It took a shootout to do it, but the Washington Crapitals beat the San Jose Sharks at SAP Center for the first time since Oct. 30, 1993. Evgeny Kuznetsov and Nicklas Backstrom scored in the tiebreaker Saturday night, lifting the Capitals to a 3-2 victory. Washington had failed to win in its past 12 visits to San Jose, going 0-11 with a tie, and had lost six in a row to San Jose overall. The Capitals beat the Sharks for the second time in their past 19 games. Capitals goaltender Braden Holtby stopped two of three shots in the shootout before Backstrom won it with a backhander past Antti Niemi.
"We've had a lot of trouble in this rink,"
Holtby said. "Part of it is due to the fact that they have a
good team every year. They've always been a really good home team.
We've had our work cut out for us. To get that one off the back
tonight feels pretty good."
Washington (34-27-11) tied the Detroit Red Wings
with 79 points in the race for the second Eastern Conference
wild-card spot in the Stanley Cup Playoffs; the Red Wings own the
tiebreaker because they have two games in hand. The Sharks (46-18-8)
reached the 100-point mark and moved three points ahead of the
Anaheim Ducks in the race for first place in the Pacific Division.
The Sharks could have clinched a spot in the Stanley Cup Playoffs
with a victory after the Boston Bruins defeated the Phoenix Coyotes
4-2 earlier Saturday.
"We would have liked to have had both
points but you have to look at how we played," Sharks coach
Todd McLellan said. "I thought we played solid defense
against a solid offense. You play 82 games and you are going to have
some of those bounces."
Both of Washington's goals, by Eric
Fehr in the first period and Chris
Brown in the third, ricocheted into the net off Sharks. Holtby
made his first start since March 6, replacing Jaroslav
Halak, who was on the bench with a lower-body injury. Holtby
didn't find out he was going to play until during the pregame skate,
but he made 34 saves for his 20th win of the season.
"I'm very happy for him," Washington
coach Adam Oates said. "Called on when it wasn't expected,
and he played great for us."
"Obviously it was a challenge,"
Holtby said. "You don't want to go too long without starting
but we've been playing very well lately so it hasn't been an issue. I
was given an opportunity to start tonight and I wanted to be there
for the guys because they've been playing well. We came through again
tonight."
Oates said Halak should be ready to play Tuesday
against the Los Angeles Kings at Verizon Center. The Capitals
finished their three-game California road trip with five points,
beating the Anaheim Ducks and Sharks and losing to the Kings in a
shootout.
"We knew these were going to be some of
the toughest games of the season coming out here with the way these
guys are playing so we did our job here, but we can't let ourselves
down at home now," Fehr said. "We have to play well
at home and continue to play a playoff-style game. We've had a lot
less turnovers and we've played a greasier style of hockey, which has
worked for us."
James
Sheppard scored an unassisted goal on a breakaway at 5:07 of the
third period, giving the Sharks a 2-1 lead. Sheppard blocked Jason
Chimera's long shot, tracked down the puck and raced the other
way. He put the puck through Holtby's pads with a backhand shot from
close range for his third goal of the season.
"I had some momentum to get down the ice
and I was lucky enough to get through his five-hole,"
Sheppard said.
The Capitals answered with Brown's first career
NHL goal at 12:30 of the third period. Brown fired a shot from the
slot that bounced off Sharks defenseman Dan
Boyle and past Niemi, who made 23 saves.
"It was a pretty special feeling,"
Brown said of his goal, "but we got the win and that's the
most important. We got the two points and kept the season alive. We
have to keep winning so that way we can keep moving up in the
standings. The other teams are winning too. As long as we keep doing
our job things will happen."
The Sharks went on a power play with 2:18 left in
regulation when Alex
Ovechkin was sent off for high sticking Marc-Edouard
Vlasic. They kept their top power-play unit on the ice for the
entire two minutes and had four shots but couldn't get the puck past
Holtby. The Capitals turned up the heat in overtime, outshooting the
Sharks 5-0, but Niemi made every save. Dmitry
Orlov and Backstrom each had a good chance to end the game early
in overtime, but Niemi stopped Orlov's blast and rejected Backstrom's
shot on the rebound. Fehr gave Washington the lead midway through the
first period. San Jose's Patrick
Marleau answered with a goal six seconds before intermission. The
Capitals took a 1-0 lead at 11:25 of the first period on Fehr's
unassisted goal, though Fehr actually got a huge assist from the
Sharks. After San Jose defenseman Matt
Irwin blocked Fehr's shot from the right circle, his partner,
Justin Braun,
tried to clear the puck from in front from of the net. But the puck
bounced off San Jose forward Matt
Nieto's skate and ricocheted past Niemi.
"Those bounces are unfortunate,"
Nieto said. "It happens so fast you really can't react to
them. This game was as huge as the last one," he said of the
Sharks' 3-2 victory Thursday night against the Ducks. "I thought
we played pretty well. It was just a night the bounces didn't go our
way."
San Jose pulled even on Marleau's 30th of the
season. Nieto intercepted Washington defenseman Mike
Green's pass behind the Capitals net and tried to jam the puck
past Holtby. Logan
Couture raced in and banged the puck off of Holtby's pads, and
Marleau ripped the rebound into the back of the net from close range.
Marleau, who also scored in the shootout, reached the 30-goal mark
for the seventh time in his career. The Sharks outshot Washington
16-6 in the second period, thanks in part to two power plays, but
Holtby stopped every one, and neither team scored.
"Those were two strange goals, but we
didn't really have too much sustained offense in their zone,"
Sharks captain Joe
Thornton said. "They're quick to close on us. I thought
we carried the game most of the night but they go home with two
points and we don't."
Snapping their long winless streak at San Jose
made these two points even more special for the Capitals.
"It's been a long time," Oates
said. "They're a very good hockey team. Their home record is
excellent. It always has been. It's always tough to play here. It's
exciting but tough. We finally got it done. We need the points, so
it's good."
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