Preview: Capitals (51-14) at Penguins (38-24)
Date: March 20, 2016 6:00 PM EDT
It's hard to believe Sidney Crosby and Alex Ovechkin have only met once in the playoffs, an epic seven-game series won by the Pittsburgh Penguins on their way to lifting the Stanley Cup seven years ago.
At some point next month, there might finally be a rematch.
A first-round showdown between the Penguins and league-best Capitals is looking less likely, but a five-game winning streak heading into Sunday's visit from Washington has Pittsburgh looking like a team that could do some postseason damage - provided it gets there.
The Capitals (51-14-5) are a few points from wrapping up home-ice advantage in the Eastern Conference and not long after that should nail down the second Presidents' Trophy in franchise history.
They'd only outscored opponents 40-39 in non-shootout goals in a monthlong stretch prior to posting a four-goal gap in wins over Carolina on Tuesday and Nashville on Friday, so the best team in hockey insists there's still room for improvement.
'Maybe we got a little complacent for a bit with our point situation,' winger Daniel Winnik said after scoring twice in the 4-1 victory over the Predators. "But we know leading down this final 12 games that it's going to be playoff hockey, and we've got to get ourselves prepared for what's going to happen at the end of the regular season.'
The Capitals found themselves out of the playoffs after seven games when they collected 121 points while winning their other Presidents' Trophy in 2010, and they're currently on pace for 125 - which would be the most in the league in 20 years.
Drawing a Pittsburgh team that has the East's best goal differential at plus-23 over the past two months might not sound too appealing, particularly considering Crosby leads the league in goals (22, one more than Ovechkin) and points (47) in 2016.
The Penguins' prospects of playing in a 10th consecutive postseason look considerably better after Saturday. Pittsburgh began the day as the East's wild-card leader, ahead of Detroit and four points better than the ninth-place Flyers, and it opened up a six-point cushion on Philadelphia with a 4-1 victory.
The Penguins (39-24-8) are now firmly in the mix for one of the Metropolitan's Division final two automatic playoff berths along with the New York Rangers and Islanders.
'I thought it was the most complete game that we've played to this point at both ends of the rink,' coach Mike Sullivan said. 'When it came time to play defense, we defended hard. Our attention to detail was really good and everyone trusted each other out there. When we play that way, we're very hard to play against.'
The Capitals have had the better of the Penguins since Barry Trotz took over, winning five of seven meetings while outscoring Pittsburgh 21-11. That includes two wins in three meetings this season despite not getting a point from Ovechkin.
Crosby has an 11-game point streak but hasn't had a lot of luck against Washington lately, scoring once with an assist in his last seven games.
Braden Holtby should be in net for the Capitals as he has for each meeting against Pittsburgh the last two seasons. It won't be easy to improve on his .954 save percentage and 1.44 goals-against average.
The Penguins' goaltending situation isn't quite as clear. Marc-Andre Fleury started Saturday, meaning another Sunday would be just the eighth time in four seasons he's played both ends of a back-to-back. An .891 save percentage in those situations offers some reasonable insight as to why he's been limited.
Backup Matt Murray, who stopped 34 shots in a 3-2 loss to Washington on March 1, hasn't allowed more than two goals in his six other NHL starts.
Date: March 20, 2016 6:00 PM EDT
It's hard to believe Sidney Crosby and Alex Ovechkin have only met once in the playoffs, an epic seven-game series won by the Pittsburgh Penguins on their way to lifting the Stanley Cup seven years ago.
At some point next month, there might finally be a rematch.
A first-round showdown between the Penguins and league-best Capitals is looking less likely, but a five-game winning streak heading into Sunday's visit from Washington has Pittsburgh looking like a team that could do some postseason damage - provided it gets there.
The Capitals (51-14-5) are a few points from wrapping up home-ice advantage in the Eastern Conference and not long after that should nail down the second Presidents' Trophy in franchise history.
They'd only outscored opponents 40-39 in non-shootout goals in a monthlong stretch prior to posting a four-goal gap in wins over Carolina on Tuesday and Nashville on Friday, so the best team in hockey insists there's still room for improvement.
'Maybe we got a little complacent for a bit with our point situation,' winger Daniel Winnik said after scoring twice in the 4-1 victory over the Predators. "But we know leading down this final 12 games that it's going to be playoff hockey, and we've got to get ourselves prepared for what's going to happen at the end of the regular season.'
The Capitals found themselves out of the playoffs after seven games when they collected 121 points while winning their other Presidents' Trophy in 2010, and they're currently on pace for 125 - which would be the most in the league in 20 years.
Drawing a Pittsburgh team that has the East's best goal differential at plus-23 over the past two months might not sound too appealing, particularly considering Crosby leads the league in goals (22, one more than Ovechkin) and points (47) in 2016.
The Penguins' prospects of playing in a 10th consecutive postseason look considerably better after Saturday. Pittsburgh began the day as the East's wild-card leader, ahead of Detroit and four points better than the ninth-place Flyers, and it opened up a six-point cushion on Philadelphia with a 4-1 victory.
The Penguins (39-24-8) are now firmly in the mix for one of the Metropolitan's Division final two automatic playoff berths along with the New York Rangers and Islanders.
'I thought it was the most complete game that we've played to this point at both ends of the rink,' coach Mike Sullivan said. 'When it came time to play defense, we defended hard. Our attention to detail was really good and everyone trusted each other out there. When we play that way, we're very hard to play against.'
The Capitals have had the better of the Penguins since Barry Trotz took over, winning five of seven meetings while outscoring Pittsburgh 21-11. That includes two wins in three meetings this season despite not getting a point from Ovechkin.
Crosby has an 11-game point streak but hasn't had a lot of luck against Washington lately, scoring once with an assist in his last seven games.
Braden Holtby should be in net for the Capitals as he has for each meeting against Pittsburgh the last two seasons. It won't be easy to improve on his .954 save percentage and 1.44 goals-against average.
The Penguins' goaltending situation isn't quite as clear. Marc-Andre Fleury started Saturday, meaning another Sunday would be just the eighth time in four seasons he's played both ends of a back-to-back. An .891 save percentage in those situations offers some reasonable insight as to why he's been limited.
Backup Matt Murray, who stopped 34 shots in a 3-2 loss to Washington on March 1, hasn't allowed more than two goals in his six other NHL starts.
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