Trotz praises Capitals’ leadership for turning series around

Barry Trotz is a man of few words and even fewer compliments.

So when the reigning Jack Adams Award winner pays tribute to his team, people tend to take notice.

Such was the case following Monday's 5-2 Game 6 victory over the Pittsburgh Penguins. With his Washington Capitals backed into a win-or-go-home scenario, Trotz said his team's veterans stepped up in the clutch.

"That’s good on our leaders, that’s good on our group," Trotz said during his postgame presser. "I thought we’ve had a calmness since probably Game 3.

" ... We're having fun now."

Yeah, winning is usually a lot more fun than losing, but Trotz's assessment is accurate. Washington's go-to guys stepped up when it mattered most.

T.J. Oshie scored his fourth of the playoffs, Nicklas Backstrom netted his sixth, and despite allowing two garbage-time goals, Braden Holtby was solid, saving 16 of 18 shots.

Trotz recognizes that his core group of players are a big reason for the club's turnaround since Game 5.

"It starts with our leadership. Our leadership has (sort of) grabbed hold the last few games and it starts there."

The Capitals will need another strong performance from that same group of leaders Wednesday night in Game 7.

Puck drop is set for 7:30 p.m. ET from Verizon Center.

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Trotz praises Capitals’ leadership for turning series around

Barry Trotz is a man of few words and even fewer compliments.

So when the reigning Jack Adams Award winner pays tribute to his team, people tend to take notice.

Such was the case following Monday's 5-2 Game 6 victory over the Pittsburgh Penguins. With his Washington Capitals backed into a win-or-go-home scenario, Trotz said his team's veterans stepped up in the clutch.

"That’s good on our leaders, that’s good on our group," Trotz said during his postgame presser. "I thought we’ve had a calmness since probably Game 3.

" ... We're having fun now."

Yeah, winning is usually a lot more fun than losing, but Trotz's assessment is accurate. Washington's go-to guys stepped up when it mattered most.

T.J. Oshie scored his fourth of the playoffs, Nicklas Backstrom netted his sixth, and despite allowing two garbage-time goals, Braden Holtby was solid, saving 16 of 18 shots.

Trotz recognizes that his core group of players are a big reason for the club's turnaround since Game 5.

"It starts with our leadership. Our leadership has (sort of) grabbed hold the last few games and it starts there."

The Capitals will need another strong performance from that same group of leaders Wednesday night in Game 7.

Puck drop is set for 7:30 p.m. ET from Verizon Center.

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Oshie delivers again in must-win game for Capitals

Dial T.J. Oshie for goals.

The Capitals winger was there again when needed Monday, picking up a goal and an assist in Washington's 5-2 victory over the Pittsburgh Penguins.

It was a must-win game for the Capitals, who entered the contest down 3-2 in their second-round series.

Oshie opened the scoring for Washington, getting on the board at the 12:41 mark of the first period when he fired home a shot from the slot past Penguins netminder Marc-Andre Fleury.

It marked the 30-year-old's third multi-point game this postseason, with the other two contests coming in Round 1 against the Toronto Maple Leafs. In Game 4 against Toronto, Oshie netted twice, including the game-opener before later sealing the contest with the winning tally in the final frame.

A pending free agent, Oshie is coming off a career-best 33-goal campaign. That performance has now carried over to the postseason, where he has reached a career-high 12 points.

As for the Capitals, the Presidents' Trophy winners have rallied for two straight wins after the Penguins carried a 3-1 series lead into Game 5. It appeared the series would be a repeat of a year ago, when the Penguins knocked out the Capitals through six games in the second round.

But things are seemingly different this spring, with Oshie attributing the team's change in perspective as the biggest difference this time around.

"Instead of feeling pressure, we relaxed," Oshie told Carol Maloney of NBC4 Sports.

The Capitals will try for three straight victories and the series win Wednesday on home ice.

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Sullivan: Crosby wasn’t evaluated for concussion after headfirst crash

No alarms appear to have been set off after Sidney Crosby took a hard, headfirst crash into the boards only a week after suffering a concussion.

The incident took place late in the opening period of Game 6, with little reaction from the Pittsburgh Penguins during the intermission, according to head coach Mike Sullivan.

Poll: Should Crosby have been pulled from Game 6 after headfirst crash?

According to Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet, Crosby said the wind got knocked out of him and he was checked out, describing it as "pretty standard stuff."

Crosby saw 19:57 of ice time in the 5-2 loss, recording a record-breaking assist and one shot on goal.

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Capitals overwhelm Penguins to force Game 7

PITTSBURGH - Andre Burakovsky scored twice, Nicklas Backstrom got his sixth of the playoffs and the Washington Capitals beat the Pittsburgh Penguins 5-2 on Monday night to force a Game 7 in their taut Eastern Conference semifinal.

John Carlson and T.J. Oshie also scored for the Capitals. Braden Holtby stopped 16 to send the series back to Washington for the deciding game on Wednesday night.

Jake Guentzel picked up his playoff-leading ninth goal and Evgeni Malkin added another 52 seconds later late in the third period to make the score look cosmetically better, but the Penguins were never in it. The Capitals controlled play throughout. Marc-Andre Fleury finished with 21 saves and received little help in front him.

This is the fourth time the Penguins and Capitals will meet in a Game 7. Pittsburgh has won each of the three previous deciding games, the last in 2009 in Washington on its way to the Stanley Cup.

The Capitals appeared on the verge of another unceremonious exit at the hands of the Penguins going into the third period of Game 5. The Presidents' Trophy winners responded with a three-goal barrage over the final 20 minutes that extended their season.

