SUNDAY, APRIL 11, 2010
PROFESSIONAL BASKETBALL
KLMNO
HOCKEY
Caps are scoreboard-watching
Team will go up against Rangers or Canadiens in first round of playoffs
by Gene Wang
The Washington Capitals con- clude the most prolific regular season in franchise history on Sunday afternoon at Verizon Center, and although the game against Boston has little rel- evance in the standings, the sub- stantive period comes in the hours following, when the team finally learns its first-round op- ponent and if Alex Ovechkin wins an offensive title or two. The only certainty was the Capitals would play either Mon- treal or the New York Rangers. The Canadiens (88 points) se-
cured a playoff berth by picking up a point in an 4-3 overtime loss to Toronto and are in seventh place. With a New York win at Wachovia Center on Sunday against Philadelphia, Montreal stays at No. 7, and the Rangers would get the final spot. The Ca- nadiens would be the eighth seed with a Flyers win.
PHOTOS BY NICK WASS/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Atlanta’s Jamal Crawford, right, blistered the Wizards for 28 points as the Hawks swept the season series with Washington.
Hawks’ late surge sinks the Wizards
Washington can’t keep momentum going, falls to Atlanta, 105-95
by Michael Lee
The Washington Wizards
have little left to play for other than pride, but Coach Flip Saunders referred to this late- season, three-game stretch against Eastern Conference contenders Orlando, Boston and Atlanta as his team’s “play- offs.” But with an opportunity to influence the playoff picture against teams that still have something to play for, the Wiz- ards went down two games to one in this best-of-three series. A night after a dominating
performance against the Celt- ics, the Wizards ran out of gas in the fourth quarter against the Hawks, as they lost, 105-95, before the 11th sellout crowd of the season at Verizon Center. Jamal Crawford scored a game- high 28 points, including a back-breaking four-point play late in the game, as the Hawks swept the season series against the Wizards for the second sea- son in a row. Andray Blatche had 24 points, 9 rebounds and 7 assists and Nick Young scored 23 points, but he was limited to just four in the second half. Mike Miller finished with 16 points and Shaun Livingston had 15 points and seven assists. The Wizards (25-55) had just arrived from Boston, where they pulled off one of the more surprising wins of the season— building a 28-point lead before defeating the Celtics, 106-96. In that impressive road win, Blatche single-handedly out- scored the Celtics’ Big Three of Paul Pierce, Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen, 31-27, and Livingston set a new career high with 25 points.
But once again, the Wizards had no answer for Crawford, the front-runner for sixth man of the year. Crawford scored a game-high 29 points in the last meeting between the two teams, which the Hawks won, 105-99. Crawford scored 11 points in the third period, as he helped the Hawks take control of the game. Al Thornton made a running left-handed hook shot to give
the Wizards a 76-71 lead with 1 minute 34 seconds left in the third period, but Crawford end- ed the quarter on a personal 7-2 run as he hit two free throws, a three-pointer and 14-foot run- ner to even the score at 78. Young made a fadeaway jumper to tie the game at 83, but Craw- ford sparked a 9-0 run with a three-pointer. When Joe John- son knocked down an open jumper to give the Hawks a 92- 83 lead, Saunders called a time- out.
Blatche missed a jumper and
Johnson (20 points) extended the lead to 11 when made a re- verse layup. The Hawks (51-29) have won
at least 50 games for the ninth time in franchise history and entered the game with a one game lead over the Celtics for the third seed in the Eastern Conference. They snapped a six-game road losing streak with the victory. Young has been playing some of the best basketball of his ca- reer in recent weeks, scoring at least 20 points in three of his past four games and averaging 21.6 points in his past five. Young started the game on fire, as he made seven of his first eight shots and scored 19 points in the first half. He came around screens, buried jump- ers, knocked down open three- pointers and played with confi- dence.
