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D4

STANDINGS AND SUMMARIES

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Team W L OL Pts. GF GA

1. vWashington (SE) 53 15 12 118 310 227 2. yNew Jersey (A) 46 26 7 99 211 186 3. yBuffalo (NE) 4. yPittsburgh (A) 5. yOttawa (NE) 6. Montreal (NE) 7. Philadelphia (A)

44 25 10 98 228 200 45 27 7 97 244 228 44 31 5 93 220 229 39 32 9 87 212 214 40 34 6 86 231 220

8. Boston (NE) N.Y. Rangers (A) Atlanta (SE) Carolina (SE)

N.Y. Islanders (A) Florida (SE)

Tampa Bay (SE) Toronto (NE)

Team

1. xySan Jose (P) 2. xzChicago (C)

36 30 13 85 195 194 36 33 10 82 212 212 34 33 13 81 231 251 34 36 10 78 223 250 34 35 10 78 213 244 31 36 12 74 201 235 31 36 12 74 206 253 29 37 14 72 209 259

WESTERN CONFERENCE

W L OL Pts. GF GA

48 20 11 107 255 210 49 22 7 105 253 197

3. xzVancouver (NW) 48 27 4 100 260 211 4. yPhoenix (P) 5. yNashville (C) 6. yDetroit (C)

7. xyLos Angeles (P) 8. xColorado (NW)

xCalgary (NW) St. Louis (C) xAnaheim (P) xDallas (P)

Minnesota (NW) Columbus (C) Edmonton (NW)

48 25 6 102 215 195 46 28 6 98 221 219 41 24 14 96 221 211 44 27 7 95 229 207 42 29 7 91 233 218

40 30 9 89 199 199 39 31 9 87 213 212 38 31 9 85 222 235 35 30 14 84 228 244 37 36 7 81 214 241 32 34 14 78 213 254 25 46 8 58 203 270

Top 8 teams in conference—denoted by line— make playoffs. Division leaders are top 3 seeds. NOTE: Two points for win, one point for overtime loss.

x-Late Game; y-clinched playoff spot; z-clinched division; v-clinched conference

Tuesday’s Results

Washington 6 ..................................... at Pittsburgh 3 at Buffalo 5 ..........................................N.Y. Rangers 2 Philadelphia 2 ......................................... at Toronto 0 at N.Y. Islanders 4 ........................... Montreal 3 (SO) New Jersey 3 ............................................ at Atlanta 0 Ottawa 5 .................................................... at Florida 2 Carolina 8 .......................................... at Tampa Bay 5 Chicago at Dallas ................................................. Late San Jose at Calgary ............................................. Late Colorado at Vancouver ....................................... Late Los Angeles at Anaheim ..................................... Late

Wednesday’s Games

Toronto at N.Y. Rangers ........................................... 7 Columbus at Detroit ............................................. 7:30 St. Louis at Chicago ............................................. 8:30 Colorado at Edmonton ........................................ 9:30 Nashville at Phoenix ................................................ 10

Thursday’s Games

Buffalo at Boston ....................................................... 7 Montreal at Carolina ............................................ 7:30 N.Y. Islanders at Pittsburgh ............................... 7:30 Ottawa at Tampa Bay .......................................... 7:30 New Jersey at Florida .......................................... 7:30 Anaheim at Dallas ................................................ 8:30 Minnesota at Calgary .......................................... 9:30 Phoenix at Los Angeles ..................................... 10:30 Vancouver at San Jose ...................................... 10:30

SENATORS 5, PANTHERS 2

Mike Fisher scored twice to help Ot-

tawa beat Florida for the Senators’ seventh win in eight games. Ottawa captain Daniel Alfredsson had an assist in the 1,000th game of his NHL career. Shawn Matthias and Kamil Kreps each scored for Florida.

SCORING

Ottawa ...................................... 1 2 2 — 5 Florida ....................................... 0 1 1 — 2

FIRST PERIOD

Scoring: 1, Ottawa, Fisher 23 (Spezza, Alfredsson), 17:44 (pp).

