Although they faced a 3-1 series deficit, no one in their right mind could say the Washington Capitals were playing bad hockey.
The Presidents' Trophy winners were at the mercy - once again - of their nemesis, the Pittsburgh Penguins, despite controlling the majority of play through four games.
Entering Game 5, the Capitals had out-attempted the Penguins 306-180, and they continued the trend Saturday night with one major difference: they scored.
The final count in Game 5 favored Washington 66-52 in all situations, and while their chances of staving off elimination looked grim after 40 minutes, the relentless Capitals attack paid off, at last.
Facing a 2-1 disadvantage, Nicklas Backstrom knotted things early in the third, then goals 27 seconds apart from Evgeny Kuznetsov and Alex Ovechkin gave the Caps four tallies in a game for the first time in the series.
Marc-Andre Fleury's performance has played a role in the Capitals' poor puck luck, too, but Washington finally broke through, and it couldn't have happened at a better time.
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