But he cooled off consider- ably in the second half, as he shot just 2 for 8. Washington was held to just
17 points in the fourth period, when they shot 6 for 19. The Hawks made 10 of their 18 shots, with Crawford scoring 12 points in the period. JaVale McGee, who scored a then-career-high 20 points in the last meeting against Atlan- ta, added eight points and 10 re- bounds but had a late-game scare after Zaza Pachulia clob- bered him as he made a jumper with 1:50 remaining. McGee landed awkwardly and his head appeared to bang against the court. Though woozy and winc- ing, he got up to hit the free throw, but it only brought the Wizards within 10 points. The Wizards have just two games left this season heading to New York on Monday and they host Indiana on Wednes- day in the finale.
leem@washpost.com
Player
Alex Ovechkin Sidney Crosby Steven Stamkos Patrick Marleau Marian Gaborik Ilya Kovalchuk Dany Heatley
“I know personally I’ll defi- nitely be watching and keeping an eye on what’s going on,” said defenseman Mike Green, who ad- mitted he and several teammates peeked at the Flyers-Rangers score during intermission of the Capitals’ 5-2 win against Atlanta on Friday. “I think everybody is watching. We want to know who we’re playing so we mentally can get ready.”
All the machinations for the fi-
nal playoff spot have gotten the attention of Capitals players, many of whom are growing im- patient to find out what kind of series to expect. Although Washington won’t
play its first postseason game un- til later this week, the team’s mindset can swing dramatically depending on the opponent. “What other teams do is out of
goals, and is making a compel- ling case for the Hart Memorial Trophy as the league’s most valu- able player despite missing 10 games because of injury and sus- pension.
If Ovechkin is voted MVP, he would join Gretzky and Bobby Orr as the only players to have won the Hart at least three times in a row. Fittingly, Ovechkin logged his
50th goal off an assist from line- mate Nicklas Backstrom, who quietly has crafted the most pro- ductive season of his career. The center also had two goals against the Thrashers for his third straight three-point game, and his 100th point of the season came via that pass to Ovechkin. “It’s great I think because he’s a
great goal-scorer, and I always just try to set him up,” Backstrom said of Ovechkin. “He’s a great player, probably the best player in the world, so it’s always good to see other people reach their milestones.” Several other teammates stand
JOHN MCDONNELL/THE WASHINGTON POST
With one more goal in the season finale on Sunday, Caps defenseman Mike Green will have consecutive seasons of 20 or more goals.
our control,” forward Brooks Laich said. “It’s exciting though. It’s exciting for people to talk about the different matchups, people asking who’d you rather play. I really have no preference. Whoever we get, we get, so we’ll keep watching and see what hap- pens.” Apart from the mad dash for
the final playoff spot, there are intriguing individual races and milestones to be settled on the fi- nal day of the regular season. Among those involving Capitals players, none has more signifi- cance than the competition for the Art Ross and Rocket Richard trophies. With two goals and an assist
on Friday, Ovechkin took over the league lead in points and is tied
STANDINGS AND SUMMARIES
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Team W L OL Pts. GF GA
1. vWashington (SE) 54 15 12 120 315 229 2. yNew Jersey (A) 47 27 7 101 220 190 3. zBuffalo (NE)
45 26 10 100 234 205
4. yPittsburgh (A) 46 28 7 99 251 232 5. yOttawa (NE) 6. yBoston (NE) 7. Montreal (NE) 8. Philadelphia (A)