SECOND PERIOD

Scoring: 2, Ottawa, Karlsson 5 (Neil, Winchester), 3:58. 3, Florida, Matthias 7 (Horton), 8:41. 4, Otta- wa, Neil 9, 9:02.

THIRD PERIOD

Scoring: 5, Ottawa, Fisher 24 (Kovalev, Foligno), 4:45. 6, Ottawa, Ruutu 12 (Neil), 6:30. 7, Florida, Kreps 5 (Tarnasky, McCabe), 7:56.

SHOTS ON GOAL

Ottawa ............................................ 11 9 8 — 28 Florida ............................................ 8 11 15 — 34

Power-play opportunities: Ottawa 1 of 4; Florida 0 of 3. Goalies: Ottawa, Leclaire 12-13-2 (34 shots-32 saves). Florida, Vokoun 23-28-11 (28-23). A: 11,790 (19,250). T: 2:17.

SABRES 5, RANGERS 2

Buffalo clinched its first Northeast Division title since 2007 behind Ryan Miller’s 30-save performance. New York remains on the outside

looking in as it fights for the final play- off spot in the tightly contested East- ern Conference.

SCORING

N.Y. Rangers ............................ 2 0 0 — 2 Buffalo ...................................... 2 2 1 — 5

FIRST PERIOD

Scoring: 1, N.Y. Rangers, Prust 5 (Eriksson, Anisi- mov), 6:57. 2, Buffalo, Roy 24 (Ennis, Pominville), 9:57 (pp). 3, Buffalo, Stafford 14 (Myers, Gaustad), 14:56. 4, N.Y. Rangers, Parenteau 3 (Girardi, Du- binsky), 18:18 (pp).

SECOND PERIOD

Scoring: 5, Buffalo, Hecht 21 (Pominville, Ennis), 5:17. 6, Buffalo, Lydman 4 (Stafford, Montador), 13:22.

THIRD PERIOD

Scoring: 7, Buffalo, Ennis 3 (Montador), 2:06.

SHOTS ON GOAL

N.Y. Rangers .................................. 13 13 6 — 32 Buffalo ............................................ 12 10 8 — 30

Power-play opportunities: N.Y. Rangers 1 of 3; Buffalo 1 of 4. Goalies: N.Y. Rangers, Lundqvist 33-27-9 (16 shots-13 saves), Auld (5:17 second, 14-12). Buffa- lo, Miller 40-18-8 (32-30). A: 18,690 (18,690). T: 2:20.

FLYERS 2, MAPLE LEAFS 0

Brian Boucher made 23 saves to earn the 17th shutout of his career and 100th win of his career and help lift Philadelphia past Toronto. Claude Giroux scored on a first- period power play and Mike Richards scored an empty-net goal for the Fly- ers (40-34-6), who passed Boston and moved into seventh place in the East- ern Conference standings with 86 points.

SCORING

Philadelphia ............................ 1 0 1 — 2 Toronto ..................................... 0 0 0 — 0

FIRST PERIOD

Scoring: 1, Philadelphia, Giroux 16 (Briere, Timo- nen), 10:59 (pp).

THIRD PERIOD

Scoring: 2, Philadelphia, Richards 29 (Giroux, Carle), 18:44 (en).

SHOTS ON GOAL

Philadelphia .................................. 11 4 8 — 23 Toronto ........................................... 7 8 8 — 23

Power-play opportunities: Philadelphia 1 of 6; Toron- to 0 of 6. Goalies: Philadelphia, Boucher 8-17-3 (23 shots-23 saves). Toronto, Giguere 9-15-7 (22-21). A: 19,366 (18,819). T: 2:23.

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Late Monday

OILERS 4, WILD 1

Dustin Penner and Ethan Moreau each scored two goals and Edmonton snapped a five-game losing skid, de- feating Minnesota. The last-place Oilers, who have 58 points, are hoping to eclipse their franchise-worst 60 points set in the 1992-93 season.

SCORING

Minnesota ................................ 0 1 0 — 1 Edmonton ................................. 2 0 2 — 4

FIRST PERIOD

Scoring: 1, Edmonton, Penner 30 (Chorney, Potul- ny), 1:33. 2, Edmonton, Moreau 8 (Gilbert, Hor- coff), 10:12 (sh).

