Capitals again blow 2-goal lead, lose to Blue Jackets in OT | CBC Sports - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 09:50 PM | Calgary | -6.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
HockeyRecap

Capitals again blow 2-goal lead, lose to Blue Jackets in OT

Sergei Bobrovsky made 54 saves, Matt Calvert scored the winner 12:22 into overtime and the Columbus Blue Jackets overcame two goals from Alex Ovechkin beat the Washington Capitals 5-4 in Game 2 on Sunday night to take a 2-0 lead in their first-round playoff series.

Matt Calvert scores winning goal for Columbus

Cam Atkinson scores on Philipp Grubauer in the first period of the Blue Jackets' 5-4 Game 2 OT win against the Capitals on Sunday. (Rob Carr/Getty Images)

Sergei Bobrovsky looked as poised facing 58 shots as he did before the game when he calmly walked down the hallway in a buttoned-up beige trenchcoat.

On the ice, Bobrovsky stood out even more. The goaltender with a history of playoff struggles looked like his two-time Vezina Trophy-winning self in making 54 saves as the Columbus Blue Jackets beat the Washington Capitals 5-4 on Sunday night on Matt Calvert's overtime winner to take a 2-0 lead in the first-round playoff series.

"He's our best player and he was our best player by a mile tonight," said Calvert, whose one-handed rebound 12:22 into overtime sent the Blue Jackets into a frenzy. "It makes us confident. When you've got him making up for your mistakes, it's always good. He's been doing it all season."

Game Wrap: Blue Jackets win in OT again

6 years ago
Duration 1:57
Columbus came from behind to win 5-4, taking a 2-0 series lead over Washington.

The playoff version of Bobrovsky of years past was a confounding nightmare compared to his elite play during the regular season: 3-10 with a 3.63 goals-against average and .887 save percentage. Through two games this year, the second of which coach John Tortorella called "one of the best goaltending performances" he has seen, the reserved Russian has stopped 81 of 88 shots to send Columbus home for Game 3 Tuesday in a place it's never been before.

Franchise 1st

The Blue Jackets had never led a playoff series until Thursday night. With "Bob" locked in like never before in the Stanley Cup playoffs, they're two victories away from advancing to the second round for the first time in franchise history.

"I would say your career is a journey and you learn some things here and there," Bobrovsky said. "It doesn't matter what's in the past. When we're gonna play third game, it doesn't matter what happen tonight. Each moment is huge right now, and you just have to be ready."

Columbus appears ready for anything against an experienced opponent with a history of playoff disappointments that has now blown two-goal leads in consecutive games. Just like in Game 1 when charging and tripping calls on Tom Wilson and Andre Burakovsky cost the Capitals, they were done in by penalties on Wilson and Devante Smith-Pelly that led to goals by Cam Atkinson and Zach Werenski.

Alex Ovechkin scored twice on the power play and T.J. Oshie tied it with 3:35 left to give Washington a chance. When Philipp Grubauer was pulled for allowing four goals on 22 shots, Braden Holtby made seven saves, but now the Metropolitan Division champions are in a hole only 49 of 361 teams (13.6 per cent) have dug out of to win a best-of-seven series.

Ovechkin confident

"Right now in hard position, but it's going to be fun when we bounce back and ... tie the series," Ovechkin said.

Coach Barry Trotz, who said he'd let his decision on who starts Game 3 simmer, added that the Capitals are "not going away." Through two games, the Blue Jackets have shown they aren't, either.

Penalty trouble almost cost the Blue Jackets as much as the Capitals, but they got to leave celebrating after Calvert's OT goal held up to an offside review by the NHL situation room. Replays showed Calvert was just onside before scoring to make the Blue Jackets just the fifth team in NHL history to overcome a multi-goal deficit to win the first two games of a playoff series.

"Luckily, I got the rebound, had one hand on my stick and the rest is history," Calvert said. "Two games in overtime, that can really crush a team."

History says Calvert is right. The Capitals are the sixth team to lose Games 1 and 2 of a best-of-seven series in overtime, and the previous five have all lost.