44 32 6 94 225 238 38 30 13 89 202 197 39 33 10 88 217 223 40 35 6 86 234 224
N.Y. Rangers (A) Atlanta (SE) Carolina (SE)
N.Y. Islanders (A) xFlorida (SE)
xTampa Bay (SE) Toronto (NE)
Team
1. zChicago (C) x2. zSan Jose (P)
x3. zVancouver (NW)
x4. yPhoenix (P) 5. yDetroit (C)
6. yLos Angeles (P) x7. yNashville (C) 8. yColorado (NW)
xCalgary (NW) xSt. Louis (C) Anaheim (P) xDallas (P)
xMinnesota (NW) Columbus (C) Edmonton (NW)
38 33 10 86 221 216 35 34 13 83 234 256 35 37 10 80 230 256 34 37 10 78 217 258 32 36 12 76 204 237 32 36 12 76 210 256 30 38 14 74 214 267
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L OL Pts. GF GA
52 22 7 111 269 206 50 20 11 111 261 213 48 28 5 101 265 219
50 25 6 106 223 199 43 24 14 100 226 214 45 27 9 99 239 218 46 29 6 98 223 224 43 30 8 94 243 231
40 31 10 90 201 203 40 32 9 89 224 221 38 32 11 87 231 249 36 31 14 86 233 251 38 36 7 83 216 242 32 35 15 79 216 259
27 46 8 62 212 277 x-Late Game
Top 8 teams in conference—denoted by line— make playoffs. Division leaders are top 3 seeds. y-clinched playoff spot; z-clinched division; v-clinched conference
Saturday’s Results
at Boston 4 .................................................. Carolina 2 Edmonton 4 ................ at Los Angeles 3 (Shootout) at New Jersey 7 ................................N.Y. Islanders 1 at Atlanta 1 ............................................. Pittsburgh 0 Toronto 4 ...................................... at Montreal 3 (OT) Buffalo 5 .................................................... at Ottawa 2 Florida at Tampa Bay .......................................... Late St. Louis at Nashville ........................................... Late Dallas at Minnesota ............................................. Late Calgary at Vancouver ......................................... Late Phoenix at San Jose ............................................. Late
Sunday’s Games
Boston at Washington ............................................ 12 N.Y. Rangers at Philadelphia ................................... 3 Detroit at Chicago ...................................................... 3 Los Angeles at Colorado ........................................... 3 Buffalo at New Jersey ............................................... 5 Pittsburgh at N.Y. Islanders .................................... 5 Tampa Bay at Florida ................................................ 5 Edmonton at Anaheim .............................................. 8
Friday’s Results
Detroit 1 .......................................... Columbus 0 (SO) N.Y. Rangers 4 ..................................... Philadelphia 3 Washington 5 ...............................................Atlanta 2 St. Louis 6 ................................................... Anaheim 3 Chicago 5 ................................................... Colorado 2
LEADERS
Entering Saturday’s Games Goals
Team GP G
Washington 71 50 Pittsburgh
79 49
Tampa Bay 80 48 San Jose
81 43
N.Y. Rangers 75 42 ATL-NJD San Jose
Alexander Semin Washington 72 39 Zach Parise Alex Burrows Bobby Ryan Anze Kopitar
Jarome Iginla Dustin Penner Mike Richards Patric Hornqvist Jussi Jokinen Patrick Kane Phil Kessel
Washington’s JaVale McGee, right, battles to score eight points and grab 10 rebounds before taking a hard fall late in the fourth.
Mikael Samuelsson Loui Eriksson Henrik Sedin
Philadelphia 73 33 Columbus Calgary
74 40 81 39
New Jersey 79 37 Vancouver 81 35 Anaheim
80 35 Los Angeles 80 34
Nicklas Backstrom Washington 81 33 Jeff Carter Rick Nash
76 33 81 32
Edmonton 80 32 Philadelphia 81 31 Nashville Carolina Chicago Toronto
Vancouver 73 30 Dallas
81 29 Vancouver 81 29
80 30 80 30 81 30 69 30
Assists Player
Henrik Sedin
Team