SECOND PERIOD

Scoring: 3, Minnesota, Brunette 25 (Koivu, Pross- er), :12.

THIRD PERIOD

Scoring: 4, Edmonton, Moreau 9 (Horcoff), 14:16. 5, Edmonton, Penner 31 (Potulny, Gilbert), 15:39 (pp).

SHOTS ON GOAL

Minnesota ..................................... 13 7 6 — 26 Edmonton ...................................... 9 8 14 — 31

Power-play opportunities: Minnesota 0 of 2; Ed- monton 1 of 4. Goalies: Minnesota, Backstrom 26-23-7 (31 shots-27 saves). Edmonton, Dubnyk 3-10-2 (26-25). A: 16,839 (16,839). T: 2:16.

Caps complete season sweep of Penguins

capitals from D1

Ovechkin then capped the win with an empty-net goal in the final seconds, giving him his first multigoal game since March 8, a span of 13 games. With the win, the Capitals im- proved to 4-0-0 against their longtime nemesis this season. Their previous best was a 6-0-1 record in 1984-85. Goaltender Semyon Varlamov made 26 saves to record back-to- back wins for the first time since a four-game winning streak Nov. 28-Dec. 7. The game also marked the rookie’s first appearance against Pittsburgh since Game 7 of the semifinals last May, a 6-2 blowout on home ice. Varlamov, though, was only

adequate on a night dominated by the Capitals’ league-leading offense, which included mile- stone goals by Alexander Semin and Matt Bradley, each of whom established new career highs. Semin gave the Capitals an

early 1-0 lead with a goal that marked a milestone for the 26- year-old winger and the team. The first-period tally was Semin’s 39th, one more than his

previous career high established in 2006-07, and it was Washing- ton’s 300th of the season (not counting the team’s five shoot- out-clinching goals), the highest total in the NHL since 2005-06, when Ottawa racked up 312 and Detroit notched 301. Bradley, meantime, scored his

10th goal, one more than he had as a member of the San Jose Sharks in 2001-02. The biggest goal, though, be-

longed to Ovechkin, who has struggled since returning from a disappointing Olympics. He now has five goals in those 16 games.

Semin got the Capitals off to another strong start, opening the scoring at 13 minutes of the first period after faking Alex Go- ligoski to his knees in the neu- tral zone with an inside-outside move and ripping a shot over Marc-Andre Fleury’s glove. Washington has scored first in each of its past four contests. Mike Knuble’s second goal in

two games, 42 seconds into the second period, put the Capitals ahead 2-0 after his ordinary looking shot from the boards sneaked underneath the right

Capitals’ next two

vs. Atlanta

Friday, 7

(Comcast SportsNet)

vs. Boston

Sunday, noon (WRC-4, WBAL-11)

Online: More Capitals coverage at

washingtonpost.com/capitalsinsider

pad of Fleury, who smashed his stick in disgust. Knuble, however, helped the

Penguins get back into it. The rugged right wing was in the penalty box about six minutes later when Crosby scored on a wrister through a Guerin screen. A goal by Tomas Fleischmann 21 seconds later chased Fleury from the Pittsburgh net. The Penguins pulled back within a goal midway through the second when Jordan Leo- pold’s point shot hit Shaone Morrisonn’s skate and slipped between Varlamov’s pads. For a moment it appeared the Penguins had seized back the

game’s momentum. But the Cap- itals killed off their third short- handed situation, then Bradley sent the game into the third pe- riod with Washington leading, 4-2.

Capitals notes: Star defense-

man Mike Green did not suit up for the second consecutive game because of an undisclosed minor ailment. . . . Evgeni Malkin, the Penguins’ second-leading scorer, was a late scratch with an illness. Eric Be- langer was scratched and re- placed in the lineup by minor league callup Jay Beagle. Karl Alzner was also recalled but he did not play. . . . Defenseman John Erskine left the game after skating only 3:52. . . . With the Penguins set to move into Consol Energy Center next October, the meeting marked Washington’s last regular season game at the 48-year-old arena. “Thank God,” Boudreau cracked. “It’s got character, but it’s anti- quated.” . . . The Capitals entered with a

33-51-7-1 record in the regular season here and an 8-16 mark in the playoffs.

elbashirt@washpost.com

ISLANDERS 4, CANADIENS 3

(SO)

Frans Nielsen scored the tying goal in the third period and added a goal in the shootout to prevent Montreal from clinching a playoff spot.

