The Washington Post - 21.10.2019

(Wang) #1

D6 EZ M2 THE WASHINGTON POST.MONDAY, OCTOBER 21 , 2019


Oshie was on the wrong end of
Chicago’s first equalizer, when he
fell entering the offensive zone
and fourth-liner Drake Caggiula
scored off the turnover. Both
teams’ depth forwards contribut-
ed, with Dowd’s shorthanded
goal providing a quick answer.
The Capitals had another re-
sponse in them after Chicago tied
it again in the third period, and
they will take a three-game win-
ning streak with them to Calgary.
“I think it’s always nice when
you can win the first one on a long
road trip,” Wilson said. “Definite-
ly makes this four-hour plane ride
a little bit more fun, and it sets us
off on the right foot, so that’s all
you can ask coming into a tough
building.”
[email protected]

aged only one shot on goal during
their extended advantage.
Dowd and Hagelin were one of
the team’s shorthanded forward
pairs Sunday, and Wilson and
Eller formed the other. Reirden
said he talked with assistant
coach Scott Arniel before the
game to make the switch to those
two particular combinations —
and if the results Sunday were
any indication, they worked.
Dowd had been in and out of
the Capitals’ lineup to start the
season, trading places as the
fourth-line center with Stephen-
son, until an injury to Richard
Panik forced the team to place
Panik on injured reserve before
Friday’s game against the New
York Rangers. Dowd has now
scored twice in as many games.
“Yeah, it was a good turning
point there,” Dowd said. “Obvi-
ously unlucky at the four minutes,
but you try to take momentum
away whenever you can. Whether
it’s the power play got us going
early with the momentum, but
special teams was a big factor for
us tonight.”
Oshie’s power-play goal in the
first period — his team-leading
seventh goal of the season, this
one on a feed from Evgeny Kuz-
netsov after a puck battle — was
his third in his past two games.
The Capitals’ power play is now 7
for 15 on the road. What earlier
this season was a concerning area
for Washington is suddenly re-
sembling the prolific unit of the
past few years.

ately boosting a unit that has
continued to excel this season.
Washington was tied for eighth in
the NHL in penalty-kill percent-
age even before its impressive
showing Sunday.
“Special teams, I talk about it
all the time, and it is something
that wasn’t where we wanted it to
be, and it has been solid for us
these last couple games,” Capitals
Coach Todd Reirden said.
Hagelin made his presence felt
on the penalty kill again Sunday
after he put his head down and
sped up ice after a turnover by
Kane midway through the second
period. Hagelin made a clean pass
to Dowd to break the tie.
Chicago had scored its first
goal just 1:28 earlier, and Chan-
dler Stephenson’s double minor
for high-sticking came at a dan-
gerous time. Instead, the Capitals
took the lead with the shorthand-
ed goal, and the Blackhawks man-

added an extra attacker. Holtby
has made 67 saves on 72 shots in
his past two games after getting
pulled Oct. 14 for allowing three
goals on three shots against Colo-
rado.
“He’s definitely got his calm
demeanor back,” Wilson said of
Holtby. “He’s one of those guys
where if there are pucks flying
everywhere, he just seems to
swallow them up, and he’s our
rock. He’s an extremely good lead-
er on the ice, off the ice. I’m happy
for him. He played great tonight.”
Wilson scored the go-ahead
goal, and Holtby preserved the
late lead, but it was the Capitals’
special-teams units that ultimate-
ly made the difference. Forward
T.J. Oshie scored a power-play
goal 9:25 into the first period,
converting the Capitals’ only ex-
tra-man opportunity of the game.
The penalty kill went 5 for 5, and
Nic Dowd scored a shorthanded
goal 9:53 into the second period
to give the Capitals a 2-1 lead.
Capitals General Manager Bri-
an MacLellan entered last year’s
trade deadline knowing his team
needed to get better on the penal-
ty kill. It was an area in which the
team had struggled all season,
unable to find the right personnel
or the right balance of when to
apply pressure in a system de-
signed to be aggressive.
The team acquired winger Carl
Hagelin and defenseman Nick
Jensen at the deadline, immedi-