San Jose Dallas
GP A
Vancouver 81 79
Nicklas Backstrom Washington 81 68 Joe Thornton Brad Richards Martin St. Louis Alex Ovechkin Paul Stastny Patrick Kane Mike Green
Sidney Crosby Daniel Sedin Duncan Keith
Daniel Alfredsson Ryan Getzlaf Ryan Kesler Mikko Koivu Tim Connolly Corey Perry
Evgeni Malkin Anze Kopitar
Henrik Zetterberg Scott Gomez
78 68 79 67
Tampa Bay 80 64 Washington 71 59 Colorado Chicago
80 59 81 57
Washington 74 56 Pittsburgh
79 55
Vancouver 62 55 Chicago Ottawa
Anaheim
81 54 69 51 66 50
Vancouver 81 50 Minnesota 79 49 Buffalo
Anaheim Pittsburgh Montreal Montreal
73 48 81 48 65 47
Los Angeles 80 46 Detroit
Vincent Lecavalier Tampa Bay 80 45 Tomas Plekanec Chris Pronger
Philadelphia 81 45 81 45
73 46 77 45
Player
Power Play Goals Team
Steven Stamkos Dany Heatley Marian Gaborik Anze Kopitar Sidney Crosby
Tomas Holmstrom Alex Ovechkin Brad Richards Mike Richards Teemu Selanne Eric Staal
Player
Martin St. Louis Daniel Alfredsson Brad Richards
GP PP
Tampa Bay 80 22 San Jose
81 18
N.Y. Rangers 75 14 Los Angeles 80 14 Pittsburgh Detroit
Washington 71 13 Dallas
Philadelphia 81 13 Anaheim Carolina
Power Play Assists Team
79 13 67 13
79 13
53 13 69 13
GP PPA
Tampa Bay 80 29 Ottawa Dallas
69 27 79 27
Nicklas Backstrom Washington 81 26 Mike Green Joe Thornton
Washington 74 25 San Jose
Sergei Gonchar Dan Boyle
Anze Kopitar Alex Ovechkin Henrik Sedin Drew Doughty
Pittsburgh San Jose
Los Angeles 80 23 Washington 71 23 Vancouver 81 23 Los Angeles 80 22
78 25 60 24 75 23
Player
Power Play Points Team
Brad Richards Steven Stamkos
Dallas
GP PPP
79 40
Tampa Bay 80 39
Nicklas Backstrom Washington 81 37 Anze Kopitar Alex Ovechkin Martin St. Louis Mike Green
Sidney Crosby
Daniel Alfredsson Drew Doughty Mike Richards Sergei Gonchar Dany Heatley Dan Boyle
Joe Thornton
Player
Dany Heatley
Patric Hornqvist Daniel Sedin Troy Brouwer Evgeni Malkin Ryan Malone Alex Ovechkin Rich Peverley Martin St. Louis
Los Angeles 80 37 Washington 71 36 Tampa Bay 80 36 Washington 74 35 Pittsburgh Ottawa
79 33 69 31
Los Angeles 80 31 Philadelphia 81 31 Pittsburgh San Jose San Jose San Jose
Game Winners Team
San Jose Nashville
Pittsburgh
60 30 81 30 75 29 78 29
GP GW
81 9 80 8
Vancouver 62 8 Chicago
78 7 65 7
Tampa Bay 67 7 Washington 71 7 Atlanta
81 7 Tampa Bay 80 7
BRUINS 4, HURRICANES 2
Boston clinched a playoff berth af-
ter three short-handed goals in 64 seconds on the same penalty pow- ered the host Bruins past Carolina. Boston has 89 points, good for
sixth place in the East with one game remaining. The Hurricanes missed the playoffs one year after reaching the conference finals.
SCORING
Carolina .................................... 0 2 0 — 2 Boston ....................................... 0 3 1 — 4
SECOND PERIOD
Scoring: 1, Boston, Paille 10 (Chara, J.Boychuk), :32 (sh). 2, Boston, Wheeler 18 (Krejci), 1:21 (sh). 3, Boston, Begin 5 (Wideman, Paille), 1:36 (sh). 4, Carolina, Cole 11 (Dwyer, LaRose), 14:30. 5, Caro- lina, Dwyer 7 (Samson, Rodney), 17:06.
THIRD PERIOD
Scoring: 6, Boston, Lucic 9, 19:00 (en).
SHOTS ON GOAL
Carolina .......................................... 14 13 8 — 35 Boston ............................................ 18 18 6 — 42
Power-play opportunities: Carolina 0 of 4; Boston 0 of 5. Goalies: Carolina, Ward 18-23-5 (41 shots-38 saves). Boston, Rask 22-12-5 (35-33). A: 17,565 (17,565). T: 2:17.
Late Friday
RANGERS 4, FLYERS 3
Marian Gaborik broke a second- period tie with his 42nd goal, and New York stayed alive in the Eastern Con- ference playoff race with a victory over Philadelphia in the first game of a home-and-home series that will deter- mine both teams’ postseason pros- pects. Both clubs are in a four-team fight for the playoffs.