SCORING

Montreal ............................... 0210 — 3 N.Y. Islanders ....................... 1020 — 4

FIRST PERIOD

Scoring: 1, N.Y. Islanders, Comeau 17 (Bergen- heim), 12:29.

SECOND PERIOD

Scoring: 2, Montreal, Plekanec 25 (A.Kostitsyn), 7:08. 3, Montreal, Gionta 26 (Gorges), 9:44 (pp).

THIRD PERIOD

Scoring: 4, N.Y. Islanders, Bergenheim 10 (Reese), 2:01. 5, Montreal, Lapierre 7 (Darche, Bergeron), 6:20. 6, N.Y. Islanders, Nielsen 12 (Park, Bergen- heim), 17:59.

SHOOTOUT

Montreal 0 (Lapierre NG, Cammalleri NG), N.Y. Is- landers 2 (Moulson G, Nielsen G).

SHOTS ON GOAL

Montreal .................................... 5 15 9 2 — 31 N.Y. Islanders ............................ 15 9 12 6 — 42

Power-play opportunities: Montreal 1 of 2; N.Y. Is- landers 0 of 3. Goalies: Montreal, Halak 26-12-4 (42 shots-39 saves). N.Y. Islanders, Biron 9-12-4 (31-28). A: 10,263 (16,234). T: 2:29.

HURRICANES 8, LIGHTNING 5

Rod Brind’Amour, Drayson Bow- man and Eric Staal scored two goals apiece and Carolina beat Tampa Bay.

SCORING

Carolina .................................... 5 2 1 — 8 Tampa Bay ............................... 1 2 2 — 5

FIRST PERIOD

Scoring: 1, Tampa Bay, Stamkos 47, 5:44. 2, Caro- lina, Bowman 1 (Boychuk, Sutter), 8:04 (pp). 3, Carolina, Brind’Amour 8 (Samsonov, McBain), 10:37. 4, Carolina, Jokinen 30 (Staal, LaRose), 17:57. 5, Carolina, Brind’Amour 9 (Rodney, Kosto- poulos), 19:29. 6, Carolina, Bowman 2, 19:40.

SECOND PERIOD

Scoring: 7, Tampa Bay, Bochenski 3 (Thompson, Meszaros), 4:47. 8, Carolina, Staal 25 (Cole, Car- son), 6:43. 9, Carolina, Staal 26 (LaRose), 9:47. 10, Tampa Bay, Purcell 5 (Lecavalier, Malone), 14:09.

THIRD PERIOD

Scoring: 11, Tampa Bay, Meszaros 6, 15:17. 12, Tampa Bay, Bochenski 4 (Foster), 16:42. 13, Caro- lina, LaRose 9 (Staal, Jokinen), 19:35 (en).

SHOTS ON GOAL

Carolina .......................................... 23 15 3 — 41 Tampa Bay ..................................... 9 13 15 — 37

Power-play opportunities: Carolina 1 of 4; Tampa Bay 0 of 3. Goalies: Carolina, Legace (11 shots-9 saves), Ward 17-22-5 (5:10 second, 26-23). Tampa Bay, Ni- ittymaki (23-18), Smith 11-18-7 (0:00 second, 17-15). A: 12,454 (19,758). T: 2:27.

CAPITALS

6

SCORING

Washington ............................. 1 3 2 — 6 Pittsburgh ................................ 0 2 1 — 3

FIRST PERIOD

Scoring: 1, Washington, Semin 39 (Schultz), 13:00. Penalties: Ovechkin, Was (slashing), 17:05.

SECOND PERIOD

Scoring: 2, Washington, Knuble 28 (Backstrom), :42. 3, Pittsburgh, Crosby 48 (Guerin, Gonchar), 6:21 (pp). 4, Washington, Fleischmann 23 (Semin, Schultz), 6:42. 5, Pittsburgh, Leopold 9 (Crosby, Goligoski), 9:55. 6, Washington, Bradley 10 (Laing, Steckel), 18:00. Penalties: Knuble, Was (holding), 5:35; Fehr, Was (hooking), 11:18.

