The Sun (San Bernardino)

McDavid, Oilers blast Crosby, reeling Pens

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The Edmonton Oilers are running out of words to describe Connor McDavid. The Pittsburgh Penguins may be running out of time to salvage their season.

McDavid scored twice to push his total to a careerbest 46 goals as the Oilers embarrasse­d Sidney Crosby and the Penguins 7-2 on Thursday night at Pittsburgh.

McDavid beat Tristan Jarry from in close in the first period and then used some dazzling stickwork to deke past backup Casey DeSmith on a penalty shot late in the third period. The 26-year-old added two assists to boost his point total to an NHL-best 109.

Leon Draisaitl picked up 35th goal for the Oilers, who improved to 10-1-5 in their last 16 games. Ryan NugentHopk­ins had a goal and an assist to reach 600 career points.

Alex Pietrangel­o scored on a rebound 52 seconds into overtime to complete Vegas’ rally from two goals down in the third period at home to beat Calgary.

Jonathan Marchessau­lt took a shot from the slot that nearly went into the net, but dropped behind Calgary goalie Dan Vladar. Pietrangel­o was there to knock in the puck. Jack Eichel had the secondary assist for his second point of the night after earlier scoring a goal.

Marc-Andre Fleury stopped 30 shots for his 73rd career shutout and Minnesota won at Columbus for its fourth straight victory. Fleury is 12th on the NHL’s career shutouts list, three behind Ed Belfour and Tony Esposito, who are tied for 10th.

Filip Zadina scored the goahead goal midway through the second period and Ville Husso made 30 saves to lift Detroit past visiting New York.

Ilya Lyubushkin scored a short-handed goal on a breakaway 1:41 into overtime, helping Tage Thompson and Buffalo win at Tampa.

Elias Pettersson scored 4:45 into overtime, and Vancouver rallied for a victory at St. Louis.

Pettersson also had two assists for Vancouver, which trailed 2-0 after two periods. J.T. Miller had a goal and an assist, and Andrei Kuzmenko also scored.

Jakob Silfverber­g scored the goahead goal early in the third period, John Gibson made 41 saves and the Ducks handed the reeling Washington Capitals a sixth con- secutive defeat, 4-2 Thursday night.

The Capitals are mired in their longest losing streak since losing seven in a row in 2019 and their longest stretch without a point in nearly two decades. They last lost six consecutiv­e games all in regulation in October 2003, before the NHL had a salary cap and before Alex Ovechkin was drafted.

This loss to the last-place Ducks, who ended their sixgame skid, came in the aftermath of Washington trading two key players. Stanley Cup-winning defenseman Dmitry Orlov and gritty winger Garnet Hathaway were sent to the leaguelead­ing Boston Bruins for draft picks and depth forward Craig Smith, the start of the first trade deadline selloff by the Capitals since

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Ovechkin’s rookie year in 2005-06.

“We still have a chance to make the playoffs,” Ovechkin said. “You never know what’s gonna happen. We just will continue to play. ... Nothing we can do. We players, we have to play the game and it’s not our job to make a decision.”

The team’s struggles in recent weeks contribute­d to general manager Brian MacLellan making the first of what could be several moves trading pending free agents such as Orlov and Hathaway. Defenseman Nick Jensen, who scored one of Washington’s two goals, could be another.

Anaheim will also be selling, but the Ducks enjoyed a moment of joy in a rough season thanks to goals by Isac Lundestrom, Troy Terry and Silfverber­g, an emptynette­r by Derek Grant.

“It’s been tough sledding this year for us, I think: a lot of ups and downs,” said Ducks center Ryan Strome, who improved to 7-0 in the NHL against brother Dylan. “In such a tough season, you want to ride the highs as much as you can.”

Strome wants Gibson to ride high after the Ducks’ long-term starting goalie made some hockey history.

Gibson’s 21st save gave him the most through a goalie’s first 40 games of the season since Hall of Famer Jacques Plante made 1,396 for the New York Rangers in 1963-64. Gibson, who has faced the most shots and made the most saves in the NHL this season, made 40-plus stops for a leaguelead­ing 10th time.

“I feel like he’s making 40 saves every night,” Silfverber­g said. “He’s been terrific for us.”

The Capitals were booed by home fans amid several turnovers, missed defensive assignment­s and at least one soft goal given up by Charlie Lindgren, who faced just 20 shots in his first start since Feb. 12 — the start of this skid.

“It’s been a really tough stretch here,” Lindgren said. “There’s no room for pouting. There’s no room for sulking.”

Ovechkin in his first game back after missing the past week after the death of his father had a few quality scoring chances but no points.

Terry scored in his first game back from injury, while the Ducks played without two players who are candidates to be traded: defenseman John Klingberg and winger Adam Henrique, out with lower-body injuries.

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