CAPITALS FROM D1

BY DAVE SKRETTA

kansas city, kan. — Denny
Hamlin was surrounded by Joe
Gibbs Racing teammates at the
front on the final restart, and that
put Chase Elliott in the most diffi-
cult and precarious of situations.
Somehow, he figured, he need-
ed to find a way to beat them all to
advance in the NASCAR Cup Se-
ries playoff.
It turned out second place was
good enough.
Hamlin roared away with a
push from behind from teammate
Kyle Busch on the second shot at a
green-white-checkered finish,
and Elliott was unable to chase
him down. But deep in the field,
Brad Keselowski was going back-
ward, and the spots he lost in the
elimination race at Kansas Speed-
way were enough to send Elliott
through in the final cutoff spot to
the round of eight.
Hamlin won the race. Elliott
felt almost as if he did.
“You have to stay fighting in
these things, especially with the
late-race restarts,” Elliott said.
“Just excited we get to fight an-
other race. Back up against the
wall, to come out here and battle
for the win, that’s what you have to
do when you’re in the position we
were in.”
In a bit of irony, it was Kesel-
owski who helped bring out the
caution in the first overtime when
he got into Daniel Suarez and
triggered a wreck that collected
teammate Joey Logano. The field
was nearing the start-finish line,
but the caution light came on
before the leader took the white
flag.

If Hamlin had crossed a split-
second quicker, the race would
have been over and Keselowski
safe.
“I pushed as hard as I knew how
and didn’t quite do good enough
on the last restart, and that was it,”
Keselowski said.
Kyle Busch ultimately finished
third, followed by Kurt Busch and
William Byron. But the key was
Keselowski, who dropped from
13th to 19th on the final restart
and out of the next round of the
playoff. He ended up three points
— equal to three positions on the
track — below the cutoff line.
Byron was the next driver elimi-
nated despite a strong run at Kan-
sas, where he would have needed a
win to advance. Alex Bowman and
Clint Bowyer also were ousted.
The frenzied push to the finish
began when Ryan Blaney scraped
the wall with 14 to go, causing his
tire to go down and a caution flag
to fly. Elliott was three points be-
hind Keselowski at that point, but
the savior of Hendrick Motor-
sports’ playoff hopes made a big
move on the restart to climb to
fourth place, and that put the
pressure right back on Keselowski
to make up ground.
Elliott was still in good shape
until another caution flew, jum-
bling the front of the pack and
giving Keselowski a chance. He
made a quick stop and picked up
three spots on pit road, putting
Elliott back in a situation in which
it appeared he would need a victo-
ry to advance.
Then Keselowski ran out of
room deep in the pack and nudged
Suarez, sending him into the wall.
— Associated Press

NASCAR

Elliott in, Keselowski out


ASSOCIATED PRESS after a chaotic cutoff race


Justin Thomas won his
11th PGA Tour title and his second
in South Korea in three years with
a final-round 5-under-par 67 and
a two-stroke victory over South
Korean-born New Zealander
Danny Lee on Jeju Island.
Thomas and Lee made it most-
ly a two-man show Sunday at the
CJ Cup at Nine Bridges. They
entered the final round tied and
stayed that way through the front
nine.
Thomas birdied the 14th to
take one-stroke lead, then went
up by two when Lee bogeyed the
15th after missing a 10-foot par
putt and Thomas made a two-
footer for par. After going from
greenside bunker to bunker on
the 16th, Lee bogeyed again and
fell three behind. But Thomas
bogeyed the 17th after his 12-foot-
er for par lipped out, reducing the
deficit to two strokes.
On Saturday, Thomas had a
three-stroke lead heading into
the 18th ahead but fell victim to a
three-shot swing when Thomas
bogeyed and Lee made a long
eagle putt. On Sunday, there were
no such late miracles for Lee:
Thomas and Lee both birdied the
18th, with Lee lipping out on his
eagle putt to finish with a 69.
“It was a very, very tough day,”
Thomas said. “Danny made it
extremely difficult. He really
made a lot of putts, a lot of
unbelievable up and downs to
kind of keep me from getting all
the momentum.”
Thomas finished with a 72-hole
total of 20-under 268.
“Just a couple holes that were
letting me down with the driver
on the back nine,” Lee said. “A
couple tee shots that you cannot


