Capitals-Avalanche Review: Washington Has "Stinker" Against Colorado
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Most of the evening, the Caps spent futile efforts trying to stick-handle through the clogged middle, more often than not resulting in breakouts the other way.
When the Caps were able to break free, they could not capitalize. Tomas Fleischmann twice missed wide open nets, Alexander Semin could not finish a breakaway attempt, and newcomer Staffan Kronwall missed an open net on a rebound as well.
Only a Niklas Backstrom wrist shot with 13 seconds remaining in the first period prevented a shutout. Credit Eric Fehr with drawing three defenders out of the crease, giving Backstrom all the net that he needed to work with.
Neutral zone turnovers by veterans Michael Nylander and Donald Brashear led directly to Colorado goals as well.
Left to speak for his mates after the game, Theodore was candid in his assessment.
"Bruce [Boudreau] said before the game that's what they were going to do: block the middle," he said. "That we would have to dump the puck and go get it ourselves. It seems that we didn't do it. We didn't listen to the game plan. They were blocking the middle so well that we couldn't get our speed, we couldn't get into the zone."
Coach Boudreau was succinct in his postgame notes.
"We had nothing. We were horrible out there," Boudreau snapped. "Everybody had their bad game at the same time. You win a lot of games in a row, you're going to have a stinker. Today was it."
Not many more questions were posed by the gathered media—perhaps still scalding from the tongue-lashing Boudreau administered after the morning skate, when a reporter asked if his team "played down" to lesser competition.
"When was the last time we played down to our competition?" Boudreau asked. "We've lost two games [in regulation] in our last 14 and [the Kings] won [four] games in a row on that road trip against good teams.
"We weren't playing down to them—they were playing really well. Colorado has won [two] games in a row and is desperate. Every team has sense of urgency, and it is the NHL—there's no bad teams.
"Do we think we are holier than thou? We don't. We think we're a hard-working team that has had some success. That question is not a good question." (In the Room, Washington Times.com)
So was the coach prepping the media for the "desperate" Avalanche? Was he bristling at the veiled notion that it's the coach's job to get his team to play through lesser competition? Or did he simply spill coffee on his slacks on his way to work?



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