A frantic finish by the New York Rangers snatched victory from the Washington Capitals’ grasp and swung the pendulum their way in their Eastern Conference semi-final series on Monday.
The Rangers tied the game with 6.6 seconds left in regulation and scored early in overtime to beat the Capitals 3-2 and move within one victory of reaching the Conference final.
With 95 seconds gone in sudden-death, Marc Staal’s shot tipped off Brooks Laich’s stick, then grazed Matt Hendricks on the way past goalie Braden Holtby to give the Rangers the unlikely win.
“Incredible feeling to see how the guys never gave up, kept working really hard and finally we tied it late,” said Rangers goalie Henrik Lundqvist, who watched the last-ditch equalizer from the bench after stopping 16-of-18 shots on goal.
The Capitals had been less than seven seconds from victory when New York’s Brad Richards stuffed the puck home after a frantic scramble in front of the net to make it 2-2 and send the sold-out Madison Square Garden crowd into delirium.
A four-minute, double minor penalty against Washington’s Joel Ward for high sticking Carl Hagelin with 22 seconds left in regulation bloodied the left winger’s mouth.
That mistake gave New York a two-skater advantage as they pulled Lundqvist from the net in search of the last-gasp equalizer.
The Ward penalty also paved the way for New York’s game-winner, as they still had a man advantage for the first 1 minute, 53 seconds of overtime and they scored with 19 seconds left on their power play.
“It was an accident,” Capitals coach Dale Hunter said about Ward’s penalty. “It was a high stick. That’s the breaks of the hockey game. They got a break.”
Washington winger Alex Ovechkin was also reluctant to blame Ward.
“You can’t say it was his fault. We all lost the game,” Ovechkin said. “We win as a group and lose as a group.”
Before New York’s two late goals, the Rangers had failed to get a shot on goal in their three power plays.
The dramatic reversal denied Washington a chance to clinch the series at home in today’s Game 6.
Despite being outshot 36-18 in regulation, Washington had tied it 1-1 on a second-period goal by center Laich after a mistake by New York defenseman Brian Boyle.
They got the go-ahead goal on a power-play slap shot by John Carlson 4:20 into the final period.
After peppering Holtby with shots early in the game, New York broke through midway through the first period when Anton Stralman fired the puck through the legs of defenseman Dennis Wideman and past Holtby.
New York failed to convert several chances to double their lead as Holtby held firm, just as Lundqvist kept the Rangers close when he thwarted two breakaway chances in the third period that would have given the Caps a two-goal lead.
On the stunning game-tying goal, Michael Del Zotto cut loose with a blast that was blocked by Holtby, who came out to gather the rebound.
Ryan Callahan had two swipes at getting the puck past Holtby, before Richards shoved it past the goalie, under the left arm of defenseman Carlson and off the inside post to light the lamp.
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