THIRD PERIOD

Scoring: 7, Pittsburgh, Leopold 10 (Dupuis, Cros- by), :49. 8, Washington, Ovechkin 47 (Backstrom), 2:37 (pp). 9, Washington, Ovechkin 48 (Back- strom), 19:59 (en). Penalties: Guerin, Pit (high- sticking), 2:33; Fehr, Was (high-sticking), 14:26.

SHOTS ON GOAL

Washington ................................... 10 6 12 — 28 Pittsburgh ...................................... 9 10 10 — 29

Power-play opportunities: Washington 1 of 1; Pitts- burgh 1 of 4. Goalies: Washington, Varlamov 15-4-5 (29 shots-26 saves). Pittsburgh, Fleury (12-9), B.Johnson 9-6-1 (6:42 second, 15-13). A: 17,132 (16,940). T: 2:24.

DEVILS 3, THRASHERS 0

Martin Brodeur got his 600th ca-

reer win with his second straight shut- out and New Jersey won in Ilya Ko- valchuk’s return to Atlanta. Koval- chuk, the former Thrashers captain, didn’t score but returned to see the Thrashers eliminated from playoff contention for the ninth time in their 10-year history.

SCORING

New Jersey ............................... 1 1 1 — 3 Atlanta ...................................... 0 0 0 — 0

FIRST PERIOD

Scoring: 1, New Jersey, McAmmond 7 (Zubrus, Le- tourneau-Leblond), 15:28.

SECOND PERIOD

Scoring: 2, New Jersey, Parise 37 (Martin, Salva- dor), :51.

THIRD PERIOD

Scoring: 3, New Jersey, Zajac 24 (Zubrus, Skoula), :10.

SHOTS ON GOAL

New Jersey .................................... 8 11 8 — 27 Atlanta ............................................ 8 9 2 — 19

Power-play opportunities: New Jersey 0 of 2; Atlanta 0 of 2. Goalies: New Jersey, Brodeur 43-24-6 (19 shots-19 saves). Atlanta, Hedberg 20-16-6 (27-24). A: 12,038 (18,545). T: 2:08.

n Puckville and beyond, Capitals-Penguins is must-see hockey. No one needed to be at Mellon Arena on Tuesday night for Washington’s 6-3 victory over Pittsburgh to prove there is nothing moving the needle more in the NHL at the moment than Ovie vs. Sid the Kid. Passion. Power. Panache.

I

Scuffling supernovas on the ice, playing leapfrog with each other’s legacy. The problem for

rockin’-the-red Washington at the moment is, Sidney Crosby is at least two leaps ahead at the moment. If Alex Ovechkin doesn’t get going fast, he becomes Wilt Chamberlain admiring Bill Russell’s bejeweled fingers. You know the history: One guy loads up on the numbers, scoring titles and MVPs (Wilt), while the other (Russell) points to the scoreboard and collects titles. Wilt retires a freak of nature, the greatest offensive force in the game. Russell retires the sport’s greatest champion and teammate, 11 titles to Wilt’s two. (One makes cheesy movies with Arnold Schwarzenegger and dies way too young, while the other is treated as this wizened, salt-and-pepper sage, trotted out at every NBA happening as if Yoda had grown to 6-foot-10. But you get the point.) “I’ve went back and forth on

this,” ESPN hockey analyst Barry Melrose began when asked recently to say which player he would start an NHL team with, “and I think I would go with Crosby because of his body of work and two things he’s done that Alex hasn’t done. Meaning the Stanley Cup he’s won and the gold medal he won for Canada. Plus, his passing just makes people around him better. “Now, Ovie is such a great

scorer, fierce hitter and tough player that I could see people

JASON COHN/REUTERS

There will always be a debate over who is the better player between Sidney Crosby and Alex Ovechkin, and right now, Crosby is winning.