SCORING
Philadelphia ............................ 1 2 0 — 3 N.Y. Rangers ............................ 2 2 0 — 4
FIRST PERIOD
Scoring: 1, Philadelphia, Richards 30, :40. 2, N.Y. Rangers, Drury 14 (Christensen, Girardi), 7:22 (pp). 3, N.Y. Rangers, Shelley 1 (Prust, Anisimov), 10:13.
SECOND PERIOD
Scoring: 4, N.Y. Rangers, Dubinsky 20 (Gaborik, Christensen), 6:58. 5, Philadelphia, Briere 26 (Gagne, Carcillo), 8:26. 6, Philadelphia, Richards 31 (Pronger), 14:41. 7, N.Y. Rangers, Gaborik 42, 16:54.
SHOTS ON GOAL
Philadelphia .................................. 4 13 10 — 27 N.Y. Rangers .................................. 12 7 6 — 25
Power-play opportunities: Philadelphia 0 of 2; N.Y. Rangers 1 of 4. Goalies: Philadelphia, Boucher 8-18-3 (25 shots-21 saves). N.Y. Rangers, Lundq- vist 35-27-9 (27-24). A: 18,200 (18,200). T: 2:22.
OILERS 4, KINGS 3 (SO)
Edmonton’s Devan Dubnyk made
52 saves and denied Los Angeles’s last two shootout attempts.
SCORING
Edmonton ............................. 1110 — 4 Los Angeles .......................... 0030 — 3
FIRST PERIOD
Scoring: 1, Edmonton, Comrie 11 (Gilbert, Whit- ney), 14:37.
SECOND PERIOD
Scoring: 2, Edmonton, Comrie 12 (Whitney, Gil- bert), 3:13 (pp).
THIRD PERIOD
Scoring: 3, Edmonton, Gilbert 5 (Pisani, Potulny), 5:24 (sh). 4, Los Angeles, Brown 23 (Smyth, Kop- itar), 6:39 (pp). 5, Los Angeles, Stoll 15 (Brown, J.Johnson), 12:03. 6, Los Angeles, Handzus 20 (Scuderi), 17:26.
SHOOTOUT
Edmonton 2 (Potulny G, Horcoff G), Los Angeles 1 (Handzus G, J.Johnson NG, Smyth NG).
SHOTS ON GOAL
Edmonton .................................. 6 7 2 1 — 16 Los Angeles ............................... 14 25 15 1 — 55
Power-play opportunities: Edmonton 1 of 5; Los Ange- les 1 of 6. Goalies: Edmonton, Dubnyk 4-10-2 (55 shots-52 saves). Los Angeles, Quick 39-24-7 (16-13). A: 18,118 (18,118). T: 2:42.
Late Friday
RED WINGS 1,
BLUE JACKETS 0
Todd Bertuzzi scored on a back- hander in the fourth round of the shootout to lift Detroit to a victory over Columbus, giving the Red Wings at least 100 points for the 10th year in a row. Rick Nash scored in the first round and Pavel Datsyuk followed him with a matching goal before the goaltenders stopped the next two shooters for each team. After Jimmy Howard turned aside the Blue Jack- ets’ R.J. Umberger, Bertuzzi netted the winner.
SCORING
Detroit ................................... 0000 — 1 Columbus ............................. 0000 — 0
SHOOTOUT
Detroit 2 (Datsyuk G, Ja.Williams NG, Kronwall NG, Bertuzzi G), Columbus 1 (Nash G, Voracek NG, Huselius NG, Umberger NG).
SHOTS ON GOAL
Detroit ........................................ 11 11 19 4 — 45 Columbus .................................. 7 11 4 0 — 22
Power-play opportunities: Detroit 0 of 4; Columbus 0 of 4. Goalies: Detroit, Howard 36-15-10 (22 shots-22 saves). Columbus, Mason 20-26-9 (45-45). A: 18,512 (18,144). T: 2:36.
Late Friday
BLACKHAWKS 5,
AVALANCHE 2
Colin Fraser scored twice, Jonathan
Toews had a goal and an assist and Chicago beat Colorado to move closer to clinching the top seed in the West.
