish this way.

One side thought it beautiful Monday.

The other, not so much. Contact columnist Ed Graney at egraney@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702383-4618. He can be heard on “The Press Box,” ESPN Radio 100.9 FM and 1100 AM, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Friday. Follow @edgraney on

Twitter.

 ?? Benjamin Hager ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @benjaminhp­hoto Fans pack T-mobile Arena on Monday for Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final between the Golden Knights and the Washington Capitals. The Golden Knights won 6-4.
Benjamin Hager Las Vegas Review-journal @benjaminhp­hoto Fans pack T-mobile Arena on Monday for Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final between the Golden Knights and the Washington Capitals. The Golden Knights won 6-4.
 ?? Chase Stevens ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @csstevensp­hoto William Karlsson’s quick hands give the Knights a first-period goal as he gathers a shot off the boards and pushes the puck behind goaltender Braden Holtby.
Chase Stevens Las Vegas Review-journal @csstevensp­hoto William Karlsson’s quick hands give the Knights a first-period goal as he gathers a shot off the boards and pushes the puck behind goaltender Braden Holtby.
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