Ovie vs. Crosby is no contest until both have hoisted the Cup

MIKE WISE

going that way. Bottom line is, we’ll be arguing who the better player is for the next 10 years.” Well, yes — after the Great

Eight’s name is engraved on the silver chalice like Crosby’s. Once Ovechkin can close the deal and hoist Lord Stanley, the real arms race is on. But comparing anything except contrasting personalities and styles until then is not a fair fight. Sidney has the hardware Alex really wants.

One guy, Ovie, is a

thrill-seeking human projectile, challenging the game’s boundaries and, soon, its all-time records. He has won the NHL’s last two MVP awards and captains the most exciting and productive team in the NHL this season, your Washington Capitals. The other, Sid the Kid, has

won everything that matters, including a Cup for the true-grit people of Pittsburgh who expect such things, and a gold medal for his birth country on home ice in about the most scintillating finish NBC could imagine. (Before the dream-sequence overtime goal beat Team USA, people forget Crosby beat Switzerland with a shootout goal in the preliminary round.) He pulled off this amazing two-fer in seven magical months, and can probably best be described as hockey’s most consummate playmaker — whether he’s shooting, passing, scoring or clogging up real estate in the crease.

Because their styles,

personalities and backgrounds are so different (Ovie is the

playful Russian showman; Sid the lunch-pail, old-hockey soul from Nova Scotia), because they don’t particularly like each other, all the ingredients are there for a decade’s worth of good old sporting animosity. Like back in the day, before opposing players in the NBA and NFL fraternized at halftime and met each other for California rolls and snap peas the night before the big game. “They both have goals, they’re both driven and they’re both very cognizant of the conversation about, ‘Who’s the best player in the world?’ ” Melrose said. “If these guys are going at it like that and there’s some ill will, that’s good for our sport. It separates us from a lot of other sports right now.” Between the fan popularity

generated from the YouTube hits and the most breathtaking goals anyone has seen since The Great One and Super Mario, Ovechkin was an early leader for the unofficial title of hockey’s No. 1 player. His bruising mix of skill and strength made Melrose and others draw comparisons between Ovie and Mark Messier. But five years after they made their NHL debuts, Sid the Kid is starting to pull away in the only measuring stick used in this sport: winning when it matters. He’s been to the last two Stanley Cup finals and won one Cup. To do so, his Penguins topped Ovie’s Caps in the lone playoff series between the two, an heirloom that went to Game 7 in the second round. Ovechkin has two Hart trophies to Crosby’s one MVP. With Pittsburgh faltering as a team at the moment and the two stars tied in goals scored this season at 48 (despite Ovechkin having played in eight fewer games), Ovie is making a major push for his third straight NHL MVP award.

But with all due respect, who cares about another Hart

S

KLMNO

HOCKEY

PENGUINS

3

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7, 2010

Trophy? The reason Magic Johnson and Larry Bird have a memorable documentary showing on HBO is because they traded the ultimate prize for eight of their first nine seasons. (The Lakers won five NBA titles to Boston’s three.) Both playing in the East, it’s impossible for Crosby and Ovechkin to meet in the Stanley Cup finals. And it’s highly provocative and a tad unfair to link iconic basketball players who have the ball in their hands all the time to hockey stars who see much less playing time and therefore are less directly responsible for their team’s fortunes. In Puckville, they know this. But in idiot sports world, they don’t. They just see Sidney piling up titles and medals. And they see Ovie’s two suspensions this season — the last a two-game hit for boarding Chicago’s Brian Campbell, which led to a broken clavicle — and think the Caps star is gradually becoming less spectacular and more sinister, Darth Vader with blades on his feet. “Look, they’re both

unbelievable players,” Melrose said. “But Ovechkin doesn’t yet have the body of work that Sidney has. One area Sidney is farther ahead than Ovechkin is the end result. He’s not just a part of those teams, he’s in the middle of it like Wayne Gretzky and Mario Lemieux were in the middle of it.”

Crosby is in the thick of it like Ovechkin wants to be in the middle of a Stanley Cup or Olympic gold-medal game. Until that happens, until the most dynamic player in the game and his team wrest the Eastern Conference championship from the Penguins and play for the grail, Crosby will have the edge. That’s not very popular to say around here, but it’s the hard truth.

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