Las Vegas Review-Journal

Capitals prioritize neutralizi­ng Knights trio’s scoring chances

Top line limited to pair of assists on Theodore’s score

- By Steve Carp Las Vegas Review-journal

On a night when Washington’s star best player was at his best, the Golden Knights’ best line was unable to respond.

The Capitals didn’t let William Karlsson’s line dominate in Game 2 after Karlsson, Jonathan Marchessau­lt and Reilly Smith had two goals and two assists in Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final.

The Knights’ top unit had a pair of assists on Shea Theodore’s power-play goal late in the second period. But they couldn’t solve goaltender Braden Holtby and the Capitals, led by the inspired play of their captain Alex Ovechkin, who evened the best-of-seven series at 1-1 with a 3-2 win Wednesday at T-mobile Arena.

Game 3 is 5 p.m. Saturday at Capital One Arena in Washington.

“We didn’t manage the puck well,” Marchessau­lt said. “We had too many turnovers and they were better than us in the second period.

“We did a good job 5-on-5. But it’s on us. We’re not playing our game. As a line, we’re having too many turnovers. When we’re managing the puck and making plays, we make things happen. If we want to have a chance to win we have to be the best line out there and we weren’t that (Wednesday).”

Washington coach Barry Trotz didn’t have the last change as visiting team, but he was able to get better execution against Karlsson’s line Wednesday.

“I thought we did a good job all around,” Trotz said. “We cleaned some things up. They’re a very good line, and I thought we played better defensivel­y overall.”

Gerard Gallant, who did have the last change, wasn’t looking for a certain matchup to help Karlsson’s line gain an edge. He basically threw them out on their next regular shift regardless of who the Capitals had on the ice.

Sometimes it was Nicklas Backstrom’s line. Sometimes it was against Alex Ovechkin and Tom Wilson, the latter who had taken a run at Marchessau­lt in Game 1 and temporaril­y knocked him out of the game.

But there were no retaliator­y hits from Marchessau­lt or his linemates. They left that to Ryan Reaves, who delivered a blow to Wilson’s face after the whistle midway through the second period and drew a roughing penalty for his actions.

Gallant said the Capitals deserve credit for their improved play against the Knights’ best line from Game 1 to Game 2.

“We came out and played real well the first 12 minutes of the hockey game and I don’t think we played bad overall,” Gallant said. “We had some chances but Washington did a good job against them.”

The line did combine for 14 of the Knights’ 39 shots on Holtby. There were a couple of strong chances, but overall the Capitals didn’t allow Karlsson, Smith and Marchessau­lt to inflict any damage beyond the Theodore power-play goal.

Karlsson had gotten the puck to Smith, who fed Theodore at the point, and with Alex Tuch screening Holtby, Theodore’s wrist shot found its way through a tangle of arms and legs.

Ultimately, the key to containing Karlsson and company was clogging the neutral zone, negating their overall speed as a unit and taking away some of the time and space they’re accustomed to creating for themselves. But Marchessau­lt said he and his teammates will bounce back Saturday in Game 3.

“We have the right attitude,” Marchessau­lt said. “Tomorrow is a new day. We have to reset and get a win over there.”

Contact Steve Carp at scarp@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-2913. Follow @stevecarpr­j on Twitter.

Ed Graney, @edgraney

James Neal, who had an earlier chance turned away, opens scoring at 7:58 of the first with wrister past Holtby. VGK 1, Capitals 0. #Rjnow

Greg Beacham, @gregbeacha­m

Oh boy, Evgeny Kuznetsov gets plastered into the boards on a high hit by Vegas’ Brayden Mcnabb. Washington’s top scorer gets up and goes straight to the dressing room.

Steve Carp, @stevecarpr­j

Eller all alone, no one picks him up and he buries it to tie it 1-1 at 17:27.

Pierre Lebrun, @Pierrevleb­run

Ovechkin on the one-timer, PP goal Caps, costly penalty by Tuch, and it’s 2-1 for the visitors. Strong response from the Caps after Vegas took it to them early in this game.

Dan Rosen, @drosennhl

Brooks Orpik. Goal. Not kidding. His first goal since the 2015-16 season. It’s 3-1 Caps.

Frank Seravalli, @frank_seravalli

Brooks Orpik’s last goal (regular season or playoffs) was on Feb. 26, 2016 — otherwise known as 117 days before

Vegas was even awarded an #NHL franchise.

Emily Kaplan, @emilymkapl­an

Alex Ovechkin scored 116 goals between Brooks Orpik goals.

Dave Goucher, @Davidcgouc­her

Huuuuuge power play goal by Shea Theodore late in the second period gets the #Goldenknig­hts within one, making it 3-2. #Goknightsg­o

NHL Public Relations, @PR_NHL

Reilly Smith (3-16—19 in 17 GP) collected an assist in the second period to move into a tie with Jonathan Marchessau­lt (8-11—19 in 17 GP) for the team lead in playoff scoring. #Nhlstats #Stanleycup #WSHVSVGK

Isabelle Khurshudya­n, @ikhurshudy­an

Bad, meet worse. Eller for hooking. VGK will have a fiveon-three for 1:09.

David Schoen, @Davidschoe­nlvrj

Capitals kill off the 5-on-3 disadvanta­ge. Big moment in the game/series. 13:00 left 3rd: WSH 3, VGK 2

Michael Russo, @Russohocke­y

Save of the millennium

Daniel Wagner, @passittobu­lis

Holtby? More like Holta+. Send tweet.

Adnan Virk, ESPN, @adnanespn

Save of the playoffs! #holtby #caps

NHL, @NHL

The @Capitals take Game 2 of the #Stanleycup Final in fine fashion.

Japers’ Rink, @Japersrink

The Washington Capitals have won a game in the Stanley Cup Final. I’ve waited a long time to type that, fam. A loooong time.

Washington Capitals, @Capitals

THE WASHINGTON CAPITALS HAVE WON THEIR FIRST STANLEY CUP FINAL GAME IN TEAM HISTORY!

#Capsknight­s Game 2 FINAL SCORE powered by @ Alarmdotco­m :

#Caps 3 - Knights 2 #ALLCAPS Series tied 1-1

Dave Lozo, @davelozo

Vegas Golden Knights are 0-1 since letting Imagine Dragons play on the ice before a game

 ?? Chase Stevens ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @csstevensp­hoto Defenseman Matt Niskanen, center, pushes Knights center William Karlsson, right, as Washington right wing T.J. Oshie goes for the puck during the third period.
Chase Stevens Las Vegas Review-journal @csstevensp­hoto Defenseman Matt Niskanen, center, pushes Knights center William Karlsson, right, as Washington right wing T.J. Oshie goes for the puck during the third period.

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