hit it in that bunkers on the left,
and I did, so struggling to make
par from there when Justin had a
couple birdie looks.”
On the eagle putt on 18, Lee
said: “Pretty close. I wasn’t going
to leave that short. It looked so
good for so long. Had a little too
much speed to go in, but I gave it a
really good run.”
Hideki Matsuyama (65), Gary
Woodland (66) and Cameron
Smith (69) finished tied for third,
five behind Thomas.
LPGA TOUR: Danielle Kang
shot a bogey-free 2-under 70 to
win the LPGA Shanghai for the
second consecutive year with a
tournament-record 16-under 272.
The 27-year-old American be-

gan the day one stroke behind
compatriot Jessica Korda, who
shot a final-round 72 to finish
second at 15 under.
“It was a really stressful day. I
definitely played well out there. It
was really tough because you’re
definitely watching what Jessica
is shooting and scoring and al-
ways just try to keep in my own
game,” Kang said.
Kang birdied the 15th to pull
two strokes ahead, but Korda
responded with a birdie of her
own on 17. Kang then holed a
three-foot par putt on the 18th to
win her third career title.
“I’ve never been more nervous
than the last putt for some rea-
son, but I made it,” Kang said.

PGA TOUR CHAMPIONS:
Heavy rain forced the postpone-
ment of the third round of the
Dominion Energy Charity Classic
in Richmond.
The first of three tournaments
in the Charles Schwab Cup play-
offs will resume at Country Club
of Virginia’s James River Course
at 8 a.m. Monday.
Tommy Tolles and Scott Parel
are tied for the lead, one shot
ahead of Colin Montgomerie.
EUROPEAN TOUR: Nicolas
Colsaerts ended more than seven
years without a victory when he
closed with a 1-over 72 and sur-
vived a wild back nine at Le Golf
National to win the French Open
in Guyancourt.

GOLF ROUNDUP


Thomas holds off Lee for second South Korea win


JEON HEON-KYUN/EPA-EFE/SHUTTERSTOCK
“It was a very, very tough day,” said Justin Thomas, who birdied No. 18 to edge Danny Lee by two strokes.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Vancouver captain Bo Horvat
wanted to set the tone early after
a tough loss the previous day. He
got the Canucks started with a
needed power-play goal, and they
bounced back with a big road
win.
Brock Boeser and Jay Beagle
scored late in Vancouver’s three-
goal first period, and the Canucks
held on to beat the New York
Rangers, 3-2, on Sunday.
Elias Pettersson added two as-
sists for Vancouver (5-3-0), which
bounced back from a 1-0 loss at
New Jersey on Saturday to win
for the fifth time in six games.
“I took that onus on myself to
be the guy to get the boys going,”
Horvat said. “I was really upset
about the last game. We should
have scored more power-play
goals, and we should have at least
gotten a point out of that....
When we do lose games, we’re not
ones to want to lose three
straight, four straight and get on
these losing skids. We want to
bounce back and have a great
game and continue winning.”
Jacob Markstrom, playing for
the first time since Oct. 12,
stopped 38 shots to win his third
straight start after losing his first
two.
“A little bit of redemption, but
our team played amazing. We
really did,” Beagle said. “Marky
stood on his head. It was just a
good overall win.”
Jesper Fast had a goal and an
assist and Artemi Panarin also
scored for New York (2-4-0),
which has lost four straight —
including three in four days after
playing just three times in the
previous 14 days. Henrik Lund-
qvist finished with 40 saves.
“We should be so eager to get
out there,” Lundqvist said. “But
sometimes it’s hard to get going.
That desperation should always
be there. Especially losing three
in a row.”
Rangers Coach David Quinn
shook up his lineup during Fri-
day’s 5-2 loss at Washington,
moving Chris Kreider to the top
line with Panarin and Mika Zi-
banejad. Pavel Buchnevich was
dropped to the second line and
rookie Kaapo Kakko down to the
third. Buchnevich ended up on
the fourth line during the second
period but was back on the sec-
ond later in the game.
Down 3-1 after 40 minutes, the
Rangers came out aggressively in
the third and controlled much of
the play while outshooting the
Canucks 17-6 in the final period.
“We knew they like to play
wide-open,” Beagle said. “They
have a lot of guys that run and


