For a period, nothing happened. Aside from some penalties taken and power plays killed off, there wasn’t much to get excited about. Unless you like watching paint dry.
After a flat start, the Rangers sprang to life in an inspired second period. In the playoffs, it isn’t always what you expect. That point was proven by the fourth line in a 4-1 Rangers’ victory over the Capitals to take Game 1 of the best of seven series.
It was the line centered by Barclay Goodrow that had the most impact to give the Blueshirts a one game to none series lead on the Caps. The trio of Goodrow (2 assists), Matt Rempe (goal), and Jimmy Vesey (goal and assist) combined for two goals and three assists to highlight the win before 18,006 screaming fans at Madison Square Garden on Sunday afternoon.
If the day started on the wrong foot for Rempe, who was called for a dubious charging minor on his first shift, then he more than made up for it later on. The fan favorite scored his first career postseason goal to get the Rangers started.
On what amounted to a perfect play on the forecheck, Goodrow moved the puck behind the net for Vesey, who made a smart tip pass that Rempe buried past Capitals starter Charlie Lindgren for a 1-0 lead at 4:17. The building went crazy. “Rempe, Rempe, Rempe!!” were the chants.
His goal not only got the crowd into it. But it woke up the team. On the next shift, a big hit by Alexis Lafreniere forced Capitals defenseman Vincent Iorio to cough up the puck. With him down due to landing hard into the boards, Lafreniere and Vincent Trocheck combined to find leading scorer Artemi Panarin for a wrist shot that beat Lindgren to the glove side for his first goal of the postseason.
It came only 33 seconds after Rempe’s goal. For Panarin, it was significant. After going without a goal in seven games last year, he got the all-important first goal in the first game of the playoffs. The goal was his first in the postseason since Game 4 against the Lightning in the 2022 Eastern Conference Finals.
Despite being paid close attention to by the Caps, Panarin had a good game. He led all skaters with seven shots and 10 attempts. It’s imperative that he continues to stick with an aggressive mindset this playoffs. That’s what led to him scoring a career best 49 goals. If he plays with confidence, that should bode well.
With his team leading by two, Laviolette went back to the fourth line for another key shift. They delivered again to make it 3-0. On a Goodrow faceoff win in the Caps’ zone back for Vesey, the former Hobey Baker winner let go of a high shot that sailed into the top half of the net at 6:23.
On the scoring play, the Caps weren’t happy with refs Kelly Sutherland and Chris Lee. They felt Rempe interfered with Beck Malenstyn following the draw. However, replays showed that Malenstyn accidentally skated into Rempe’s forearm. It was a case of a smaller man running into a bigger man without any impeding.
They already were fuming over the tough Lafreniere hit that injured Iorio, which resulted in Panarin making it 2-0. That was a close play. But Lafreniere came from the side when he delivered a crushing check that sent Iorio into the boards. Had it been directly from behind, it would’ve been a penalty. Iorio went to the locker room and didn’t return.
By turning it around, the Rangers scored three goals over a 2:06 span. That forced the defensive minded Caps to search for offense. They got it from defenseman Martin Fehervary. On a pass from Tom Wilson, his shot banked in off the skate of Fehervary past Igor Shesterkin to give the Caps some life. He beat Mika Zibanejad on the play to make it 3-1 just 1:08 after Vesey’s goal.
With less than nine minutes left in the second, Lafreniere took a slashing minor on Connor McMichael to put the Caps on the power play. Similar to their first two back in the first period, they were unable to get much accomplished.
The aggressiveness of the Rangers’ third rated penalty kill had something to do with it. They pressured the points and took away time and space. Instead, Zibanejad came on a two-on-one with Kreider for a shorthanded chance. But Kreider was unable to hit the net on a tough Zibanejad pass, missing high and wide.
Special teams were quiet on Sunday. The Rangers went 0 for 2 on the power play. Both came in the first period. They killed off all four Caps’ power plays, including an early one in the third period to maintain a two-goal lead.
Alexander Ovechkin found it tough to get shots through against a stingy penalty killing unit. He had a couple blocked and missed another five attempts wide. That included a couple of dangerous one-timers from his office. He was held without a shot in 19:36, including 7:54 of power-play time.
Although they were successful in killing all four penalties, the Rangers shouldn’t make it a habit. Especially with Ovechkin set up in his wheelhouse.
The Caps are offensively challenged. They want to muck it up as much as possible. That was on full display in a mind-numbing first period that saw the teams combine for 11 shots. The Rangers had seven. None were particularly dangerous. They shot a few into Lindgren’s right catching glove.
