With only pride at stake, the Washington Crapitals showed plenty of it against the Chicago Blackhawks at Verizon Center on Friday night. The pressure-free 4-0 victory came in the Capitals' first home game since being mathematically eliminated from Stanley Cup Playoff contention two days earlier. Washington will miss the playoffs for the time since 2007.
"I told the guys when we found out it was
over that part of their job as a professional is to play as hard as
you can," coach Adam Oates said. "Do it for
yourselves and do it for the people who paid to come watch you play.
You owe them."
Jay
Beagle scored twice and Alex
Ovechkin and Nicklas
Backstrom also had goals for the Capitals, whose season ends
Sunday at home against the Tampa Bay Lightning.
"We talked about it as soon as we found
out our chances were gone for the playoffs," Beagle said.
"We had talked about it a couple of times as a group, as a
team. We just said let's finish hard, let's finish strong and be
professionals and do it for our fans. And win for ourselves, too."
Goaltender Jaroslav
Halak stopped 34 shots for his fifth shutout of the season and
30th of his career. The Blackhawks, without star forwards Patrick
Kane and Jonathan
Toews due to injury and with defenseman Duncan
Keith receiving a night off, had little to play for and saw their
four-game winning streak end. Chicago is locked in as the third seed
in the Central Division and will open the playoffs on the road
against the Colorado Avalanche or St. Louis Blues.
"It doesn't matter what's on the line,
it's important that we show up and play, wearing the [Blackhawks]
jersey," forward Patrick
Sharp said. "It doesn't matter who's playing or who's not
playing, you want to go out there and work your hardest and play your
best. We clearly didn't do that. It's the NHL. We're professionals
and we should be ready to go. But we can't start the game like that
and spot them a lead like that."
The Blackhawks close their regular season Saturday
on the road against the Nashville Predators. Ovechkin, who is all but
assured of winning the Maurice "Rocket" Richard Trophy for
the fourth time in his career, padded his goal-scoring lead on the
power play 2:04 into the game to give Washington an early 1-0 lead.
From his usual place inside the left circle, Ovechkin unleashed a
one-timer that blew past Corey
Crawford (16 saves) for his 51st goal of the season. Beagle
extended Washington's advantage to 2-0 at 9:22. After receiving a
pass from Evgeny
Kuznetsov, Dmitry
Orlov noticed Beagle lurking backdoor. His pass hit Blackhawks
defenseman Nick
Leddy on the way, but Beagle was still able to corral the puck
and push it past Crawford.
"It was a tough start,"
Blackhawks coach Joel Quennevile said. "They score like that
from there and they get an early one like that in the second. Both
periods we lose whatever energy we were looking to get in a game like
that. It's one of those nights where [the Capitals] were clearly the
better team."
The Capitals doubled their lead in the second
period. Backstrom scored his 18th of the season on a sharp-angled
shot from along the goal line that banked off Crawford and into the
net at 1:19. Beagle scored his second of the game and fourth of the
season at 16:16. After the Capitals worked the puck along the end
boards, Beagle finished Jason
Chimera's centering pass. It marked the first multi-goal game of
the 28-year-old forward's career.
"[Orlov] made a great pass to me on that
first one and then [Chimera] made a great backhand pass to me,"
Beagle said. "It almost surprised me in the slot, that it
came out to me that fast and that crisp. Trying for the third one,
the guys were hitting me no matter where I was. It was a fun game to
be a part of."
As the game ended, Beagle's teammates did whatever
they could to give him an opportunity for the hat trick.
"We were fired up," defenseman
Karl Alzner
said. "We didn't even want to let him off the ice at the end
there, but he was gassed so we had to. If you go around the room,
he's the guy that people rally around the most. We get the most fired
up when he does well. It was awesome. I'm really happy for him.
Everyone else is too."
Antti
Raanta replaced Crawford to start the third period and stopped
all seven shots he faced.
"It feels like everything was just working
for them," Crawford said. "In this game, everything
worked and they created some good opportunities. I gave them a couple
bad ones, but it just felt like everything they did worked, and
everything we did didn't."
Washington lost forward Marcus
Johansson to an upper-body injury early in the second period
after he was struck by a Backstrom shot. He will miss the season
finale.
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