The Columbus Dispatch

Switcheroo to Korpisalo delivers victory

- By Brian Hedger

WASHINGTON — John Tortorella did it again Saturday night. Blue Jackets 2, Capitals 1, OT

The Blue Jackets coach zigged instead of zagged, going against the grain with his goaltendin­g choice against the Washington Capitals — merely the 2018 Stanley Cup champions and leaders of the Next game

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Metropolit­an Division.

Joonas Korpisalo, the backup, started for the second straight game rather than Sergei Bobrovsky, the two-time Vezina Trophy winner who missed an overtime win Thursday against Nashville because of an undisclose­d incident heard ’round the hockey world.

Was Tortorella just reprising his logic from Oct. 4 in Detroit, when he started Korpisalo in the season-opener and saved Bobrovsky for the next night at home?

“No, I just think Korpi deserves another game,” Tortorella said before Korpisalo made 32 saves in a 2-1 overtime win over the Capitals, their second victory by that score at Capital One Arena and second OT win in a row. “I thought he played really well (against Nashville).”

On paper, it didn’t really add up logically.

Defenseman Ryan Murray was home sick. Forward Kevin Stenlund, a rookie called up Friday from Cleveland, played his first NHL game. Two-thirds of the usual fourth line, Brandon Dubinsky and Markus Hannikaine­n, were out

because of injury.

Most assumed Bobrovsky would get the nod, but it couldn’t have worked out much better that he didn’t. The Blue Jackets got a great performanc­e from Korpisalo, a strong defensive effort in front of him and Artemi Panarin’s second power-play OT winner in a row.

“He’s earned it,” Tortorella said of Korpisalo afterward. “I don’t profess to understand all goaltendin­g stuff, but when I see Korpi just play under control, that’s when he’s strong. He’s been really solid, just as far as his positionin­g.”

He needed to be against the Capitals, who who outshot the Jackets 33-22.

Cam Atkinson gave Columbus a 1-0 lead 1:00 into the game on his 25th goal of the season, capping a breakaway with a beautiful move, but Washington generated more scoring chances.

The Capitals just couldn’t solve Korpisalo until Evgeny Kuznetsov slapped one past him with 1:06 left in the third — celebratin­g with his patented flying bird gesture right in front of the Jackets bench.

That was the only goal celebratio­n the Capitals got to do, though, thanks

mostly to Korpisalo. This was his first career start against the Capitals but second appearance this season, after making 14 saves on 15 shots in relief of Bobrovsky on Dec. 8 at Nationwide Arena — a 4-0 victory for Washington.

Tortorella said he had forgotten about that game during his pregame comments. But it was arguably the Jackets’ worst game of the season — prompting Tortorella to “hit the reset button” by emphasizin­g defensive structure in the team’s next practice.

The Blue Jackets quickly responded by winning six of seven games (6-0-1) and stayed right in the thick of things in the division race. So, why not go back with Korpisalo over Bobrovsky?

It made all the sense in the world when cast in that light — and made even more sense after watching Panarin blast another one-timer into the net to win a game — setting off the Jackets’ own flying bird celebratio­n.

It wouldn’t have been possible were it not for Korpisalo.

“He played good,” Tortorella said. “He played good against Nashville. To me, it was a no-brainer.”

bhedger@dispatch.com @Brianhedge­r

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