Las Vegas Review-Journal

Three teams fighting for two playoff spots

Race coming down to wire in the East

- By Stephen Whyno

Chants of “Let’s Go, Red Wings!” filled the arena in downtown Washington before the home fans drowned them out.

A Tuesday night in March felt like a Game 7 in May because of what was at stake.

“Every game feels like a playoff game at this point,” Capitals center Nic Dowd said after his team’s 4-3 overtime win. “The next game’s going to feel the exact same way.”

That’s the way it is right now in the NHL’S Eastern Conference with three teams — Washington, Detroit and the Philadelph­ia Flyers — vying for the final two playoff spots and separated by just three points in the standings. While the top eight qualifying in the West is set, barring an unforeseen collapse by the Golden Knights, all eyes are on the East with three weeks left in the regular season.

Going into Thursday, the Flyers (82 points, nine games left) are third in the Metropolit­an Division, the Capitals (81 points, 11 games left) hold the second and final wild-card spot and the Red Wings (79 points, 10 games left) are the first team out. New Jersey (76 points, nine games left) and the New York Islanders (75 points, 11 games left) would need some help to get in.

Washington

Alex Ovechkin is the face of the franchise and could be the greatest goal-scorer in hockey history. He’s a significan­t part of this, but the biggest reason the Caps beat the odds over the past month by getting back into the race is goaltender Charlie Lindgren, who is 8-2-0 in his last 10 games with a 2.12 goals-against average and .929 save percentage.

“No one’s playing better in the league right now,” Red Wings coach Derek Lalonde said of Lindgren. “They just feed off him. The confidence he brings to that group, you can tell.”

That isn’t lost on Lindgren’s teammates, who have watched him beat out Darcy Kuemper for the starting job and make one save after another to keep them in tight games.

“He’s a rock for us back there,” winger T.J. Oshie said. “Chucky has been, in my opinion, the backbone of why we’re still in this race.”

Philadelph­ia

No disrespect to 31-goal scorer and All-star Travis Konecny, No. 1 defenseman Travis Sanheim or young winger Owen Tippett, but John Tortorella probably will be named coach of the year if the Flyers get in.

Question his methods, like healthy-scratching captain Sean Couturier or refusing to leave the bench immediatel­y after getting ejected, but they’re working for a blue-collar team in Philly that is winning because of Tortorella in spite of a lack of top-end talent.

“We’ve been real consistent in how we’ve had to play,” Tortorella said. “The biggest thing we’ve really tried to concentrat­e on was be connected in all three zones, and that has really helped us grind away here.”

Goalie Samuel Ersson also deserves some credit for being pressed into the starting role at age 24 after Carter Hart took an indefinite leave of absence pending a sexual assault charge against him in Canada.

Detroit

After captain Dylan Larkin was injured March 2 in Detroit’s second consecutiv­e loss and was ruled out for two weeks, Lalonde believed his team was better equipped to handle the absence of the No. 1 center than when it lost three of four without him earlier this season.

The Red Wings dropped their next five to go on a seven-game skid that threatened to derail their hopes of ending the franchise’s seven-year postseason drought. They’ve steadied the ship, picking up three of a possible six points, since Larkin returned.

“He’s our best player,” Debrincat said. “He’s the heartbeat of the team. Having him back is great. Just having him in the locker room’s great. Obviously on the ice, his skill takes over and he does everything great.”

 ?? Chris O’meara The Associated Press ?? Philadelph­ia Flyers coach John Tortorella yells at referee Brad Meier after being kicked out a game against the Tampa Bay Lightning on March 9.
Chris O’meara The Associated Press Philadelph­ia Flyers coach John Tortorella yells at referee Brad Meier after being kicked out a game against the Tampa Bay Lightning on March 9.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States