Washington capitals.2022-23 Schedule

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Небо начало раскалываться надвое. – Кто. Олвин улыбнулся.

 
 

 

– Washington Capitals – Wikipedia

 

Eller Capitals’ Lars Eller: Out with illness. Illness: Day-to-Day. Capitals’ Lars Eller: Out with illness. Capitals’ Dylan Strome: Pots two goals. Brown Capitals’ Connor Brown: Tallies two points. Capitals’ Connor Brown: Tallies two points. Capitals’ T. Oshie: Skates before practice Friday. Upper Body: Day-to-Day. Lower Body: Day-to-Day. Capitals’ Dmitry Orlov: Misses practice Thursday. Capitals’ Darcy Kuemper: Expected to start Wednesday. Capitals’ Charlie Lindgren: Starting Saturday.

Borgstrom Henrik Borgstrom. Helsinki, Finland. Dowd Nic Dowd. Huntsville, AL. Rodovre, Denmark. This series was capped off by the classic Easter Epic game, which ended at am on Easter Sunday The Capitals had thoroughly dominated most of the game, outshooting the Islanders 75—52, but lost in overtime when goaltender Bob Mason was beaten on a Pat LaFontaine shot from the blue line.

However, the goaltending once again faltered and they were eliminated in the first round by the Philadelphia Flyers. The Capitals finally made the Wales Conference Finals in , but went down in a four-game sweep at the hands of the first-place Boston Bruins. From to , the Capitals would lose in either the first or the second round of the playoffs.

They would eliminate the Rangers in the first round but lost the second round to the Pittsburgh Penguins in In and , they would lose in the first round to the Penguins and the Islanders, respectively.

In , they won their first-round series against the Penguins but lost in the second round to the Rangers. In and , they lost in the first round both times to the Penguins. They would miss the playoffs in , but they came close to winning their first Stanley Cup one year later.

The Capitals won six overtime games, three in each of their series against the Bruins and Sabres. However, the team was outmatched by the defending champions, the Detroit Red Wings , who won in a four-game sweep. That same season, Oates, Phil Housley and Hunter all scored their 1,th career point, the only time in NHL history that one team had three players reach that same milestone in a single season.

After their championship run, the Capitals finished the —99 season with a record of and failed to qualify for the playoffs. The Capitals went on to win back-to-back Southeast Division titles in and , yet both years lost in the first round of the playoffs to the Penguins.

After the —01 season, Adam Oates demanded a trade but management refused and stripped him of his team captaincy. In the summer of , the Capitals landed five-time Art Ross Trophy winner Jaromir Jagr , by trading three young prospects to the Pittsburgh Penguins. However, after Adam Oates was traded to the Philadelphia Flyers , the Capitals failed to defend their division title and missed the playoffs in despite a winning record.

Still, the —02 season marked the highest attendance in franchise history, drawing in , fans and 17, per game. Before the —03 season, the Caps made more roster changes, including the signing of highly regarded Robert Lang as a free agent, a linemate of Jagr’s from Pittsburgh. Washington returned to the playoffs in , but disappointed fans again by losing in six games to the Tampa Bay Lightning after starting off with a two-game lead in the best-of-seven first-round series.

At the time it was the longest game in the building’s history and was eventually decided by a power-play goal by Tampa Bay. In the —04 season , the Caps unloaded much of their high-priced talent — not just a cost-cutting spree, but also an acknowledgment that their attempt to build a contender with high-priced veteran talent had failed.

Jagr had never lived up to expectations during his time with the Capitals, failing to finish among the league’s top scorers or make the postseason All-Star team. This was quickly followed by Peter Bondra departing for the Ottawa Senators. The Lang trade marked the first time in the history of the NHL that the league’s leading scorer was traded in the middle of the season.

The Capitals ended the year 23—46—10—3, tied for the second-worst record, along with the Chicago Blackhawks. The Capitals’ off-season consisted of making D. The Capitals finished the —06 season in the cellar of the Southeastern Division again, with a 29—41—12 campaign, earning 12 more points than the —04 season, good for 27th out of the 30 NHL teams.

The team, however, played close in every game, playing in 42 one-goal games, although losing two-thirds of those games. Ovechkin’s rookie season exceeded the hype, as he led all —06 NHL rookies in goals, points, power-play goals and shots.

