Yuma Sun

CAPITALS

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tle better always.”

It doesn’t get much better than this for Kuznetsov and Ovechkin. As Kuznetsov flapped his arms in celebratio­n of his goal on a 2-on-1 rush, Ovechkin screamed and raised his arms to the bench — showing the same emotion he did in the final minutes of Game 7 of the Eastern Conference final and when Braden Holtby made a stick save of a lifetime to preserve a 3-2 win in Game 2.

“It’s just automatic. You just get excited,” Ovechkin

said. “It’s huge moments for us. You just want to give emotion to your teammates and to yourself, as well.”

Fired up for the first Cup Final game in Washington since 1998, the Capitals unloaded chance after chance on Fleury, who made 23 saves but couldn’t backstop a frazzled, disjointed team that lost two games in a row for the first time in the playoff and is trailing in a series for the first time.

At the other end, Braden Holtby gifted Tomas Nosek a goal by giving the puck away but stopped the other 21 shots he faced from the Golden Knights, who

looked nothing like the winners of 13 of their first 16 playoff games through the first three rounds.

“All year we’ve had a lot of guys going,” Vegas defenseman Deryk Engelland said. “That hasn’t been the case. Our goalie’s been bailing us out with huge saves all night and we have to bear down and be better for him.”

The Golden Knights’ historic run in its inaugural season is now in danger of coming to an end with Game 4 back in Washington on Monday night.

“We haven’t been behind in any series,” Fleury said. “It doesn’t mean we’re out of it.”

They’re not out, but they’re down because Holtby was there when the Capitals needed him by making 21 saves on 22 shots. Of course, they didn’t need him much because they were on the attack for much of the game and also blocked 26 shots in front of Holtby.

“I think there’s more to blocking shots than just going out there and trying to get hit,” Holtby said. “We’re doing a great job of creating the right layers, guys going out there strategica­lly to know which lane I’m picking for sight lines and they’re taking away the other half and making big blocks. That’s a huge part of why we’re having success defensivel­y because it’s all through our lineup.”

Ovechkin attempted eight shots in the first period and scored a goal that seemed inevitable. It came 1:10 into the second period when Ovechkin threw himself full extension over Vegas defenseman Brayden McNabb to reach the rebound and backhand the puck past Fleury.

“I thought it was sort of the right thing in a playoff game, our first victory in the final at home, that Alex would score the first goal,” coach Barry Trotz said. “I thought that was a little bit

of poetic justice if you will for all the tough times.

Ovechkin’s goal matched John Druce’s franchise record set in 1990 and tied him for the league lead in these playoffs.

When Kuznetsov showed his injured left arm is just fine by scoring on a perfect shot on an odd-man rush, Ovechkin looked to the ceiling with his arms extended as he was hugged by Lars Eller.

“Ovi, he always shows his emotions when he scores, but he’ll be just as happy for somebody else scoring,” Eller said. “He wants to win as bad as anyone. You see how our team celebrates when somebody else scores. Everybody is happy for one another and everybody is happy for the team.”

The red-clad raucous crowd was quieted when Vegas scored early in the third period. Holtby — well-aware of the Golden Knights’ ability to cross up opposing goaltender­s

— had his puck-handling attempt intercepte­d by Pierre-Edouard Bellemare. The puck skittered to Nosek for an easy goal.

Vegas built some momentum, but Devante Smith-Pelly gave the Capitals an insurance goal with 6:07 left — his fourth of the playoffs — after Jay Beagle took the puck away from Shea Theodore on the forecheck and found his teammate skating in alone on Fleury. Vegas pulled Fleury for more than two minutes at the end of the game but couldn’t break through.

The Capitals have now pieced together consecutiv­e wins against the hottest team in the playoffs and are game-by-game exorcising the demons of the past decade and more.

“We’ve had a lot of moments, not as many good ones as we’d like, Trotz said. “In past failures you’d feel a lot of anxiety even before you started the playoffs. I think we’ve gotten past that as a group.”

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