Rempe heard his name chanted during his first playoff shift by MSG. He went to finish a check on Malenstyn along the boards but was sent off for charging. It definitely wasn’t a charge as he never left his feet. Maybe it was boarding since it came from behind. Rangers coach Peter Laviolette didn’t like the call.
On an early penalty kill, the Blueshirts blocked three shots. Chris Kreider and Adam Fox got in the path of Ovechkin twice. Fox also blocked a Carlson shot. Eventually, Shesterkin got over to make a save on Carlson later.
Playing his first career playoff game, Will Cuylle was effective on the third line. On one early shift, he drove to the net to draw a holding minor on Capitals defenseman Alexander Alexeyev.
On their first power play of the series, the Rangers couldn’t get what they wanted. However, Zibanejad tested Lindgren from the slot with a wrist shot that he handled. Most of the Caps’ focus was on taking away Panarin. He still managed to get off a shot that was stopped.
A few minutes later, Trocheck was caught for knocking the stick out of Hendrix Lapierre’s hands. However, during a scrum initiated by Adam Fox, they got the retaliation on Max Pacioretty for cross-checking. It probably should’ve still been a Capitals power play. Fox wasn’t called.
Not much materialized during the four-on-four. Tom Wilson finished a check on Braden Schneider. Later, Panarin had another shot stopped by Lindgren, whose right catching glove was a factor.
Shots were hard to come by. The Caps did a good job playing a structured defensive system. They blocked shots and limited the Rangers’ offense. There was plenty of physicality.
Goodrow and Rempe finished checks. Lafreniere and Jacob Trouba each paced the Rangers with five hits. As a team, the Rangers outhit the Capitals 31-20. That was despite Wilson picking his spots, including catching Zibanejad with a clean shoulder that sent him down during the second period. Nic Dowd had six hits to lead Washington.
Following a Caps’ successive kill, they tested Shesterkin late. His best stop came on Wilson in front. That kept it scoreless through one.
The Rangers’ second period explosion put the Capitals in a hole they couldn’t climb out of. It was exactly what the building needed.
Rempe’s energy electrified The Garden. Nobody could’ve predicted he’d get the first goal. But he made a good read to spin in front to fire home Vesey’s pass for a memorable moment. He joined Matt Gilroy as the only two Rangers to score goals in their first postseason game.
Then, Lafreniere lit up Iorio to force a turnover. It led to him getting the puck over to Trocheck, who had Panarin open for his first of the playoffs.
Rempe was a factor on Vesey’s goal that made it 3-0. He was in the way of Malenstyn on Goodrow’s faceoff win. The incidental collision allowed Vesey to snap home his first of the series over Lindgren.
As much as the Capitals bench didn’t like it, it wasn’t a penalty. Rempe didn’t set an illegal pick. He was just bigger, and Malenstyn ran into him.
They got one back thanks to Wilson firing a shot pass that Fehervary redirected legally off his back skate.
The Caps had opportunities. They didn’t take advantage of them. Shesterkin came up with a big save to deny John Carlson. He was pretty quiet. The Rangers did a good job paying close attention to him. Vesey made a diving block on a Carlson shot that killed the remainder of the second period.
The third period was a defensive clinic. The Rangers held the Caps without a shot for over 12 minutes. It was all about team defense and backchecking. They got in the path to take away shots and continued to make life difficult on their opponent.
When they pressured, the Blueshirts forced Lindgren into some tough stops. That included Rempe making a bid for his second. Lindgren kept the Caps around for a while.
Eventually, Shesterkin was busy making key saves on Aliaksei Protas. He heard the familiar “Igor, Igor!!” chants from the fans.
Following a good defensive play that led to a two-on-one rush with Zibanejad, Kaapo Kakko hit the crossbar with a shot.
With the Caps continuing to take chances down two, that eventually led to a strong defensive shift from the Zibanejad line putting it away. Jack Roslovic made a good read to get the puck over for Zibanejad. He made a great stretch pass for Kreider, who broke in and beat Lindgren with his patented backhand deke for his 41st career postseason goal.
Somewhat predictably, things got a bit noisy. With exactly a minute left, Wilson gave a chop to Shesterkin following a save. Schneider had a quick response, not backing up an inch. Dylan McIlrath also got involved. All three got misconducts.
On the final shift, Laviolette sent out Rempe to keep things under control. When the final buzzer sounded, the Rangers celebrated their first win of this postseason.
Now, it’s onto Game 2 on Tuesday night.
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