He finished third overall in the NHL in scoring and tied for third in goals, and his shots not only led the league, but also set an NHL rookie record and was the fourth-highest total in NHL history. Ovechkin’s rookie point total was the second-best in Capitals history, and his goal total was tied for third in franchise history. Many longtime Capitals had career years, with Dainius Zubrus netting 57 points, Halpern having a career-best 33 assists, Matt Pettinger putting in a career-best goal, point effort and seven others on the relatively young team topping 20 points for the first time.

Two notable landmarks were also hit by Capitals, as the team’s longest-tenured player, Olaf Kolzig, won his th game in goal, and Andrew Cassels became the th player to play 1, games, although he did not finish his season with Washington. A notable first was that Washington area native Jeff Halpern was named captain of his hometown Capitals. In the off-season, Halpern left the Capitals to join the Dallas Stars ; Chris Clark subsequently became the Capitals’ new captain. Richard Zednik returned to the Capitals in —07 after a disappointing goal, assist season in —06 with the Montreal Canadiens , but was later dealt at the trade deadline to the New York Islanders after a disappointing and injury-plagued season.

Despite the transactions, however, the Capitals finished with the same point total 70 in —07 as they did the year before, although they won one fewer game. Ovechkin was the Capitals’ lone representative in the season’s All-Star Game , with Washington’s campaign also seeing the breakout of Alexander Semin , who notched 38 goals in only his second NHL season.

They also signed year-old Semyon Varlamov to a three-year entry-level contract. They then went on to fill needs at defense, signing puck-moving defenseman Tom Poti ; right wing, by signing Viktor Kozlov ; and center, by signing playmaker Michael Nylander. As a result of these signings, there was much more hope for the —08 season and players were looking towards the playoffs.

Despite the Capitals’ young defense and injuries to key players such as Michael Nylander and Brian Pothier , Boudreau engineered a remarkable turnaround. Aided by key acquisitions at the trade deadline Matt Cooke , Sergei Fedorov and Cristobal Huet , Ovechkin’s NHL-leading 65 goals, [6] and Mike Green ‘s league defensemen-leading 18 goals, the Capitals won the Southeast Division title for the first time since the —01 season , edging out the Carolina Hurricanes for the Division title on the final game of the season.

Washington’s remarkable end-of-season run included winning 11 of the final 12 regular-season games. The Capitals became the first team in NHL history to make the playoffs after being ranked 14th or lower in their conference standings at the season’s midpoint. However, they ultimately lost to the Flyers 3—2 in overtime. The accolades for the team continued to grow after the end of the season.

Pearson Award , becoming the first player in NHL history to win all four awards in the same season. The —09 season was highlighted by the play of Mike Green who was the third of the Capitals’ three first-round selections in Ovechkin’s draft year and Ovechkin. Green led all NHL defensemen in goals and points, also setting the record for the longest consecutive goal-scoring streak by a defenseman with eight games. Ovechkin won his second Hart Trophy, his second Lester B.

The Capitals finished the regular season with a record of 50—24—8 and a team-record points, and they won their second consecutive Southeast Division championship. They then defeated the New York Rangers in the first round of the playoffs four games to three, overcoming a 3—1 deficit. The Capitals finished the —10 season regular season first in the NHL with points, thereby winning the Presidents’ Trophy.

Ovechkin led the team in points with and finished as the third-highest goal scorer, despite playing nine games fewer than the league leaders. Backstrom finished with points, fourth-most in the NHL. Once again, Mike Green led all defensemen in points, finishing with The Capitals also dominated the plus-minus category, finishing with five players in the top six in the league. The —11 season saw the Capitals repeat as the Southeast Division champions and as the top team in the Eastern Conference with points.

However, the Capitals’ playoff disappointment continued. The Capitals started the —12 season with a record of 7—0, but they only won five of their next 15 games. By the end of the —12 season, the team’s top two goaltenders, Michal Neuvirth and Tomas Vokoun , were injured and the Capitals were required to lean on their goaltending prospect Braden Holtby to help the team into the playoffs.

The Capitals made a strong push and finished with the seventh overall seed in East, drawing the defending champion Boston Bruins in the first round.

Every game in the series was decided by a one-goal margin; previously, no single series in the Stanley Cup playoffs had ever gone as far as six or seven games while neither team ever held more than a one-goal lead. The series again went seven games, ending with a 2—1 Rangers victory at Madison Square Garden. Following the season’s end, head coach Dale Hunter announced he would step down. Adam Oates was later named permanent head coach of the team. The lockout -shortened —13 season saw the Capitals off to a rocky start, as they managed just two wins in their first ten games.