The momentum carried over two days later and 250 miles northwest. Washington systematically dismantled the defending Stanley Cup champions, who looked listless as they struggled to generate any kind of sustained pressure.

Pittsburgh coach Mike Sullivan tinkered with his lines after Game 5, reuniting the "HBK" line (Carl Hagelin, Nick Bonino and Phil Kessel) that played an instrumental part in the team's Cup run last spring. Sullivan also moved rookie Guentzel alongside Malkin and put Conor Sheary with Crosby.

Crosby was a nonfactor for a second straight game after sitting out Game 4 with a concussion. He took a nasty spill in the first period when he was slammed into the end boards head-first while he tangled with Carlson. He remained in the game but found little room to work.

Then again, neither did any of his teammates as Washington dominated on both ends of the ice. Pittsburgh's first shot in the opening 17 minutes was a 136-foot flip by Brian Dumoulin that made its way to Holtby. By then the Capitals already had a 1-0 lead on Oshie's shot from the right circle on the power play.

It wasn't unlike most of the first four games of the series, when Washington would control play for long stretches only to have Pittsburgh expertly counterpunch on its way to a 3-1 series lead.

This time, there would be no response by the Penguins. Pittsburgh had trouble executing even the simplest of plays. Defenseman Ron Hainsey went to boards to retrieve a loose puck in the Penguins end only to get checked by Burakovsky, who skated away with the puck and stuffed a shot past Fleury 6:36 into the second.

Holding two-goal leads in the postseason has been a tenuous proposition at best, with 13 times teams letting them away so far in the postseason.

Yet instead of simply trying to protect its advantage, Washington kept pressing. Backstrom flipped a wrist shot by Fleury 16 seconds into the third to make it 3-0 and when Carlson fired on past Fleury 11:17 into the third, the arena began emptying out, perhaps for the last time this season.

Game notes
Penguins D Trevor Daley did not play after getting hit by Washington's Tom Wilson in Game 5. Chad Ruhwedel filled in. ... Washington went 2 for 4 on the power play. The Penguins were 0 for 3.

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Crosby sets all-time Penguins record with 97th playoff assist

Sidney Crosby made history in a losing effort.

The Pittsburgh Penguins center recorded an assist on a Jake Guentzel goal in the third period of Game 6, setting a new franchise benchmark for playoff helpers.

The previous record, which Crosby tied in Game 5, was held by Mario Lemieux.

Crosby made waves earlier in Game 6 after falling headfirst into the end boards, leaving many to wonder why he was not pulled by a concussion spotter.

The Penguins lost the game, prompting a series-deciding Game 7 back in Washington on Wednesday.

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Wednesday to feature Game 7 double-dip

After waiting nearly a month into this year's Stanley Cup playoffs for Game 7 action, NHL fans will be treated to a double-dip of winner-take-all postseason play Wednesday evening.

Up first will be the Pittsburgh Penguins visiting the Washington Capitals in D.C. for the initial batch of gut-wrenching do-or-die madness that will have the Pens wishing they'd finished off the Caps in either Game 5 or Game 6.

Pittsburgh blew a pair of chances to send Washington packing after taking a 3-1 series lead, and after Monday's insipid showing, momentum has most definitely swung in the Capitals' direction.

Second on the docket Wednesday night is the Edmonton Oilers heading to SoCal to tangle with the Ducks.

On the heels of a stellar performance from Leon Draisaitl, the Oilers head back to Honda Center a more confident bunch. And following Sunday's 7-1 shellacking, predicting the winner of this series has never been more difficult.

The Ducks, meanwhile, will be looking to avoid the dubious distinction of losing a Game 7 on home ice for the fifth straight season.

No matter how you break down Wednesday's action, one thing remains evidently clear: nothing beats a Game 7 hockey game. Unless, of course, there are two of them in the same night.

Enjoy.

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Poll: Should Crosby have been pulled from Game 6 after headfirst crash?

One week after suffering a concussion that sidelined him for one game, Pittsburgh Penguins superstar center Sidney Crosby fell headfirst into the end boards during the first period of Game 6 against the Washington Capitals.

Related: Crosby falls headfirst into end boards, remains in Game 6

As evidenced by Twitter's reaction, many eyebrows were raised when Crosby was not immediately pulled from the game by the NHL's concussion spotters, and again upon his return for the second period.

Have your say:

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Twitter reacts to Crosby playing after headfirst crash into boards

Sidney Crosby found himself trending on social media for all the wrong reasons in Game 6.

One week after suffering a concussion that sidelined him for a single playoff game, the Pittsburgh Penguins superstar took a hard, headfirst fall into the end boards near the conclusion of the first period of Game 6 against the Washington Capitals, and appeared to be a bit shaken up as a result.

Still, he remained in the game, leaving many to wonder about the efficacy of the NHL's concussion protocol.

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Crosby falls headfirst into end boards, remains in Game 6

Sidney Crosby was a bit slow to get up off the ice following a headfirst fall into the end boards during the first period of Game 6 against the Washington Capitals.

The Pittsburgh Penguins center skated hard to the net and appeared to trip over Braden Holtby's left pad while getting tangled up with defenseman John Carlson and teammate Patric Hornqvist.

He did not, however, have to leave the game, and was on the ice to begin the second period.

Crosby was diagnosed with a concussion following a hit to the head delivered by Matt Niskanen in Game 3 on May 1.

He missed Game 4 but was able to return to the lineup for Game 5.

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