Pens beat Capitals in Game 7

By WKBW Sports

Pens beat Capitals in Game 7

July 8, 2010 Updated Jul 8, 2010 at 3:44 PM EDT

WASHINGTON (AP) - So much for all of the hype about Sidney
Crosby vs. Alex Ovechkin, Penguins vs. Capitals, Game 7. This
second-round series ended with a thud, thanks to a perfect
performance by Sid the Kid's Penguins.
Crosby scored twice to take his NHL-leading playoff goal total
to 12, and Pittsburgh chased rookie goalie Simeon Varlamov early in
the second period while shutting down Ovechkin most of the night in
a 6-2 victory over Washington on Wednesday.
"Any player knows: When there are expectations, you want to
respond," Crosby said after his first Game 7 at any level. "We
had two great teams that battled for seven games, and it's good to
be on this side."
Everyone chipped in for the Penguins, from the stars to the
second thoughts, from regular-season scoring leader Evgeni Malkin's
two assists, to fourth-line forward Craig Adams' first goal in 42
career postseason games. Second-year defenseman Kris Letang,
38-year-old Bill Guerin and Jordan Staal scored, too. Marc-Andre
Fleury made 19 saves and didn't allow a goal until his team led
5-0.
Pittsburgh's 4-3 series victory after trailing 2-0 moves it
closer to a second consecutive trip to the Stanley Cup finals,
something the team last did in 1991 and 1992.
The Penguins will face Boston or Carolina in the Eastern
Conference finals. They play their second-round Game 7 at Boston on
Thursday night.
For the Capitals, this setback extends some dispiriting trends.
They are 2-6 in Game 7s, including 0-3 against the Penguins. And
they have lost seven of eight playoff series against Pittsburgh -
including four times after Washington held a two-game lead.
The NHL boasted that it's the first time since 2001 three
conference semifinals went the distance, and the league, its TV
partners and fans had to be excited about the potential drama on
tap Wednesday. In addition to all of the big names on the ice,
there was this: Five of the series' first six games were decided by
one goal - and three went to overtime.
"I can't describe the ups and downs of the series," Crosby
said.
Nothing but ups for his team on this night, in part because
Pittsburgh scored goals 8 seconds apart in the first period. And
just kept on scoring.
Crosby put the visitors ahead 1-0 with a power-play goal about
7½ minutes in from his favorite spot on the ice: the net's
doorstep. He added something of a finishing touch with another
power-play goal in the third period, stealing the puck from his
rival, Ovechkin, before beating Varlamov's replacement, Jose
Theodore.
Pittsburgh was on the man-advantage there because Brooks Laich
was called for a 4-minute high-sticking penalty after sending
Crosby crumbling to the ice. Clearly, though, Crosby was well
enough to make it 6-1.
Much earlier in the evening, back when the game was scoreless, a
pass came his way from Sergei Gonchar. Crosby kicked the puck to
himself with his right skate and then flipped it home with his
stick. Gonchar was back in his usual role of running the point for
Pittsburgh after missing most of Game 4 and all of Games 5 and 6
with a knee injury after a hit by Ovechkin.
Any Penguins fans celebrating Crosby's goal missed the second
score. Right off the ensuing faceoff, the Capitals didn't appear to
be paying much attention, and Pittsburgh wound up with an odd-man
rush that ended in Adams' goal.
That two-goal lead amounted to a mammoth margin in this
tight-as-could-be series: Entering Wednesday, the teams were tied
or separated by one goal 92 percent of the time. Neither team had
led by three goals in Games 1-6.
Yet this gap would grow. Crosby assisted on Guerin's goal only
28 seconds into the second period, and less than 2 minutes later,
Letang put in Malkin's pass to make it 4-0. That was it for
Varlamov, who took over for Theodore after the Capitals lost Game 1
of their first-round series against the New York Rangers.
Ovechkin scored late in the second period, his 11th goal of the
postseason. That made the reigning MVP the first NHL player since
1995 to total 14 points in a series.
That goal got the home fans excited, but Penguins coach Dan
Bylsma lowered the temperature by calling a timeout. Bylsma
seemingly has made all the right moves since he was promoted from
Pittsburgh's top minor league affiliate to replace the fired Michel
Therrien on Feb. 15. At the time, the Penguins were 10th in the
conference - not good enough to make the playoffs.
But Bylsma led Pittsburgh to an 18-3-4 record to qualify for the
East's No. 4 seeding, then a first-round victory over the Flyers.
And now - with plenty of help from Crosby, Malkin and others - the
Penguins keep moving on.
"I was blessed with a fortunate opportunity," Bylsma said.
Notes: The most lopsided score in a Game 7 in NHL history is
Detroit's 7-0 victory over Colorado in the 2002 Western Conference
finals, according to STATS LLC. ... Capitals enforcer Donald
Brashear was scratched for the second game in a row. He was
suspended for the series' first five games.

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