SCORING
Chicago ..................................... 2 1 2 — 5 Colorado ................................... 0 1 1 — 2
FIRST PERIOD
Scoring: 1, Chicago, Fraser 5 (Kopecky, Seabrook), 6:20. 2, Chicago, Toews 25 (Kane, Byfuglien), 10:55 (pp).
SECOND PERIOD
Scoring: 3, Chicago, Sharp 25 (Toews, Sopel), 7:21. 4, Colorado, Stoa 1 (Stastny, Salei), 17:36.
THIRD PERIOD
Scoring: 5, Colorado, Tucker 10 (Yip, Wilson), 12:49. 6, Chicago, Fraser 6 (Kopecky, Eager), 13:27. 7, Chicago, Versteeg 20 (Ladd), 18:39 (en).
SHOTS ON GOAL
Chicago .......................................... 17 9 11 — 37 Colorado ........................................ 7 11 14 — 32
Power-play opportunities: Chicago 1 of 5; Colorado 0 of 2. Goalies: Chicago, Niemi 26-7-3 (32 shots-30 saves). Colorado, Budaj 5-5-2 (36-32). A: 16,327 (18,007). T: 2:15.
Late Friday
BLUES 6, DUCKS 3
Keith Tkachuk set up the tying goal in his home finale and assisted on an insurance goal, adding meaning to St. Louis’s postgame tribute to the 38- year-old forward with a victory over An- aheim.
SCORING
Anaheim ................................... 1 2 0 — 3 St. Louis .................................... 1 1 4 — 6
FIRST PERIOD
Scoring: 1, Anaheim, Beleskey 9, 3:36. 2, St. Louis, Eller 2 (Junland, Colaiacovo), 13:58.
SECOND PERIOD
Scoring: 3, St. Louis, Brewer 8 (Perron, McDonald), 3:49. 4, Anaheim, Ryan 35, 8:25. 5, Anaheim, Be- leskey 10 (Perry, Ryan), 15:35.
THIRD PERIOD
Scoring: 6, St. Louis, Colaiacovo 7 (Tkachuk, Mc- Donald), 3:29 (pp). 7, St. Louis, McClement 11 (Colaiacovo, Weaver), 16:10. 8, St. Louis, McDon- ald 24 (Tkachuk, Perron), 16:33. 9, St. Louis, Backes 16 (Perron, Junland), 17:59 (pp).
SHOTS ON GOAL
Anaheim ......................................... 6 15 5 — 26 St. Louis .......................................... 12 18 18 — 48
Power-play opportunities: Anaheim 0 of 2; St. Louis 2 of 4. Goalies: Anaheim, McElhinney 8-5-2 (48 shots-42 saves). St. Louis, Mason 30-22-8 (26-23). A: 19,150 (19,150). T: 2:27.
for first in goals. The two-time reigning MVP has 109 points, one more than Vancouver’s Henrik Sedin, and Ovechkin and Tampa Bay’s Steven Stamkos each has 50 goals. Pittsburgh’s Sidney Crosby is second with 49. “It’s a big number, especially when you miss a couple games,” said Ovechkin, who joined Wayne Gretzky and Mike Bossy as the only players with four 50- goal seasons in their first five years. “You always want to score 50 goals, but sometimes you don’t have luck, sometimes you just miss chances.” The left wing hasn’t been do- ing much of that during the Cap- itals’ five-game winning streak. He has seven points over the past three games, including four
to get theirs in Sunday’s game. Most notable is Green, who can become the first defenseman in 17 years to have consecutive sea- sons with at least 20 goals. Green leads all defenseman in scoring (19 goals, 56 assists) and was back on the ice on Friday af- ter resting for two games. He’s also among the front-runners for the Norris Trophy presented to the league’s top defenseman. Three other Capitals have
noteworthy round numbers well within their grasp. Right wing Al- exander Semin is one goal from his 40th, Laich needs two points for 60, and defenseman Jeff Schultz is two points from a plus-50 rating. “Anybody that follows hockey knows that’s it’s a pretty close race in a lot of individual stuff,” Coach Bruce Boudreau said, “so if you can help your players get to that point without hurting the team, I think it’s prudent upon you to try as a coach.”
wangg@washpost.com
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