Crosby, Penguins strike first in showdown with Capitals | CBC Sports - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 11:52 PM | Calgary | -12.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
HockeyRecap

Crosby, Penguins strike first in showdown with Capitals

Sidney Crosby scored two goals in 52 seconds, Nick Bonino had the winner in the third period and the Pittsburgh Penguins beat the Washington Capitals 3-2 in Game 1 of their second-round playoff series on Thursday night.

Pittsburgh star scores twice in 52 seconds in Game 1 win

Game Wrap: Penguins edge Capitals to take Game 1, Crosby scores twice

7 years ago
Duration 1:39
Pittsburgh beats Washington 3-2 in opener of 2nd round series.

Sidney Crosby outdueled Alex Ovechkin in a vintage goal-for-goal showdown between the NHL's top teams, and Nick Bonino and Marc-Andre Fleury put the finishing touches on a playoff classic.

Crosby scored two goals in 52 seconds, Bonino had the winner in the third period and Fleury made dazzling saves with and without his stick, helping the Pittsburgh Penguins beat the Washington Capitals 3-2 Thursday night in Game 1 of their highly anticipated second-round series.

Almost eight years after their "dueling hat tricks" game, Ovechkin answered Crosby with his fourth goal of the playoffs, but his team couldn't compensate for the Penguins captain's greatness.

"They're special athletes, both those guys, and they look for those big moments and they capitalize on those big moments," Capitals coach Barry Trotz said.

Hip Check: Sidney Crosby scores 2 goals in less than a minute

7 years ago
Duration 0:27
Penguins captain leads Pittsburgh to 3-2 win over Washington in Game 1.

Crosby's two goalshim as many goals as he had points in the Penguins' series against the Capitals a year ago.

"That's how it goes sometimes," Crosby said. "You don't get some for a while and then they come in bunches."

In a post-season full of blown multi-goal leads, the Capitals rallied on goals by Ovechkin late in the second and Evgeny Kuznetsov early in the third. Then another Capitals mistake allowed Penguins forwardScott Wilson to find Bonino in some open ice, and the third-line centre beat Braden Holtby with 7:24 left for the Game 1 winner.

"Bones [Bonino]is a guy that's a high-stakes player," coach Mike Sullivan said. "He brings his best game when the games are most important, and we've got a lot of guys on our roster that we can say that about."

Fleury qualifies, especially after he flailed around and almost actually stood on his head to preserve the victory. He made 15 of his 32 saves in the third period, including a flurry of four with threeminutes left long after he had lost his stick.

"I couldn't see the puck for a little while there, I had no stick, so I was trying to make some stops," Fleury said.

The Capitals weren't feeling so good about a game in which they didn't have a single power play. Pittsburgh went 0 for 2 with the man advantage, but Trotz thought there were opportunities for his team to get at least one chance.

"No penalties against their side," Ovechkin said. "You just have to fight through it."

The Capitals outshot the Penguins 35-21 Holtby made 18 saves and Fleury was the difference. With Game 2 in Washington on Saturday night, Bonino knows it will be difficult to take a 2-0 series lead with the same showing.

"I think we can play better," Bonino said. "There's no perfect games. I think we weathered their storm there. I think we're happy to get the win, but they played a great game and we know they're going to get better too, so we've got to match that."