gun. They love to go east-west
and hardly ever dump it.... We
got the job done.”
WILD 4, CANADIENS 3:
Zach Parise scored the go-ahead
goal midway through the third
period, and Minnesota won its
second game of the season, beat-
ing Montreal in St. Paul, Minn.
Jason Zucker, Marcus Foligno
and Brad Hunt also scored for
Minnesota, which matched its
highest goal total through eight
games this season. The Wild (2-
6-0) also scored four goals in a 7-4
home loss to Pittsburgh.
Devan Dubnyk made 29 saves
and earned his first win of the
season.
Phillip Danault scored twice
and Tomas Tatar added a goal for
the Canadiens (4-3-2). Keith
Kinkaid stopped 29 shots in his
second game of the season.
Parise took a perfect pass from
Zucker through traffic and sent a
shot that beat Kinkaid and gave
the Wild a 4-3 lead. The score
came just over four minutes after
Hunt tied the game on the power
play.
The teams squared off for the
second time in a four-day span.
The host Canadiens won the pre-
vious meeting, 4-0.
JETS 1, OILERS 0 (SO):
Kyle Connor and Patrik Laine
scored in the shootout, and Win-
nipeg (5-5-0) snapped a three-
game losing skid with a win at
home over Edmonton (7-1-1).
Connor Hellebuyck made
28 saves and recorded his first
shutout of the season.
Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and
Connor McDavid were stopped in
the shootout.
The overtime period was high-
lighted by tight goaltending.
Edmonton goalie Mike Smith
robbed Mark Scheifele in close,
and Hellebuyck followed that by
denying McDavid on a break-
away.
Smith made 23 saves for the
Oilers, who had their two-game
winning streak snapped.
The Jets are undefeated in
regulation in their past seven
games against the Oilers. Their
last loss was Dec. 1, 2016.
FLAMES 2, DUCKS 1: Mi-
kael Backlund scored with 11:03
left, Cam Talbot made 29 saves
and Calgary (5-4-1) rallied for a
road victory over Anaheim (6-
3-0).
Backlund got a pass from Mat-
thew Tkachuk on a two-on-one
rush after a neutral zone turnover
and beat goaltender John Gibson
with a snap shot from the right
faceoff circle. It was his second
goal in two games.
Talbot made his second start of
the season and got his first win as
he stopped a flurry of one-timers
in the third period. Michael Stone
also scored for the Flames, who
snapped a three-game road los-
ing streak.

Capitals open trip with win in Chicago


CAPITALS’ NEXT THREE

at Calgary Flames

Tomorrow 9 NBCSW

at Edmonton Oilers
Thursday 9 NBCSW

at Vancouver Canucks
Friday 10 NBCSW+

Radio: WJFK (106.7 FM),
WFED (1500 AM)

NHL ROUNDUP


Vancouver bounces back


to beat reeling New York


CANUCKS 3,
RANGERS 2

PAUL BEATY/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tom Wilson (43) scored the eventual game-winner after the Blackhawks tied Sunday’s game with a pair of goals in the third period.

Capitals 5, Blackhawks 3
WASHINGTON ......................... 1 1 3 — 5
CHICAGO .................................. 0 1 2 — 3
FIRST PERIOD
Scoring: 1, Washington, Oshie 7 (Kuznetsov), 9:25 (pp).
Penalties: Shaw, CHI, (holding), 9:17; Eller, WSH,
(tripping), 12:59; Gudas, WSH, served by Vrana, (rough-
ing), 20:00; Gudas, WSH, (cross checking), 20:00; Mur-
phy, CHI, (roughing), 20:00.
SECOND PERIOD
Scoring: 2, Chicago, Caggiula 2 (Carpenter, Nylander),
8:25. 3, Washington, Dowd 2 (Hagelin), 9:53 (sh).
Penalties: Stephenson, WSH, major (high sticking),
9:25.
THIRD PERIOD
Scoring: 4, Washington, Ovechkin 6 (Kempny, Carlson),
3:52. 5, Chicago, Kubalik 2 (Kampf, Saad), 6:05. 6,
Chicago, Kane 3 (Nylander), 9:58. 7, Washington, Wilson
3 (Hagelin, Eller), 11:47. 8, Washington, Eller 3 (Orlov),
19:10. Penalties: Kempny, WSH, (tripping), 0:33.
SHOTS ON GOAL
WASHINGTON ....................... 12 9 9 — 30
CHICAGO ................................ 14 15 15 — 44
Power-play opportunities: Washington 1 of 1; Chicago 0
of 5. Goalies: Washington, Holtby 3-1-2 (44 shots-41
saves). Chicago, Crawford 1-3-0 (29-25).
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