The team rebounded to win the Southeast Division, thereby earning the third seed in the Eastern Conference playoffs. Unfortunately for Washington, the Capitals’ playoff woes continued as they again fell to the Rangers in seven games. In the —14 season , the Capitals started the season winning five of their first ten games. The Capitals struggled to stay in a playoff spot and ultimately missed the playoffs for the first time since — On April 26, , 15 days after the regular season ended, the Capitals announced they would not renew general manager George McPhee’s contract and that they had fired head coach Adam Oates.

On May 26, , the Capitals announced the promotion of Brian MacLellan from director of player personnel to general manager and the hiring of Barry Trotz as the new head coach. The Capitals finished in a second-place tie with the New York Islanders in the Metropolitan Division during the —15 season and held home-ice advantage in the first-round playoff series between the two, as they had defeated the Islanders in the season series with two home wins and two road overtime losses in comparison, the Islanders had two home wins, one road loss and one road shootout loss.

The teams split the first four games of the series, with the Islanders winning the first and third games, and the Capitals winning the second and fourth games. After winning Game 5, the Capitals had a chance to clinch the series in Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum , but the Islanders won Game 6 to send the series to a deciding Game 7 in Washington, which the Capitals would go on to win and defeat the Islanders, setting up a match-up against the top-seeded Rangers in the Second Round for the third time in four years.

In the second round, all seven games were decided by a one-goal margin. The Capitals and the Rangers split the first two games with Joel Ward scoring a game-winning buzzer beater goal for Washington in Game 1, coupled with a loss by Washington in Game 2 by a 2—1 margin. Braden Holtby would then post a 1—0 shutout in Game 3, with Jay Beagle scoring the game’s only goal, which was then followed by another 2—1 victory in Game 4.

After Washington held a 3—1 series lead, the Rangers would then cut the series lead to 3—2 after scoring the game-tying goal and the game-winning overtime goal in Game 5. Both teams scored a goal during regulation time in Game 7, but the Capitals would lose the game and the series in overtime via a Derek Stepan goal.

In the —16 season , the Capitals finished in first place in the league with a record of 56—18—8 and points. In the first round of the playoffs, they would face the Philadelphia Flyers.

The Capitals won the first three games of the series and were looking for their first sweep in the playoffs of a best-of-seven series in franchise history. However, the Flyers would win the next two games to send the series to a sixth game in Philadelphia; the Capitals nevertheless won that series in six games to advance to the second round of the playoffs.

In the second round, they faced the Pittsburgh Penguins for the first time since After winning the first game of the series in Washington, the Capitals lost three straight games, and were in danger of elimination. Washington would stave off elimination with a win in Game 5, but they would lose the series in six games, with the Penguins going on to win the Stanley Cup.

Ovechkin reached the 1,point milestone on January 11, , with a goal against the Pittsburgh Penguins 35 seconds into the first period of that game. Ovechkin is the 84th NHL player to reach the 1,point milestone, the fourth Russian-born player and the 37th player to reach the milestone while playing for one team throughout their NHL career.

After falling behind 3—1 in the series, they battled back to force a game seven at home, where they were eliminated 2—0, and lost their series 4—3. Despite a slow 5—6—1 start, which extended out to 10—9—1, the Capitals caught fire in December, going 10—2—2, and were able to clinch the Metropolitan Division for a third straight year on April 1.

They qualified for the Stanley Cup playoffs for the 10th time in 11 years. In the playoffs, the Capitals were able to battle back from a 2—0 series deficit against the Columbus Blue Jackets in the first round of the playoffs , winning four straight and beating the Blue Jackets in six games. They faced the Penguins again in the second round, and this time, on May 7, , they were able to beat the Penguins in the second round with an overtime goal on the road in Game 6 by Evgeny Kuznetsov.

It marked the first time in 20 seasons that the Capitals made a Conference Final and the first time in 24 seasons that they had defeated the Penguins in a playoff series. Not only was it the Capitals’ first Stanley Cup win, but it was also the first championship for a Washington, D. On April 4, , the Capitals clinched their fourth straight Metropolitan Division title and with that accomplishment, Washington became only the second organization in NHL history to win four consecutive division titles twice in their history Boston Bruins from —28 to —31 and again from —76 to — The Capitals’ previous streak was from the —08 season to the —11 season in the now-defunct Southeast Division.

