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Ron Cook
Beating Ovechkin on home ice was Capitals' punishment
Sunday, May 10, 2009

WASHINGTON -- Well, aren't you glad the Washington Capitals' Alex Ovechkin played last night? Didn't that make the Penguins' 4-3 overtime win that much more fun? Isn't it better to beat him in his own house and put his team on the edge of playoff elimination than to do it with him serving a suspension and giving the Capitals some sort of lame excuse?

Absolutely, it's better.

"Definitely, it's better," Penguins defenseman Brooks Orpik said in the immediate, joyous aftermath of teammate Evgeni Malkin's winning goal, just 3:28 into the extra session.

It was pretty clear all of the Penguins thought that way after this throbbing Game 5 win, their third victory in four nights in the series. It gave them a three games-to-two edge and the chance to turn out the lights on the Capitals' season in Game 6 tomorrow night at Mellon Arena.

Much work remains to be done, of course.

Much, much work.

"The fourth win is always the hardest to get," Penguins star Sidney Crosby always says.

But know this:

The Penguins will be especially thrilled if they can turn out the lights on Ovechkin tomorrow night.

You know, at the scene of the crime.

The Penguins were outraged that Ovechkin took out their top defenseman, Sergei Gonchar, with a wicked knee-on-knee hit early in Game 4 at Mellon Arena Friday night. Gonchar sat out last night and might be finished for the postseason. Who knows for sure the way all NHL clubs guard their injury secrets?

Orpik -- Gonchar's defensive partner -- was especially incensed, accusing Ovechkin of taking frequent runs at him, Gonchar and the other Penguins with the intent to injure. But he wasn't the least bit surprised that league officials, after reviewing tape of the hit on Gonchar, didn't fine Ovechkin, let alone suspend him for what the Penguins screamed was a blatant cheap shot.

"Did you see what Gonch's agent said about it?" Orpik asked. "That said it all."

Agent J.P. Barry told TSN of Canada yesterday, "We now have Exhibit A of the extreme double standard that exists in the NHL's approach to discipline ... It was an extremely negligent hit and if anyone else in the league does the same we all know they will face serious discipline."

I don't know about you, I'm not quite willing to buy that. Penguins winger Chris Kunitz, who is much less a bright light in the NHL's galaxy than Ovechkin, cross-checked Capitals goaltender Simeon Varlamov in the neck late in Game 2, an offense every bit as despicable as Ovechkin's hit on Gonchar. Kunitz was fined but not suspended, proving, in this series anyway, that justice isn't totally blind.

You might know, though, that didn't stop Orpik from giving Ovechkin the business last night during a scrum between the two at the end of the first period. They shared pushes, shoves, nasty words, everything but Happy Mother's Day wishes.

"I just tried to get in his head a little, maybe get him thinking a little," Orpik said. "Who knows? Maybe he feels bad. But I wanted to remind him of what he did. I told him he was lucky he was Alex Ovechkin. I told him he wouldn't be playing in this game if he was another player."

It's pretty safe to say the smack talk didn't knock Ovechkin off his game. Less than a minute after Penguins center Jordan Staal finally scored a goal for a 1-0 lead in the second period, Ovechkin answered with a goal of his own, a wicked wrist shot that beat goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury. It gave Ovechkin the chance to exult in Orpik's face, one that he clearly enjoyed. Orpik was the closest Penguin to him when he took the shot.

The Great 8 -- as Ovechkin is known in the Washington area -- also scored a huge goal with 4:08 left in regulation, pulling the Capitals into a 3-3 tie, just about the time the Penguins were starting to think about their postgame celebration plans. It was his seventh goal of this series and 10th of the playoffs.

What a bummer it would have been for the Penguins if that Ovechkin goal had led to a Capitals' win that would have been crippling to their chances of advancing to the Eastern Conference final.

"He's definitely a great player," Orpik said of Ovechkin. "I've said before I love watching him play. I just don't like him taking runs at people. Even going back to last season, he took runs at [Malkin]."

Fortunately for the Penguins, it was Malkin who made sure Ovechkin's night was ruined. His pass for Crosby in overtime bounced off diving defenseman Tom Poti and past the helpless Varlamov.

"What a resilient bunch this team is," Orpik said. "I know a lot of teams think they are resilient, but I'm not sure there's one that is as consistent as this one."

It's fair to think no one enjoyed the win more than Gonchar.

"I had a chance to talk to him for about 10 or 15 minutes at breakfast," Orpik said. "He just said, 'It is what it is. You've got to let it go now. The best way to get back at him [Ovechkin] is to beat him here.'"

Mission accomplished.

By Dave Molinari

For three games, the Penguins' second-round playoff series with Washington was intense, occasionally nasty.

Last night, for at least a few seconds, it turned downright ugly.

The Penguins evened the series, 2-2, with a 5-3 victory in Game 4 at Mellon Arena, but the outcome was almost overshadowed by a knee-to-knee hit from Capitals left winger Alex Ovechkin that knocked Penguins defenseman Sergei Gonchar out of the game.

Maybe the series. Perhaps the playoffs, even if the Penguins manage to advance.

The unofficial word circulating after the game was that Gonchar likely will be out for weeks, not hours or days, although coach Dan Bylsma said he still was being evaluated and that his status was not determined.

If Gonchar can't play tonight in Game 5 at the Verizon Center, he likely will be replaced by veteran Philippe Boucher, a healthy scratch for nine of the Penguins' 10 games to date.

Whether the hit will cost Ovechkin any playing time, via a suspension issued by the league, is unclear.

The Penguins seemed convinced that the inci

Washington came out of Game 3 pretty much convinced it had beaten itself Wednesday night, the proof being right there on the first page of the Capitals press briefing, which listed the final score as follows:

Washington 3, Washington 2.

The only thing more crystalline about how the Capitals felt about their overall effort in this thickening narrative was that their faith in callow goaltender Simeon Varlamov hadn't wavered by a degree. One of only four goalies to earn a playoff victory before turning 21 (Harry Lumley, Patrick Roy, Carey Price), Varlamov took the hostile stage of Game 4 last night at Mellon Arena looking again like the looming X factor of the series.

Not only had the Penguins thrown the kitchen sink at him the first three games, when he stopped 108 of 114 shots, but the bathroom sink as well, both without evincing so much as a rattle.

"We knew he was going to be a good goalie," said Capitals boss Bruce

Ron Cook can be reached at rcook@post-gazette.com. More articles by this author
First published on May 10, 2009 at 12:35 am