The next season the Capitals finished second in the division, ultimately losing to the Boston Bruins in five games of the first round of the playoffs. However, they ended up falling to 4th place in the division, which was good enough for the 2nd Wild card, and was matched against the Presidents trophy winning Florida Panthers in the first round of the playoffs , falling to them in 6 games.

Mike Vogel has been covering the team online for the Washington Capitals on its website since the season, writing daily game stories and analysis.

Vogel, who also participates in podcasts and in-stadium video presentations as well as guesting on various Washington DC radio and television programs, has been described as “the most interesting man in Caps media”.

WTOP-TV channel 9 picked up television coverage for the Capitals’ first three seasons, covering 15 road games in the —75 season. Sportscaster Warner Wolf was the commentator for the first season. Team radio broadcaster Ron Weber moved to the TV booth for telecasts in the second and third seasons. Station management had little interest in the games and said they received far more complaints about the preempted CBS shows.

Before the —78 season, the Capitals signed a five-year deal with WDCA channel 20 , which had regional cable carriage and as an independent station was able to commit to more expansive live coverage. The —92 season illustrates a typical arrangement: WDCA showed 20 road games and any road playoff games, while HTS picked up 34 home games and any home playoff games, leaving 28 regular season games not televised. WFED continues to broadcast games as a network affiliate. The Washington Wizards also took priority over the Capitals on WFED in case of a conflict, leading to some games in which the only home broadcast was available via Internet streaming.

The team responded to fan complaints by reaching a temporary deal in January to place the rest of its games on WWDC-HD2 , which is available metro-wide to those with HD Radios and has a low-powered analog signal that covers the city itself. The Capitals took to the ice in red, white and blue jerseys featuring contrast-colored shoulders and stars on the chest and sleeves.

The team originally had red, white, and blue pants options, but retired the white pants only after a few games in their first season, and the red ones at season’s end. The blue pants would eventually become the only option used. The original logo crest underwent a few modifications throughout the jersey’s history.

Prior to the start of the —96 season , in an attempt to modernize the look and improve merchandise sales, the team abandoned its traditional red, white and blue color scheme in favor of a blue, black, and bronze palette with an American bald eagle with five stars as its logo. The alternate logo depicted the Capitol building with crossed hockey sticks behind. For the —98 season, the team unveiled a black alternate jersey, devoid of blue with bronze stripes on the ends of sleeves and at the waist.

The crest on the white and blue jerseys were the bald eagle logo, while the crest on the black jersey was the Capitol logo. Initially, the team name was placed along the bottom black stripe, but was removed on the white jersey in , while it remained on the blue jersey until its retirement.

Prior to the —01 season , the team retired its blue road jersey in favor of the black alternate jersey, but still kept the white jersey for home games. The Capitals unveiled new uniforms on June 22, , which coincided with the NHL Entry Draft and the new league-wide adaptation of the Reebok -designed uniform system for — The change marked a return to the red, white and blue color scheme originally used from to The new alternate logo uses an eagle in the shape of a “W” with the silhouette of the Washington Monument and the United States Capitol building in the negative space within and below.

The Washington Capitals have 14 roster players entering this season on expiring contracts. It could mean that the club will look very different. What might a team filling vacancies from within look like? Daily Washington Capitals news and notes: the Caps and Wings play their second preseason game, a blue line preview, Caps canine cuteness and more.

A look at some Cup experience remaining on the roster. Daily Washington Capitals news and notes: Protas continues to make his case, the Bears open their camp, and more. Daily Washington Capitals news and notes: the Caps make more roster cuts, previewing the season for a returning defenseman, a look at the new PK and more. Daily Washington Capitals news and notes: The Caps fall in regulation for the first time in preseason, Protas shines and more.

Daily Washington Capitals news and notes: The Caps ride a veteran-filled lineup to a win in Detroit, the preseason schedule marches on to Columbus and more. Daily Washington Capitals news and notes: The Caps head to Detroit for a busy weekend of preseason action, Strome makes his case and more. Daily Washington Capitals news and notes: The Caps even up their preseason record with a win in Philly, the newest Caps shine in their preseason debut and more. A look at a good year for Garnet.

Daily Washington Capitals news and notes: the Caps and Flyers face off in a preseason matchup, thoughts on the blue line and the new guys and more.

 
 

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